Menu

Friday, March 20, 2015

Only One Bidder For Radio Shack’s Remains Wants To Keep Any Stores Open

http://ift.tt/18U9B47

In the bankruptcy auction for the smoldering remains of RadioShack, only one bidder is interested in keeping the chain open as a business. That’s Standard General, which also happens to be the lender that bailed out the company last year in a last-minute attempt to save the business.

Standard General plans to buy out 1,723 of RadioShack’s stores, and plans to run them in a co-branded venture with Sprint.


The offer for remaining stores from Standard General is $145.5 million, while RadioShack’s debts total more than $500 million. To cover the rest of those debts, they’ll have to sell other assets at auction, including remaining leases and inventory, corporate facilities, and anything else that the former Radio Shack management has sitting around. The estimate is lower than the original “We’ve gone from selling a Bentley to selling a Ford to selling a used Vespa,” a lawyer for one of the lenders said of the bankruptcy auction.


The auction takes place at noon on Monday. Other bidders who might bid for pieces of the company intend to sell off everything and shut down the RadioShack business entirely instead of trying to run a smaller chain of electronics stores.


Standard General is using the money that RadioShack owes it as a form of currency in the bankruptcy auction, something that junior (unsecured) creditors in the bankruptcy auction find problematic. Junior creditors have been questioning Standard General’s actions in the runup to declaring bankruptcy.


Standard General Says Its Bid Is RadioShack’s Sole Hope of Survival [Wall Street Journal]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Taco Bell May Relocate Original Bell Building To Save It From Demolition

http://ift.tt/1CmqkpE
The original Taco Bell opened in 1962 in Downey, CA. It now stands empty and local preservationists hope to save it.

The original Taco Bell opened in 1962 in Downey, CA. It now stands empty and local preservationists hope to save it.



Back in January, we reported that the Downey, CA, building where Taco Bell got its start more than 50 years ago is facing possible demolition. Taco Bell, which has long since moved on from that building, responded with a social media campaign to judge whether the structure was worth saving. But now it looks like the company is seriously considering the possibility of preserving the building where it all started, but in a different location.

There is already a relatively new, fully functional Taco Bell down the street from the currently vacant structure at 7112 Firestone Blvd. in Downey, where company founder Glenn Bell first opened the doors in 1962. And the land it sits on is likely too valuable to justify just keeping it as a bit of fast food history.


So, According to ABC News, Taco Bell has hired a local non-profit group, We Are the Next, to conduct a feasibility study for relocating the building.


“I don’t think there’s any question whether or not the building physically can be moved; it’s a very simple process,” explains WATN’s Katie Rispoli, adding that it’s more about figuring out the regulatory requirements involved. “[W]ould we be working with the city of Downey, would we have time to buy land before the building faces demolition, if we do buy land, is it going to be in Downey or somewhere near Downey? So we have a lot of factors we’re considering right now.”


A rep for Taco Bell tells ABC that the restored building could ultimately serve any number of purposes.


“Whether it’s used for another Taco Bell or as a museum or as community space we don’t know,” says the rep. “That’s the fun conversation we get to brainstorm about now. That’s the next question.”


Downey is home to another destination for fast food historians. The oldest existing McDonald’s (which is actually the third one ever built) is only a short drive across town.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Police: Man Said He Showed Meijer Workers Nude Selfies Because It Cheered Him Up

http://ift.tt/1MRdGVs

We’ve all had the blues, but when you need cheering up it shouldn’t involve showing unsuspecting store workers pictures of your junk. That’s what police in Grand Rapids say one man admitted to doing, because he says it cheers him up when he’s not feeling so great.

The 51-year-old man is accused of snapping photos of his nether regions on his cell phone and then showing them to employees at several area Meijer stores, reports MLive.com.


Police say he showed his nudie pics to an employee in the photo department of one store near the end of January, and then two days later allegedly pulled out his phone while talking to a female worker in the electronics department and displayed photos of his exposed privates.


He was identified through video surveillance at the stores, and police say he then confessed to his show-and-tell sessions. Police say he admitted knowing that sharing such photos with unsuspecting people is wrong, but that he liked to see their reactions.


“Yeah, it cheers me up when I’m feeling down,” an affidavit quotes him as saying.


Due to a history of criminal sexual conduct spanning back to 1986, he’s being charged as a sexually delinquent person, which means he can be detained until a judge says he’s no longer a threat to anyone.


