понедельник, 4 мая 2015 г.

uTaco Bell Is Testing Potato Chip Nachos For Some Reasonr


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  • taco-bell-potato-crisp-nachosSure, nachos made from thick-cut potato “crisps” are nothing new, but we are kind of surprised to see them at Taco Bell. Maybe they’re preparing themselves for a bleak dystopian future where there is no more corn or flour to make tortillas from. Or they’re trying to create new and more appealing junk foods.

    Brand Eating reports that this new product is pretty much the same thing as the existing Nachos Bell Grande, except that those have a base of tortilla chips. The toppings are beef, refried beans, cheese sauce, tomatoes, and sour cream. Guacamole is also being tested, but that’s not standard on the Nachos Bell Grande.

    The known test sites, if you find this idea too irresistible to wait around for the ‘tater nachos to reach your city, are Bellevue, Nebraska and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. If you see them anywhere else, you know where to reach us.

    The current pricing is $2.49 or $3.49 depending on toppings.

    Taco Bell Testing Potato Crisp Nachos [Brand Eating]



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uCalifornia Still Deciding Whether To Block Comcast Merger That Is No Longer Happeningr


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  • Even though the $45 billion merger of Comcast and Time Warner Cable officially failed more than a week ago. One might assume that this collapse would have sufficed for the California state regulator who proposed blocking the deal in that state, but yet the merger approval process in California moves forward — even without a merger to approve.

    Two weeks before Comcast and TWC gave up the idea of marital bliss, Mike Florio, one of four commissioners and a president who make up the California Public Utility Commission leadership, proposed blocking the transfer of TWC franchises in the state to Comcast, arguing that the combined cable companies would “have a monopoly in approximately 78 percent of census blocks.”

    After Comcast pulled the plug on the acquisition, an administrative law judge in California was asked to stay the comment period on Florio’s proposal. But the judge decided to continue allowing comments and for the CPUC to move forward with its review process. The full commission could vote on Florio’s proposal in the coming weeks.

    What’s the point of rejecting a merger after the merging parties have already called it quits? Bloomberg reports that it appears to be a matter of establishing the extent of the CPUC’s authority over the state’s broadband providers.

    After all, Time Warner Cable is the dominant cable/Internet provider for Los Angeles, and is still likely to be involved in some sort of major acquisition in the near future. Similarly, Comcast has a hold on the San Francisco Bay region, and that company has $45 billion that had been set aside to buy TWC. It would help the CPUC to have an understanding of what it can and can’t do to regulate the broadband market.



ribbi
  • by Chris Morran
  • via Consumerist


uLottery Officials Looking For Guy Who Won $75K But Walked Away From Gas Station With Only $75r


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  • (via ABC 7)

    (via ABC 7)

    Have you been to a gas station in California recently, where you cashed in a lottery ticket and won an exciting $75? Hold onto your hat and find a chair, because you might’ve actually won $75,000 instead.

    Though you are unlikely to be this lucky person, there is a man out there who is much richer than he thought, reports ABC 7.

    The gas station manager says a cashier misread the numbers on the machine when a man came into the store and handed over his lottery ticket. The guy took his money and left before the cashier could realize his big mistake.

    The California Lottery is now on the case, doing a slow but thorough search to find the guy who’s missing out on a tidy sum right about now. The store’s manager hopes the public knows who he is so he can reap his rewards. And the clock is ticking — he’s got about six months left to claim it.

    PALMDALE GAS STATION MANAGER LOOKING FOR MAN WHO WON $75,000 IN LOTTO TICKET MISHAP [ABC 7]



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uFire Department Called To Untangle Girl’s Fingers From Target Shopping Basketr


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  • A trip to Target turned into quite the ordeal for a young Michigan girl over the weekend when the local fire department had to be called to unsnarl her fingers from a shopping basket.

    The Detroit Free Press reports that a four-year-old girl’s fingers had become so twisted into a shopping basket that store employees had to call 9-1-1 for help.

    The incident began Saturday night when a mother and daughter paid a visit to a Detroit-area Target. Sometime during the trip the little girl’s fingers became stuck in the holes of a shopping basket.

    Store employees were unable to set her fingers free using soap, so they called the local firefighters and paramedics.

    Authorities were able to free the girls fingers by cutting the basket with scissors and tin snips. The girl was uninjured.

    The local fire department tells the Detroit Free Press that they were “happy to assist with this simple but unusual situation and glad that she is okay.”

    It’s unclear how the girl’s fingers became so badly engaged with the basket, the fire department says.

