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Backlash after "Yellow Fever" restaurant opens inside Whole Foods 365

Backlash after "Yellow Fever" eatery opens inside Whole Foods 365
Backlash after "Yellow Fever" eatery opens inside Whole Foods 365 01:41

LONG BEACH, Calif. -- The proprietors of a small, Southland chain of pan-Asian restaurants are facing a backlash over the opening of their newest location, but they are taking all the negative hype in stride, CBS Los Angeles reports. Eatery Yellow Fever, which has as its motto "asian bowls for your soul," opened its latest locale Wednesday at a new Whole Foods 365 in Long Beach, California, and the name rubbed some shoppers the wrong way.

"I was shocked. I find it offensive," Brin Inks told CBS Los Angeles. She said the name "is basically suggesting that — a sexual connotation towards Asians."

The reaction was similar on social media, with one person tweeting, "Well, I guess Whole Foods is out of the closet with their racist Asian fetish."

Another retweet of 365's photo read, "Today in 'bad product ideas.'"

Owner and chef Kelly Kim, has run other Yellow Fever locations in Venice and Torrance for years. CBS Los Angeles featured Kim and her Venice location earlier this month, after the restaurant announced it was going cashless. She said she didn't face any blowback until she teamed up with Whole Foods.

"We've been in business for four-and-a-half years; any backlash or any negativity has been almost none," said Kim.

Outside the shop, some Long Beach residents said they saw both sides of the issue.

"Almost all the people I work with would probably think it was funny and wouldn't really have a problem with it, yet I know some people might be sensitive to it and find it offensive," said Martin Waltsak, who says he works mostly with Asian people.

"I really don't find anything too offensive with it, but I guess it could be misconstrued pretty quickly," said Ivan Luna.

Kim told CBS Los Angeles that no matter the controversy, her food speaks for itself, and she hopes critics will try it.

"I hope that once they come in and try our food and see us for who we are and who we're trying to be, that they'll realize that they're picking on the little kid, you know?" chuckled Kim.

Their success so far at the Long Beach location might indicate the larger public sentiment. Kim said the new location is outperforming her two older locations by 100 percent.

CBS Los Angeles reached out to 365 but had not heard back from them late Friday.

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