Man tells police showing pictures of his penis to Meijer employees ‘Cheers me up’ [MLive.com]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Watch Workers Replace A Retention Pond With A Trader Joe’s

http://ift.tt/1AQSmIc

tjstoreThe dilemma at a shopping center in Schaumburg, Illinois was a true modern one: Trader Joe’s wanted to build a store there, but there was no vacant space in which to build a store. The resourceful owners decided to make more space by covering an artificial pond with the store and its parking lot.


“In late 2013, Trader Joe’s expressed significant interest in establishing a new location at Woodfield Village Green, but, due to the high occupancy level, the shopping center did not have the obvious space required to accommodate the specialty grocer’s footprint,” the mall owner explains on its page about the project. Infrequent visitors to the mall may have wondered how a pond sprouted a specialty grocery store. Thanks to this six-month time lapse video, you can watch exactly what happened during every day of this construction project.


Here’s a quick summary: they built a water retention system that would go underground, then filled in the ex-pond with rocks and gravel, then built a store on top of it.


The video does play audio, but it’s just relatively bland music and not relevant to the actual construction.



Trader Joe's Construction | Woodfield Village Green | DDR Corp. from DDR on Vimeo.


Creative Expansion Brings Trader Joe’s to Chicago Market [DDR] (via Chain Store Age)




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

The Numbers Show Startups Can’t Get Enough Of Calling Themselves The “Uber” For This, The “Airbnb” Of That

http://ift.tt/1C6gdro

If you’ve been hearing startup companies throw around phrases like, “We’re the Uber of [insert industry that is not ride-hailing]!” or “Our service functions just like the Airbnb of [another industry that is not renting out rooms to strangers]!” you’re not alone. A recent analysis of language used by startups to describe their businesses show that a lot of them are hitching their apple carts to those brands’ rising stars.

MarketWatch sorted through 477,358 company entries on AngelList, which is a platform with startup profiles and investing opportunities. Analysts looked at the companies’ descriptions or high-concept pitches, searching for specific uses of company comparisons.


The most popular belle at the startup ball is Airbnb, which was referenced 270 times, followed by Uber at 220 mentions and LinkedIn nudged out Facebook at 180 name drops.


Airbnb is used often to bring the idea of a sharing economy to mind, while Uber is the chosen company for indicating on-demand service. LinkedIn, in somewhat of a surprise, was the popular choice for social networking site comparisons.


“It is more powerful and much more needed today to spread the message of who you are and what you do,” said one investment expert, who says using the popular comparisons has become more prevalent for startups as new businesses try to capitalize on the success of known businesses.


On the other hand, investors could be experiencing brand overload after hearing these same names thrown out again and again, much like many consumers. And often, using a name everyone else is throwing out there to stand out can also lead to a company coming off as the opposite, instead of new and groundbreaking in its own right.


“It’s no longer quite so inspiring,” said a partner at another investment firm, especially when startups use the names to designate themselves as “preordained winners.”


We analyzed 477,358 startup pitches, and this is the shockingly unoriginal secret formula [MarketWatch]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Report: Apples, Not Caramel Deemed Responsible For December Listeriosis Outbreak

https://consumermediallc.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/apples.png?w=680&h=340

A December outbreak of listeriosis linked to several kinds of prepackaged caramel apples may be over, but regulators say they now know it was the apple, not the caramel that led to the death of seven people and the sickening of 35 others.


Food Safety News reports that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that at least three people who had only eaten whole or sliced green apples became sick as part of the outbreak.


The new information seems to confirm that the listeria contamination originated at an apple processing plant for California-based Bidart Bros.


The company issued a recall of Granny Smith and Gala apples back in January after testing found a connection between the produce and two strains of Listeria monocytogenes responsible for the deadly listeria outbreak.


Prior to that testing, several caramel apple producers, including Happy Apple, California Snack Foods, and Merb’s Candies recalled products.


A possible contamination was first reported in December 2014, after five people died and at least 28 people in 10 state became infected with Listeriosis due to Listeria monocytogenes – a bacteria that can cause life-threatening illness.


At that time, the CDC warned all consumers to avoid eating prepackaged caramel apples, including plain caramel apples as well as those containing nuts, sprinkles, chocolate, or other toppings.


In all, the outbreak affected consumers ages 5 to 92 in all corners of the U.S. including Arizona, California, Minnesota, Missouri, New Mexico, North Carolina, Texas, Utah, Washington, and Wisconsin.


