Atlanta, GA — A homeless entrepreneur’s unlikely burger business in Atlanta has been yanked from DoorDash after customers bombarded the platform with reports over unsanitary conditions — and the whole saga is captured in a now-viral social media video.

The operation, cheekily named “Nasty Azz Cheeseburger,” somehow landed a listing on the delivery app despite running out of what multiple eyewitness accounts and earlier clips describe as a shopping-cart setup on Atlanta streets.

Viral ‘Nasty Azz Cheeseburger’ Deleted From DoorDash After Food-Safety Complaints

The video shows the makeshift “restaurant” in action: a street-level cart operation complete with the man’s own “special sauce,” basic grilling setup, and branding that somehow passed initial platform checks long enough to generate orders — and a respectable 3.8-star rating before the backlash hit.

DoorDash has since removed or marked the listing as “temporarily closed,” according to users who tried to order and the timing of the removal matching the surge in complaints.

No official statement has been issued by the company, but the move came after “countless users” flagged hygiene and safety issues tied to the openly improvised street-cart conditions.

The clip has ignited a firestorm of reactions online. Some viewers are cheering the hustle: “Can’t knock someone’s grind,” one commenter wrote, noting the man had clean clothes and was clearly trying to make legal money.

Others pointed out the honesty in the name itself — “If you order from a place called Nasty Azz Cheeseburger, what did you expect?” — while a wave of horrified responses joked about ghost kitchens gone wrong and compared the setup to a scene from an old In Living Color skit.

Earlier videos and posts from the past few days had already made the story a meme magnet, with users sharing images of dasher reaction faces and Cat-in-the-Hat-style contraptions to mock the pickup locations. One social media user quipped, “This is exactly why I avoid the ‘try something new’ section on DoorDash.”

The saga highlights the wild west of gig-economy food delivery, where unconventional vendors can briefly slip through the cracks before public scrutiny — and health concerns — catch up. Whether the operator will rebrand, relocate, or find another avenue remains to be seen, but for now, Atlanta’s most candidly named cheeseburger joint is off the menu.

Would you have risked the “Nasty Azz”? The internet is split — but DoorDash just voted no.

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