    Firefighters free child’s fingers from shopping basket [The Detroit Free Press]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uChipotle Reveals Its Guacamole Recipe To The Worldr


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  • Is Chipotle farther away than your own kitchen? Probably, but that won’t matter now if you’ve got a hankering for the chain’s guacamole, because Chipotle revealed its recipe and instructions on how to make the good green stuff online Sunday morning.

    After making the announcement that it’s going entirely GMO-free with all its ingredients, its latest effort to woo the public appears to be a straight appeal to the tastebuds.

    “We know that you know that guac is extra, but have you ever thought about what makes it so delicious? Well, it starts with sourcing the best whole ingredients possible, and ends with a quick mash in our restaurant. In fact, it’s so easy, we’re going to show you how to do it below,” Chipotle says on its website.

    The recipe includes ingredients known to anyone who makes guacamole at home: Avocados, lime juice, salt, jalapenos, red onions and cilantro. Though the proportions are on a smaller scale — two avocados per homemade batch instead of the 48 used at Chipotle — other than that, Chipotle says this is it’s recipe.

    You can find the step-by-step ingredients (basically: Chop, add, mix, eat, as seen in the gif below) on Chipotle’s site. Charge yourself extra if you feel like it.

    guac



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


пятница, 1 мая 2015 г.

uNordstrom Remodels Flagship Stores, Won’t Make You Go Insider


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  • There are two interesting developments that Nordstrom is trying right now: first, they’re remodeling and fancying up their stores in Seattle, Chicago, and San Francisco, seeking to draw international tourists with world-class retail experiences. They’re also experimenting with curbside order pickup, so local shoppers can pick up their online order of bras without getting out of their cars.

    These trends make sense: while people might shop online for their own mundane purchases, while on vacation they might visit a department store that they don’t have at home. They’re shopping for recreation or for an experience rather than Nordstrom wants to attract people visiting these three cities from all over the world, and more importantly keep them in the building for long enough to buy some stuff.

    Two floors of the Seattle store have already been remodeled, and reporters got to tour the new space. There’s more natural light, and also a new cocktail and tapas bar and a cafe. The Seattle store will also be about 20,000 feet bigger than it was before the remodel, and renovations of the other floors will be done next spring. People probably won’t travel from all over the world just to see these stores, but they hope that tourists might stop in to shop.

    Nordstrom aims high with downtown flagship remodel [Seattle Times]

    SEE ALSO:
    Uncanny: This Man Can Always Tell When He’s In A Store’s Flagship Location [Clickhole]



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uPhilip Morris International Uses Copyright Claims To Quiet Marlboro Criticsr


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  • Earlier this year, John Oliver thrust Philip Morris International — the New York-based cigarette giant that markets Marlboro and other brands in hundreds of countries outside the U.S. — into the spotlight for its questionable legal efforts to delay and block tobacco regulation around the globe. And this morning, the company used copyright claims to have videos posted by critics of Marlboro removed from the Internet.

    The group Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids has been highly critical of the “Be Marlboro” marketing campaign that PMI has been running in various countries since 2012. The ads tell young smokers to “Don’t Be A Maybe” and project a vibrant lifestyle full of partying and extreme sports while leaving out things like cancer, emphysema, and heart disease.

    CTFK had compiled several Marlboro marketing videos with footage of Marlboro-sponsored parties that were part of this marketing. These clips were uploaded, without any editing, to video-sharing site Vimeo to show how Marlboro actively markets to the young-adult market.

    But after the group sent out a press release notifying the media of its video collection, the clips vanished from Vimeo because of a copyright request from the Philip Morris office in Switzerland:
    vimeograb

    The available takedown details provide nothing more than the names of the videos removed from the site other than the titles of the deleted clips and PMI’s claim to ownership. We’ve reached out to PMI for further explanation but have not yet received a reply from the company.

    “We want people to see these videos for the same reason Philip Morris International wants to take them down,” explains a spokesperson for the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, “because they make it clear that the Be Marlboro ad campaign is targeting young people around the world. Philip Morris claims they don’t market to kids, but the Be Marlboro advertising and videos show otherwise. They use images and themes like sex, parties and risk that are sure to appeal to teens and entice them to become Marlboro smokers. It’s important for public officials around the world to see this marketing and take action to protect kids by banning the Be Marlboro campaign and others like it.”

    While these particular videos are no longer available on Vimeo, we were able to view them in order to present them so that readers can decide whether or not they cross an ethical line.