While the latest update on the CDC website states that the listeriosis outbreak is over, the agency continues to advise consumers to avoid eating Bidart Bros. apples.


Apples Were Apparently the Contaminated Ingredient in Those Caramel Apples [Food Safety News]




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Contractor Steals Homeowners’ Valuables, Demands Cash For Their Return

http://ift.tt/1I6nKHA

It’s certainly not unheard of to have your things stolen by workers with access to your home, but most of them don’t have the gall to justify their theft by saying the victim should pay a ransom because the thief’s boss doesn’t pay them enough.

The Philadelphia Daily News’ Ronnie Polaneczky has the story of a couple here in Philly who have experienced one nightmare after another since moving into their newly constructed home in 2012.


First, the roof leaked, and even though the builder had included a one-year warranty, the delay in fixing the problem resulted in damage to interior walls and floors.


They finally seemed to get that problem sorted out and hired a contractor to repair the walls. Everything was fine until the day when the couple left the home for a few hours while work continued.


When they returned, the front door was open, the workers were missing — and so was some jewelry, an iPad, and three laptops, one of which contained the only digital copy of the husband’s thesis dissertation that he was set to defend the next day.


The couple contacted the police and began reaching out to the foreman on the job, begging him to help make things right.


When he finally replied, the foreman initially blamed the theft on another worker before ultimately admitting he’d stolen the items “for leverage” because his boss didn’t pay him enough.


The next day, the thief texted to say he’d return the purloined items if the homeowner paid $300. They arranged to meet in a McDonald’s parking lot. Meanwhile, the homeowner alerted police and made photocopies of the cash so that the serial numbers could be used as evidence.


Then the thief got cold feet, texting that “I have this feeling that u are going to have cops with u I seen this in movies before we’re u meet at the drop and the bad guy gets caught.”


He then sent multiple texts with directions to a second exchange spot.


Eventually, the homeowner found some of his stuff (one laptop, the iPad, and some jewelry were missing) stashed in a gym bag (also stolen from his home) inside a garbage can. The thief was nowhere to be found.


The couple sued the owner of the company that employed the thief, and even though the court sided with them, the homeowners have yet to see a penny.


Check out the whole sordid story at Philly.com.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Report: New Streaming TV Services Trying To Sidestep Net Neutrality Rule

http://ift.tt/1BX9XRt



A segment of consumers has for many years been begging for an unbundled, à la carte option for programming. That future is now taking its first shambling steps into our homes — only, it’s happening through the magic of the internet, and not in pay-TV subscriptions. But right now, we are in a particularly turbulent time for sorting out the rules of what is and isn’t allowed when it comes to giving preferential treatment to certain services. While the virtual ink is still drying on the brand-new, not-yet-implemented open internet rule, new players in the field of over-the-top internet TV are already trying to see just how far that rule bends.

As The Wall Street Journal (paywalled) reports, HBO, Showtime, and Sony are all hoping negotiate deals for preferential treatment, and to sidestep potential data “thresholds”, with their over-the-top services.


What content companies are specifically trying to negotiate for, according to the WSJ, are agreements that would make them “managed” traffic.


The broadband connection your home has to your ISP — Comcast, Verizon, Cox, and so on — treats all your uses of the internet the same way. That’s what net neutrality is and was all about: that it doesn’t matter whether you’re using your paid-for slice of the broadband pipe to stream Taylor Swift videos on YouTube, play World of Warcraft, download images in questionable taste, forward chain e-mails to your grandkids, or watch serious-issue documentaries on Netflix. All of those things are basically part of the general mishmash of the internet.


However, there’s also a whole category of connected things that use bandwidth but aren’t part of that general internet soup. Such managed services are explicitly exempt from Title II classification and, therefore, the net neutrality regulation that goes with. The FCC’s go-to examples for such services are VoIP calling — that landline that’s attached to your cable modem and not to copper wires — and dedicated health monitoring systems, like a pacemaker that checks in with a remote server.


So. If content companies negotiate deals with ISPs that make their video streams into managed services,that means that their traffic is not considered equal, or traveling in the same metaphorical lane, as all those other things you do on the internet. If we stick with the road metaphor, HBO, Showtime, and Sony would basically have arranged to be the only cars in the HOV lane, and to be guaranteed permanent access to the HOV lane. And the rest of your traffic is all jostling for position on the main road, with all the challenges that presents.


