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Wimpy Grills – founded in Bloomington, Indiana, in 1934; eventually grew to 25 locations within the United States and 1,500 outside of the U.S.; its international locations were eventually sold to J. Lyons and Co. in the United Kingdom, which remains open while all of the American locations eventually closed by 1978 [14] [15] [16] [17]
Cicis. One of the nation’s foremost all-you-can-eat pizza chains emerged from the pandemic significantly smaller. Cicis, where you can famously down all the Mac & Cheese pizza, pasta salad, and ...
Photo: Shutterstock. Design: Eat This, Not That!A spate of closures swept the restaurant industry in 2023 as struggling chains shuttered dozens or even hundreds of locations.Using data from the ...
The restaurant scored 18 on a Dec. 7 follow-up inspection, but the inspector found black organic residue on the soda nozzles and can opener and saw flies in the back and dining areas. Several ...
GNC closed over 900 stores in 2019, including between 300 and 400 of the chain's 800 shopping mall locations, which have been particularly hard-hit by declining foot traffic at malls overall. [146] Godiva Chocolatier closed all of its North American retail locations in 2021 after the chocolate company faced a decrease in sales and foot traffic ...
The show focuses on the Mystery Diners, an organization led by Charles Stiles that goes undercover at specific restaurants at their owners' requests, and sets up undercover stings and unseen surveillance cameras to catch misbehaving restaurant employees in the act. [1] Season 9 had Charles Stiles starting to make use of private investigators.
Hooters has closed a number of “underperforming” restaurant locations, the fast-casual chain confirmed to TODAY.com. News of the chain’s abrupt closures in markets from Kentucky to Texas to ...
Texadelphia is a cheesesteak sandwich restaurant chain established in Austin, Texas in 1981 by Philadelphia native Joel Stanley. Texadelphia has had locations in and around Austin, San Antonio, Dallas, Houston, the Rio Grande Valley, and Oklahoma City. [1] [2] The name is a portmanteau of "Texas" and "Philadelphia.”