    “In 2012, Marlboro launched a new revolutionary campaign — ‘Don’t Be A Maybe; Be Marlboro!’ — which is aimed to inspire a young adult smoker into decision-making,” explains the voice-over on the clip produced by Philip Morris Slovakia for a pop-up “Red City” festival Marlboro put together there. “Only thanks to courage, it’s possible to make decisions.”

    Philip Morris International says the goal of "Don't Be A Maybe" is to "inspire a young adult smoker into decision-making." Here we see someone jumping off a 10-meter tower, presumably rather than having to smoke a Marlboro.

    Philip Morris International says the goal of “Don’t Be A Maybe” is to “inspire a young adult smoker into decision-making.” Here we see someone jumping off a 10-meter tower, presumably rather than having to smoke a Marlboro.

    “We tried to inspire and induce visitors to make a decision to experience something new at the festival,” continues the voice-over. “Ongoing activities through the day were presented in the spirit of the brand campaign and linked to the overall concept through music, dance, graffiti, and lifestyle.”

    Marlboro wants to encourage young smokers to dance, which is good because they won't be able to dance very much later in life if they're still smoking.

    Marlboro wants to encourage young smokers to dance, which is good because they won’t be able to dance very much later in life if they’re still smoking.

    There was also a video from a 2012 party in Moldova, complete with DJs wearing furry panda heads and a topless dancer.

    Several minutes of the Moldova video feature this topless dancer grinding on the panda-headed DJs. The Marlboro logo in the image above was inserted to cover her bare, pierced nipples.

    Several minutes of the Moldova video feature this topless dancer grinding on the panda-headed DJs. The Marlboro logo in the image above was inserted to cover her bare, pierced nipples.

    In Indonesia, the partying may have been less explicit, but the Marlboro branding was not.

    While this Marlboro poster tells men to boldly go and ask for a woman's phone number, even though the only women shown attending this party were working there as models or dancers.

    While this Marlboro poster tells men to boldly go and ask for a woman’s phone number, even though the only women shown attending this party were working there as models or dancers.

    What's a party without premium product placement?

    What’s a party without premium product placement?

    The party also featured a fashion show with women wearing Marlboro's favorite color: red.

    The party also featured a fashion show with women wearing Marlboro’s favorite color: red.

    What better way to drive home the cigarette brand's anti-maybe message?

    What better way to drive home the cigarette brand’s anti-maybe message?

    While the Indonesia Marlboro party was noticeably free of non-working female attendees, the one in Saudi Arabia was a strictly male-only event, and even more focused on pushing Marlboro cigarettes:

    Interestingly, the Saudi Arabia video states that "Freedom doesn't start with a maybe," but glosses over the lack of freedom for women in Saudi Arabia.

    Interestingly, the Saudi Arabia video tells viewers that “Freedom doesn’t start with a maybe,” but glosses over the lack of freedom for women in Saudi Arabia (like the fact that none of them would be allowed to attend this party).

    In all of the videos we watched, this was the first where we saw any kind of visible health warning, though you'd have to squint to see it.

    In all of the videos we watched, this was the first where we saw any kind of visible health warning, though you’d have to squint to see it.

    Yes, that's a steel briefcase full of Marlboros...

    Yes, that’s a steel briefcase full of Marlboros…

    This is the guy who shows off that steel briefcase to talk up the cigarettes and distribute samples.

    This is the guy who shows off that steel briefcase to talk up the cigarettes and distribute samples.

    The video of the Saudi Marlboro party was the only one we saw where guests were actually shown smoking.

    The video of the Saudi Marlboro party was the only one we saw where guests were actually shown smoking.

    The video ends with "behind-the-scenes" footage of a host asking attendees to name the best cigarette brand. You'll never guess what they say.

    The video ends with “behind-the-scenes” footage of a host asking attendees to name the best cigarette brand. You’ll never guess what they say.

    One could argue that these parties are not significantly different from events thrown every night in cities all around the world by alcohol, electronics, software, and food companies. The claim could also be made that party attendees don’t actually care about the sponsor or the branding message and just want to enjoy themselves. At the same time, one has to wonder why Marlboro is going through the cost and expense of both throwing these parties and hiring producers to record them, but doesn’t want them to be shared — without any subsequent edits or commentary — by a group critical of Marlboro’s motives.

    We leave you with the original Last Week Tonight report that first put the Be Marlboro campaign in the national spotlight:

    (All above party photographs are screen-grabs taken from four separate Philip Morris videos provided to Consumerist by Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids)



ribbi
  • by Chris Morran
  • via Consumerist