Not only would positioning as managed services theoretically guarantee smooth connections and good video quality for those services, but also it would exempt those streams from data caps. (ISPs can also agree to exempt certain usages from their data caps without also marking them as managed services or handling their traffic differently.)


This concept, called zero rating, has proven to work very well in the mobile space — at least, for the wireless carriers and the large services that can afford to strike deals with them.


Data usage caps on mobile broadband are the norm for most of us, but they’re not exactly uncommon in home wired broadband, either. Recent reports estimate that if Comcast and Time Warner Cable do successfully merge, nearly 80% of users would be subject to data caps on their home broadband. ISPs, which enjoy making money, completely love the idea of expanding data caps. Consumers, who dislike being nickled and dimed, totally hate it. But lack of competition means consumers don’t usually have much choice one way or the other.


Of course, if someone tells you there’s a cap on how much data you can use without hitting a magic “pay more” threshold, most consumers are going to try to minimize how much data they use. And if some services and not others are exempt from those caps, well, that’s definitely a mark in favor of the zero-rated services as far as consumers are concerned.


With all of those advantages, it’s easy to see why new streaming video services would want to negotiate those deals. What’s less clear, however, is what possible motivation existing ISPs — the majority of whom are also existing pay-TV companies — would have to agree to them.


A subscriber to HBO Now or Showtime’s streaming service may well still keep their cable bundle. But a Sony Vue user has absolutely no reason to. The two services are redundant to one another. So why would Comcast, say, want to give Sony special access to Sony to encourage consumers to become cord-cutters? Unless Sony paid Comcast some ridiculous sum like $30 – $100 per customer, which they would not, Comcast would be shooting themselves in the virtual, vertically-integrated foot.


As it currently stands, there is nothing illegal or against the rules in any of this… unless there is. That’s where it gets tricky: the new open internet order is vague on the specifics about managed services, data caps, and zero rating agreements.


That’s partly by design. In the current order, the FCC wanted to set the high-level, bright-line guidance for internet fairness, with many next-level-down, more specific rules about specific aspects of regulation to come down the line. The commission also intentionally left room for growth: the internet and all the many companies and technologies in it move very quickly, and if the rule were too specific, loopholes that accidentally permit future bad behavior would be easy to come by.


There’s no knowing right now what contracts are actually being negotiated, or how they’ll hold up legally once they are. But with pretty much everyone jumping into the gray areas full steam ahead, the next great battle already seems likely to be on the way.


Streaming TV Services Seek to Sidestep Web Congestion [The Wall Street Journal]




by Kate Cox via Consumerist

Lawsuit Claims Several Brands Of Wine Contain “Very High” Levels Of Arsenic

http://ift.tt/1HbJYdx

Before you tip back a glass of your favorite wine to salute the glorious arrival of the weekend, you might want to consider how you feel about potentially drinking arsenic: A new lawsuit claims that some low-cost brands from various winemakers have “very high” levels of arsenic in their products.

The lawsuit filed Thursday in California Superior Court claims that 28 wineries knowingly violated state law by producing wine contaminated with arsenic, and failing to inform consumers about potential dangers, says a company called BeverageGrades on a website for the lawsuit, TaintedWine.com.


The federal government doesn’t have regulations that set the acceptable limit for arsenic in wine, but the lawsuit says that some of the wines tested had up to four and fives times the maximum allowed by the Environmental Protection Agency for drinking water.


BeverageGrades says it conducted testing on more than 1,300 bottles of wine, with almost a quarter of them containing levels higher than the EPA’s maximum for drinking water, which is 10 parts per billion.


“Some very, very high levels of arsenic,” the company’s founder told CBS News, adding that he noticed a pattern in the results.


“The lower the price of wine on a per-liter basis, the higher the amount of arsenic,” he said.


Included in that list: Trader Joe’s famed Two-Buck Chuck White Zinfandel (at three times the drinking water limit); a bottle of Ménage à Trois Moscato (four times the limit) and a Franzia White Grenache that clocked in at five times the EPA limit for drinking water.


He handed his data over to a law firm after unsuccessfully reaching out to wine companies, he says. The lawsuit is a proposed class-action lawsuit that accuses more than 24 winemakers of misrepresenting their wine as safe.


So are these levels dangerous? Allan Smith, an epidemiologist and associate director of the Arsenic Health Effects research program at U.C. Berkeley says that the highest level found in one of the bottles tested came in at 50 parts per billion of arsenic, which could be deadly over time. Again, based on drinking water studies, which is the only drink that has a set arsenic limit.


