I had a laugh at the pizza one, too. I think I saw it with instalments of a burrito. It was a partnership with Uber Eats, or something like that. It's good to have a laugh but also recognize what's out there in the marketplace and what people are using it for.
Social media is also a vehicle that allows us to have access to how other people live and what their lives look like in a way that we never quite had before. It can also entice and encourage supplementary spending outside of the essentials when you're keeping up with people in your feeds or with algorithms. I would also put that forward, because it's so easy to engage with, and it's just a click away. I understand why people may think, if they see it as an option at a checkout, or something that's simple or traditional, that it is part of the infrastructure we understand. I'm not advocating to hurt people's credit scores but rather to protect young people who may become quickly over-leveraged in a way that they don't realize and that can hurt them later—outside of burritos.
