Like most people, Kate Malecik is living a normal life after posting a video to Facebook. Though her posting experience is not like that of most people.
Her video shows, what appears to be maggots, crawling on two slices of pizza.
She says she stopped by Seniora Pizza to pick up wings and a few slices. After ordering two slices, she took them outside. When she opened the box, Malecik says she saw the site of maggots.
"Returned the pizza and explained the situation. The cashier seemed very shocked about the situation,” she said.
The business refunded the money to Malicek.
"He mentioned to his manager there were bugs in my pizza. The manager didn't so much as confront me, acknowledge me, he so much as said, 'what pizza?’” Malicek said.
"She take the pizza and she go out, come back in five minutes later and she sees fly inside of the pizza. I don't know where it comes from,” the cook said.
It wasn't the owner or manager who the cashier addressed that day, it was the cook.
The cook says he rushed away from Malecik and back to the kitchen to get rid of the pizza and make sure there weren't more bugs in any of the other food. He says he didn't find any other bugs.
The owner says he's not sure how maggots got on the pizza in the first place, considering the pizza was seen by multiple people before reaching Malecik.
"I'm not at all. I have no reason to destroy this business. I have no reason. I've been going to it for years. There's no motive behind this,” she said.
The Facebook video has more than 90,000 views. On the businesses Facebook page, there are dozens of comments about maggots.
Staff says there's been a clear decline in business since the video was posted.
The Onondaga County Health Department was made aware of the video and a spokesperson says they can't "authenticate the video," though an inspector was sent there two days following the alleged incident.
No contaminated food was found, though a notice of violations was issued for fruit flies and unclean shelves and floor areas.
Reporter: "Kate, if you got that apology you wanted, do you think you'd post that video?"
Malecik: "No, no. I've had other experiences before and they've always tried to make it right and I've walked out of that restaurant satisfied with how it was dealt with."
A representative from Orkin says it'd be unusual for a fly to lay eggs on pizza unless it was left out for hours or if some ingredient was rotten.
Seniora Pizza staff says they change the pizza every two hours.