“We estimate that approximately 1 in 100 people who drink water like that throughout their life will die from the arsenic, ultimately, due to mostly cancers from it,” he told CBS.


But a spokesperson for The Wine Group, which is one of the companies named in the lawsuit, points out that there’s a difference between drinking wine and drinking water.


“It would not be accurate or responsible to use the water standard as the baseline” he said, because people tend to drink a lot more water than they do wine. And in Canada, where the government does set limits for arsenic in wine, the highest level of arsenic cited in the lab results is “only half of Canada’s standard for wine, of 100 parts per billion.”


Under California law, businesses must warn consumers if their products contain “a chemical known to the state to cause cancer,” with a threshold of 10 parts per billion. However, an advocacy group for California lawmakers says the industry already provides warning signs that can be posted in retail stores.


Trader Joe’s sells Two Buck Chuck, and told CBS that “the concerns raised in your inquiry are serious and are being treated as such. We are investigating the matter with several of our wine producing suppliers.”


The lawsuit doesn’t name a dollar amount, but seeks “injunctive relief, civic penalties, disgorgement and damages.”


The attorney who filed the lawsuit says his goal is “to get the winemakers to recall these wines, to get them to refund the money that people paid for these wines, and ultimately to clean up the wine industry in California.”


“Very high levels of arsenic” in top-selling wines [CBS News]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

BMW Settles FTC Charges That It Required Consumers To Use Specific Parts, Service Centers Or Lose Warranties

http://ift.tt/1CEDe6U

Under federal law, car manufactures are prohibited from threatening to revoke vehicle warranties based on where a consumer chooses to have their vehicle fixed. Apparently, a division of BMW didn’t follow that rule and now must change its practices to resolve charges from federal regulators.

The Federal Trade Commission announced this week that BMW agreed to settle charges that its Mini division – which handles all Mini Cooper sales – violated provisions of the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act by telling vehicle owners that the company would void their warranties unless they used Mini dealers and parts for repairs.


According to the FTC settlement [PDF], BMW told owners that in order to maintain a vehicle’s safe operation and value they must “have routine maintenance performed only by Mini dealers unless the representation is true and BMW can substantiate it with reliable scientific evidence.”


In order to resolve the charges, BMW must provide affected BMW Mini owners with information about their right to use third-party parts and service without voiding warranty coverage, unless the manufacturer offers the parts and services free of charge.


Additionally, the company is barred from representing that, to ensure a vehicle’s safe operation or maintain its value, owners must have routine maintenance performed only by Mini dealers or Mini centers, unless the representation is true and BMW can substantiate it with reliable scientific evidence.


A spokesperson for BMW tells The Detroit News that the company did not agree with the FTC’s claims but settled for the best interest of consumers.


BMW Settles FTC Charges that Its MINI Division Illegally Conditioned Warranty Coverage on Use of Its Parts and Service [Federal Trade Commission]




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

5 Food Prep Tips For Reducing Pesticide Risks

http://ift.tt/eA8V8J

When you buy a sack of potatoes with dirt still clinging to the spuds, you know they’ll need a wash before going into your dinner. But those completely clean-looking apples, peaches, and strawberries may carry a less-visible danger in the form of pesticide residues.


The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention claims that that there are traces of 29 different pesticides in the average American’s body, so our colleagues at Consumer Reports recently published an extensive look at the pervasiveness of this problem and how consumers can best reduce their risk of chowing down on pesticides.


In the above video, CR gives the following food-prep tips for cutting down your risk of exposure to pesticides in produce.


1. Wash thoroughly.

Not just a spritz or a dust-off. You should wash fruits & vegetables under running water for at least 30 seconds to one minute.


2. Use a brush.

Help scrub off any residues by employing a clean brush for firm-skinned produce like apples and carrots. There are specialty brushes available for items like mushrooms and potatoes. Keep all your brushes clean by regularly washing with hot, soapy water, or by tossing them in the dishwasher.


3. Shed layers.

The outer layers of foods like lettuce and cabbage are where you’ll find most pesticide residues.


4. Go organic, especially if you’re using the whole item.

CR recommends that you buy organic produce whenever possible, as the use of synthetic pesticides on these items is limited. Organics are particularly important if you’re intending to use the outer skin of a fruit or vegetable, like a potato peel or lemon rind.


