Tyson Brand has issued a voluntary recall of around 30,000 pounds of "Fun Nuggets" for a not-so-fun reason. The recalled fun nuggets, described as "fully cooked fun nuggets breaded shaped chicken patties", were made in a single Tyson factory on September 5, 2023, according to the company's website.

The fun nuggets affected will have the following codes on the package:

  • 2483BRV02 07
  • 2483BRV02 08
  • 2483BRV02 09
  • 2483BRV02 10

For retailers, the product cases will have either of these codes:

  • 048153-6910
  • 10000048153

All recalled packages will also bear the establishment code P7211, which means these fun nuggets were shipped to Alabama, California, Illinois, Kentucky, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia, Wisconsin, and Michigan.

Why Has Tyson Voluntarily Recalled 30,000 Pounds of Fun Nuggets?

29 ounce bag of recalled Tyson fully cooked fun nuggets breaded shaped chicken patties with a best if used by date of September 4, 2024
Canva
loading...

The food giant's website was very forthcoming for the reason behind the recall of 16,500 packages or more frozen dinosaur-shaped fun nuggets:

A limited number of consumers have reported they found small, pliable metal pieces in the product, and out of an abundance of caution, the company is recalling this product.

The fun nuggets affected will have a "Best if Used By" date of September 4, 2024.

29 ounce bag of recalled Tyson fully cooked fun nuggets breaded shaped chicken patties with a best if used by date of September 4, 2024
Canva
loading...

If you have a recalled bag of frozen "fully cooked fun nuggets breaded shaped chicken patties", YOU should cut the UPC and date code off of the package and toss the rest. Once you've discarded the fun nuggets, call or text 1-855-382-3101 for more information.

Related: URGENT Michigan Recall: Popular Cars Could Catch Fire

Once a list of stores that received the product is put together, it will be posted on the USDA's website at this link:

http://www.fsis.usda.gov/FSIS_Recalls/Open_Federal_Cases/index.asp

Michigan Deer Season: Car v Deer, Which Kill More in Your County?

Between hunters and car-deer collisions, which one is responsible for thinning the herd more in your Michigan county? Using the Michigan Department of Natural Resources deer license sales from all seasons and crash data from MichiganTrafficCrashFacts.org, let's take a county-by-county look as we count down to the one with the most deer-involved crashes and compare that to the amount killed by hunters.

Gallery Credit: Scott Clow

More From 99.1 WFMK