5. Organics still need to be washed.

Even though organic produce is grown using a limited range of pesticides, there’s no way to rule out cross-contamination from other crops. So it’s just as important to wash these foods as conventionally grown produce.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Parent Company Of Johnnie Walker, Guinness, Smirnoff Will Include Nutritional Info On Beverage Labels

http://ift.tt/1CCaNEZ

We know that the thought at the forefront of your mind while downing a shot of whiskey is “How many calories are in this?” It’ll be a lot easier to figure out now when drinking brands like Johnnie Walker, Guinness, Smirnoff and Baileys, as parent company Diageo announced today it’ll include nutritional information on its products’ labels.

The U.S. Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau gave companies the go-ahead to include information like calories, carbohydrates, fat and protein content on booze labels on 2013, but it’s a voluntary thing.


Diageo said in a statement Thursday that all its brands will display per serving nutritional information on drink labels, and has gained approval for the label on its U.S. products from the bureau.


“Consumers are increasingly discerning about what’s in their glass,” Diageo Chief Executive Officer Ivan Menezes said in the statement. “We are committed to ensuring our consumers have the best possible information from which to make informed choices.”


The company says it’s the first one to voluntarily disclose nutritional information on alcoholic drinks, and it could be a good way to stay in tune with the consumer trend of disclosing what exactly is in the products we’re eating and drinking.




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Suspected Walmart Shoplifter Kicks Through Ceiling, Tunnels Out Via Air Ducts

http://ift.tt/1APRgfE
Escape from the Walmart ceiling.

Escape from the Walmart ceiling.



We never imagined that the world’s greatest criminal masterminds would bother to shop-lift from Walmart. Yet a suspected shoplifter at a store in Alabama made an escape from the store worthy of a terrible spy movie. He was captured on surveillance camera climbing up into the ceiling, navigating air ducts, and then kicking his way down through the ceiling near the store exit.

The man was accused of stealing some clothes, and his daring escape was out of proportion to the crime he was being accused of. Evading justice may even put him in more trouble than the original theft…if he’s apprehended.


Security sat the man down in the McDonald’s restaurant within the store, and from there he punched through the ceiling and climbed up and through 20 feet of ducts. Store employees are calling him Spider-Man for obvious reasons, but would the real Spider-Man steal clothes before he escaped using not-so-secret tunnels? Where could you hide shoplifted goods in a spidey-suit, anyway?


Accused Shoplifter Turns Into Spider-Man For Escape [WKRG]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Burger King Announces Limited Edition Whopper-Scented Cologne

http://ift.tt/1H9m52Q

whoppercologne Did we miss some kind of memo that made it cool to smell like your food without the pleasure of actually eating anything? Because Burger King apparently feels the need to jump on the fast food scent train, announcing that it’ll bestow 1,000 bottles of Whopper-scented cologne upon the world on April 1.


Alas, as with Pizza Hut’s foray into food perfume, which was limited to Canada at first, only people in Japan will be able to get their hands on a bottle of burger cologne.


Burger King announced today that the April 1 date is not because this whole thing is an obvious April Fool’s joke, but because it’s Whopper day for the company, notes the Associated Press.


The Flame Grilled fragrance sells for 5,000 yen or about $40, along with the purchase of a burger with flame-grilled beef. Ketchup and mustard packets will also be available in case you want to squirt some into your hair to complete the effect.


Burger King has cologne for hamburger lovers [Associated Press]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Graco Agrees To Pay $3M Fine For Delayed Reporting Of Car Seat-Buckle Complaints

http://ift.tt/1FMAIux

After Graco recalled about six million car seats last year in two sets of recalls because the harness’ buckles could get stuck, the company has now agreed to shell out $3 million to the government for being slow to report complaints about the tricky buckles.

Along with that payment, Grace has to spend $7 million on measures to improve child seat safety, reports the Associated Press.


This means a better way of registering seat owners so that if there’s a safety problem, they can be notified quickly and easily. It also has to work on better procedures to identify issues and make recalls happen faster.


Last year a National Highway Traffic Safety Administration investigation looked into Graco’s behavior during what was the biggest child seat recall in the U.S. to date.


The trouble started when Graco announced it was recalling 4.2 million toddler seats in February 2014. But what about infant car seats? asked NHTSA in a letter to the company accusing it of playing down the recall with “incomplete and misleading” documents for consumers. Then in July, Graco gave in and issued a recall for 1.9 million car seats with the same sticky buckle situation.


Friday’s fine “uses NHTSA’s enforcement authority to not only hold a manufacturer accountable, but to keep our kids safe,” Mark Rosekind, the agency’s administrator, said in a statement.


The president of Graco Children’s Products said in a statement that Graco is sorry it fell short of NHTSA’s expectations when it came to gathering data about the recalls and spreading the word to customers.


“We accept this fine and the additional funding requested by NHTSA for a joint venture involving child passenger safety initiatives in the future,” said Laurel Hurd.


Graco fined for delayed reporting of seat-buckle complaints [Associated Press]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

FAA Clears Amazon To Start Testing Delivery Drone Flights

http://ift.tt/1LzGDIc

amazonprimeair2 Amazon is getting one step closer to the company’s dream of delivering packages by air, as the Federal Aviation Administration has given the company the go-ahead to start testing drones outside.


The FAA issued an experimental airworthiness certificate to Amazon Logistics, Inc., for what it calls an “unmanned aircraft design” that the company will use for research and development of its proposed Amazon Prime Air service, as well as crew training, the FAA says.


Lest anyone thinks drones will just start whizzing through the sky willynilly, there are some restrictions and conditions set in the certificate that Amazon must abide by in testing its fliers: All flights must stay below 400 feet and happen during the daylight, in clear skies.


The drone has to stay within the pilot’s line of sight at all times, as well as an observer. And whoever is flying the aircraft has to have at least a private pilot’s certificate and current medical certification.


From here, Amazon will have to provide monthly data about its test to the FAA, reporting the number of flights conducted, pilot duty time per flight, unusual hardware or software malfunctions, any deviations from air traffic controllers’ instructions, and any unintended loss of communication links.




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Consumerist Friday Flickr Finds

http://ift.tt/1CBlSWR

Here are eight of the best photos that readers added to the Consumerist Flickr Pool in the last week, picked for usability in a Consumerist post or for just plain neatness.










Want to see your pictures on our site? Our Flickr Pool is the place where Consumerist readers upload photos for possible use in future Consumerist posts. Just be a registered Flickr user, go here, and click “Join Group?” up on the top right. Choose your best photos, then click “send to group” on the individual images you want to add to the pool.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Thursday, March 19, 2015

#NewsAlert What is goin on Repost By @balleralert:...





#NewsAlert What is goin on Repost By @balleralert:

“Washington (CNN)The hanging death of an African-American man who had been missing since early this month and was found Thursday by local authorities in Mississippi has drawn the scrutiny of the FBI and the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division.


The sheriff’s office in Claiborne County, Mississippi had organized a search for the man, who had been missing since March 2 and reported missing March 8. Authorities found the body hanging from a tree in the woods behind the residence where he had been living.


It is unclear if it is a suicide, or if the man was killed by someone.


But at this point there are two parallel investigations: one by local authorities into the death and one by the FBI into whether there may be any federal civil rights violations. The FBI has a forensics team on the scene in Mississippi in part because the bureau has responsibility for federal civil rights law.


The Department of Justice Civil Rights Division and U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Mississippi are also investigating the death, according to a spokeswoman for the Justice Department.


According to a statement from the FBI, the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation is also on the scene. “Earlier in the day, the Claiborne County Sheriffs Department and the Mississippi Wildlife Fisheries and Parks conducted a ground search for a man who had been missing since early March. Officers located a man hanging in the woods near Roddy Road a half mile from his last known residence,” according to the FBI statement.” #mississippi #OfficialPlugMag #OfficialPlugMagazine #ThePlugMag #ThePlugMagazine #PluggedInNews






via Tumblr http://ift.tt/1C22OR3

CDC Links Listeriosis Illnesses To Fruit Recalled In July 2014

http://ift.tt/1BDq2YM

Last summer, a California-based fruit packing company recalled all fruit that had passed through their plant during a six-week period, since they were potentially contaminated with Listeria bacteria. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have definitively linked fruits from the Wawona plant and cases of Listeriosis in different parts of the country, but what does that mean? should people who are pregnant or frail avoid fresh peaches and nectarines?

In short: no. Fresh fruit is good for you, and is also delicious. Listeriosis poses a special risk to pregnant women, and also people who are elderly or have compromised immune systems. These people shouldn’t avoid fruit, but should be sure to wash fresh fruit that they eat carefully. (Everyone was doing that already, right?)


The CDC used whole-genome sequencing to match bacteria from people who became sick from listeriosis during the period covered in the Wawona Packing Company recall. They checked whether the bacteria that made four people in different parts of the country sick matched. Two of them did. Investigators were able to use grocery store loyalty card records to match the customers’ purchases of fruit that had passed through that plant to an illness.


When it comes to fruit, the most important thing to remember in order to prevent infection with Listeria is to wash the fruit before you eat it.


Follow the FDA’s tips to avoid cross-contamination between types of food, and don’t leave precooked meats sitting around in your refrigerator for a long time.


Notes from the Field: Listeriosis Associated with Stone Fruit — United States, 2014 [MMWR]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Truck Carrying 30,000 Pounds Of Lobsters Overturns, All Survive To Become Dinner

http://ift.tt/1EwhvJf

lobstertruck


When a tractor-trailer tips over and spills its edible cargo on the highway, it’s simultaneously sad and hilarious as long as no one is seriously injured. In that case, it would be just sad. Heavy snow in Maine yesterday caused a tractor-trailer accident involving one truck and thousands of lobsters.


Before you hop in your car with a trunk full of butter and wearing a bib, you should know that the lobsters did not scatter across the highway, and remain uncooked and alive. According to the driver, he had swerved to avoid a car in the wintery conditions, and the vehicle fell on its side off the highway. The passing lane was closed all day.


The lobsters are a rare happy ending in one of these stories where a toppled trailer spills food on the highway. The lobsters will need to be inspected, but they survived the crash. Exoskeletons have their advantages. They were loaded into a different truck for distribution to their respective pots of boiling water. The truck, unfortunately, was destroyed, but the driver was unhurt.


lobstahs


In recent years, we’ve seen candy, ramen noodles, frozen turkeys, French fries, potatoes, beer, more beer, dairy products, chicken, and ham scattered on the highway, and most of the food ended up in the trash (though those turkeys were donated.)


Tractor Trailer Carrying 30,000 Lbs. of Lobster Overturns on I-95 [NECN] (Thanks, Peg!)




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Cheapo Euro Airline Ryanair Denies Plans To Launch Transatlantic Flights To The U.S.

http://ift.tt/1LxALiI

Maybe April Fool’s Day comes early in Ireland? Just four days after European budget airline Ryanair announced its board approved plans to launch transatlantic flights, the company backtracked, saying no such plans have ever been in the works.


In a short statement released Thursday afternoon, Ryanair denied that the airline had considered or approved an expansion into the U.S. market via transatlantic flights.


“In the light of recent press coverage, the Board of Ryanair Holdings Plc wishes to clarify that it has not considered or approved any transatlantic project and does not intend to do so,” the statement reads.


The abrupt about-face comes after it was widely publicized that within the next five years the company would begin offering flights to New York, Boston, Chicago, Miami from London, Dublin and Berlin, with one-way tickets that could start as low as $20.


At the time, representatives for the Ireland-based company reportedly told the Irish Times that a start date for the flights depended on the availability of aircraft, but that Ryanair was already in talks with manufacturers to buy more long-haul planes.


BBC News reports that Ryanair first announced plans for transatlantic flights back in 2008, but nothing had come to fruition until this week.


Ryanair abandons plans to operate transatlantic flights [BBC News]




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Amsterdam Uber Driver: Mysterious Masked Men Threatened Me

http://ift.tt/1CeQOct
(redsox223)

(redsox223)



From the point of view of Uber, a service that summons cars and drivers over the Internet, maybe the fines imposed on the company by governments are a relatively cheap marketing expense instead of a nuisance. Yesterday, we shared that Germany has banned the company yet again. Authorities in the Netherlands have imposed a fine of $107,000 on the company for violating the laws that regulate taxis.

Yet the company’s UberPop service, where ordinary citizens pay to drive each other around, still operates in the Netherlands while the company appeals that fine. One driver told a radio reporter that he was attacked by a mysterious group of masked anti-Uber vigilantes. Taxis and regular cars blocked his vehicle in and confronted him, and he even recalls feeling brass knuckles pressed into his neck.

Police say that another driver reported being blocked in while on the job as well, but neither driver was physically harmed. One can’t blame them for wanting to quit driving for the company, though, which is exactly the point.


It sounds outlandish, but this wouldn’t be the first incident of anti-Uber, pro-taxi driver violence in Europe since the company expanded there. Taxi drivers blocked off traffic to protest Uber last summer, and there were also slashed tires and broken windows in Paris last year that were blamed on drivers of traditional taxis.


Masked Men Ambushing Uber Driver Elevates Clash in Amsterdam [Bloomberg]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist