#Publix Supermarkets
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adribosch-fan · 8 months ago
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La historia de éxito de Publix Supermarkets en Estados Unidos
Descubre cómo Publix Supermarkets se ha convertido en una de las mejores cadenas de supermercados en Estados Unidos, ofreciendo una experiencia de compra excepcional basada en la atención al cliente y la satisfacción del empleado. Texto del contenido: “George Jenkins era hijo de un dueño de una tienda general en la ciudad rural agrícola de Harris City, Georgia. La tienda vendía de todo, excepto…
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nwbeerguide · 1 year ago
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Publix Supermarkets and Taylor Sheridan's 666 Grit & Glory agree to 100-store trial.
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Press Release
(Guthrie, TX-October 2023) The deep south is getting a taste of big ranch Texas, as Florida-based Publix Supermarkets plans to roll out a 100-store trial of Taylor Sheridan’s 6666 Grit & Glory line of premium beers, ranch water and vodka cocktails in select retail markets. The grocery giant just signed on to offer Grit & Glory products to customers in the Tampa and Orlando markets.
Publix Supermarkets joins other major retail brands offering the Grit & Glory line of beverages. A year after the brand’s launch, 6666 Grit & Glory products are a major hit with other national and regional retailers in 37 states including Kroger, Tom Thumb, Randall’s, Ralph’s, Marianos, Acme, Harris Teeter, Jewel Osco, Save Mart, Albertson, Target, Sprouts and HEB. A just-announced distribution agreement with Wal Mart will soon expand the brand’s presence nationwide to all 50 states, and 6666 Grit & Glory CEO Tom Larsen expects sales grow to $40 million in 2024, making it one of the fastest growing brands in the alcoholic beverage category. “We’re excited to expand and partner with Publix to make Grit & Glory products available to their customers in important markets like Tampa and Orlando,” said Larsen. “Publix is an iconic brand with an expanding footprint across the south—we know this trial is the start of something big.”
The “6666 Grit & Glory” brand was inspired by the famous Four Sixes Ranch, owned by Taylor Sheridan and David Glasser, creator and producer of the small-screen hit series “Yellowstone”. The 6666 brand’s swift emergence coincides with the buzz and popularity of Yellowstone and its ties to the Four Sixes Ranch as an integral part of the Yellowstone story line. The legendary 260,000-acre spread and its rich heritage serve as an important backdrop for the series, transporting the Yellowstone story and its characters from Montana south to Guthrie, Texas.
Sheridan and the Grit & Glory team plan to capitalize on the show’s popularity with co-branded promotions and retailer sweepstakes, including a just-announced sweepstakes with a walk-on role in one of Sheridan’s future productions focusing on the Four Sixes Ranch. The beverage line is just one more facet of Sheridan’s vision—making the Four Sixes Ranch a full circle brand offering products, entertainment and experiences to the public that resonate with the real flavors, textures and values of big ranch Texas and the authentic cowboy lifestyle. Known for producing prize quarter horses, cattle and hard-core cowboys for more than 150 years, the brand will soon add ready to drink cocktails to the product line up as they continue to build on the legacy of this iconic ranch. “With the shows, with the ranch, with Grit & Glory, I want people to get a sense of where the past and the future come together—it’s relatable. People get it and we want the Four Sixes to help tell that story.” 
About Publix Supermarkets
With over 225,000 employees, Publix Super Markets is the world’s largest employee owned business. One of the ten largest volume supermarket chains in the country, Publix owns and operates 1,271 retail locations across the southeastern US. One of the best-performing companies in the grocery industry, Publix has continued to expand and open up new locations in recent years.
About Four Sixes Ranch
“Four Sixes” has been a working ranch dating to the 1870s. Now owned by hit series Yellowstone producers Taylor Sheridan and David Glasser, the 6666 ranch and its authentic western roots were the inspiration for the line of Grit and Glory craft alcohol beverages.  The rich heritage of the legendary 260,000-acre spread is the backdrop for “6666”, transporting the Yellowstone story and its characters from Montana south to Guthrie, Texas. After purchasing the ranch, Sheridan and Glasser created the Grit and Glory line of beverages embodying the iconic brand and its storied past.
About 6666 Grit & Glory
Yellowstone creators Taylor Sheridan and Producer David Glasser partnered with L.A. Libations to create the Grit and Glory brand, a line of beverages and consumer products celebrating the iconic 6666 Ranch and the cowboy lifestyle. Amplified by the Yellowstone series, the “Four Sixes” and its authentic roots, Grit and Glory craft Pilsners, IPAs, Lagers, Ranch Waters and Ready to Drink Cocktails are resonating with beverage consumers and forging a connection the brand’s founders tapped into with the Yellowstone world and its 15 million fans.
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philanthropicpeople · 1 year ago
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Publix Donates $1M, No Cakes
Publix Supermarkets is donating $1 million to support relief in the aftermath of Hurricane Idalia, Northern Florida’s worst landfall in over a century. Publix is the largest employee-owned company in the United States, a supermarket chain with over 1,300 stores in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Virginia, and the Carolinas. With over 250,000 employees, they’ve been recognized as an…
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oldfritz · 5 months ago
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josh added some friends to my shopping list
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neomatcha · 5 months ago
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supermarkets kill walkable cities
supermarkets contain so many things like cleaning products, clothes, fruits veggies, deli, bakery, flowers, pharmacy etc. instead of going to the butcher, florist, grocer's, barker's, pharmacy etc we go to publix. or walmart or wholefoods or whatever chain you have. plus theres lots of overconsumption cause of supermarkets.
where i am right now (semi-walkable city), every day we go out to buy the day's groceries. i need meat for lunch? butcher's. i get my whatever and go back tomorrow. pastry for breakfast? right down the block there's a bakery.
(also, i feel like eating organic/non pesticided/ethical food is way easier when i know the eggs came from the grocer's chickens this morning. and when i know the eggs in my cookies also came from the same chickens. wow is that.... community?)
i've gone to the regional Large Chain Grocery Store and came out with a bunch of stuff i did not use. more expensive and more soul sucking than saying hi to the little dog at the florist's.
i feel like a lot more people could have well paying fulfilling and community-serving jobs in the us if they could have their own bakery (a small business !!) instead of going to work at the publix bakery for minimum wage. whatever guys im just a girl :3
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funnyfooddatabase · 1 year ago
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Publix Orlando City Sub
Food
Type of Funny Food: Tie-In Product
Introduced: March 2019
Location: Publix
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In partnership with the Orlando City soccer club, southern supermarket chain Publix released the Orlando City Sub, a hot submarine sandwich made with chicken tenders, black bean hummus, tomato, lettuce, mayonnaise, cheddar cheese, and avocado cilantro dressing.
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kingkana · 1 year ago
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banging my fist on the fucking ground arroz con leche is so fucking good
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nickgerlich · 1 year ago
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The Public Side Of Publix
A few days ago I made a wisecrack about Publix, the Florida-based supermarket chain that is growing across the southeast. I played the geezer card, basically saying that their thus-far slowness in adopting new trends in the grocery business merely reflected the geezerliness (I made this up) of the Florida population.
While there’s no doubt that the average age of Floridians is 42.2, compared to 38.1 for the entire US, I must walk it back a bit and say that Publix is now taking proactive steps to prepare for the future.
And I, like all good geezers, had conveniently forgotten I had read about this very thing a month ago. So with mea culpas gushing forth, let me say that, while Publix may have been slow to dive into self-check, curbside, and delivery, its $50 million investment in a new technology campus says they finally found their bullets.
Publix is headquartered in Lakeland Florida, where my late parents spent their final years. I love Lakeland, as it is one of the prettiest cities in the entire state. Publix Food Market opened in 1930 in nearby Winter Haven; in only a few years the chain had grown both organically and by acquisition, changing its name to Publix Super Market. They relied heavily on Art Deco architectural stylings in their early years, and to this day they occasionally use those stylings in new stores.
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Today, Publix has 1351 stores in eight states. It has historically used a promote-from-within strategy, and has made many millionaires through the years, thanks to lucrative stock options available only to employees. The company is completely employee-owned.
The technology campus, to be located in downtown Lakeland, “…will create hundreds of new jobs paying an average salary of $130,000,” the President of the Lakeland Economic Development Council reported. That’s not bad.
More than anything, the move signals their commitment to technology, which they now see as critical to their future success. With rivals Walmart, Kroger, and HEB all having technology centers, this is a do-it-or-lose-it moment in the company’s history. This is especially true since Kroger is trying to make inroads in Florida with warehouse-to-customer delivery, all the while Publix is intent on encroaching upon Kroger’s territory in Kentucky.
And about the only thing keeping Publix from venturing west across Louisiana and into Texas is HEB. That’s a brick wall for now, but that could all change, because HEB only has 420 stores.
A key part of the new initiative will be data collection and analysis, which is a fancy way of saying they’ll be studying consumer behavior. Knowing their customers, while also continuing to evolve as an omnichannel retailer, may be the difference that sets them apart from competitors.
Interestingly, when I was doing my dissertation in the grocery industry in 1988-1990, the headquarters of a supermarket operations was usually heavy on the admin side, bean counters, and sales analysts, along with a team of buyers, whose task was to quickly evaluate sales pitches from companies offering new products. But analysis was usually pretty basic, because there were no means then to go granular in the data, tracking individual purchases and behavior. All they had were macro-stats.
We can say that was quaint, because it was. But it’s no longer a recipe for success. It’s not enough to be able to say that canned string beans sold really well last month; it’s far better to be able to say who was buying those, how much they were spending throughout the period, and everything else they bought.
I have high hopes for this technology campus, to the point that I have alerted my daughters about it in case they wish to make career changes. I know at least one of them wants to wind up in Florida eventually, as does their father—that would be me—when he retires.
I just refuse to be one of those resistant-to-change geezers who have become the stereotype of Florida residents (Florida Man notwithstanding). I’m watching, Publix. I expect to see great things from you in the years ahead.
Just keep your hands off Texas, though. This here is HEB country.
Dr “What’s In Your Cart?” Gerlich
Audio Blog
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shootfighting · 20 days ago
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Frozen waffles are being recalled in the USA due to listeria risk. Stay safe American friends.
edit. It's a Canadian problem too.
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follow-up-news · 17 days ago
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Treehouse Foods, an Illinois-based manufacturer, is recalling a flurry of its frozen waffles that were sold at major supermarket chains due to listeria contamination concerns. The company is behind dozens of various store brand frozen waffles sold at Walmart, Target, Harris Teeter, Publix, Food Lion, Tops and more. The manufacturer also produces frozen waffles for brands like Kodiak Cakes, Simple Truth and Foodhold. On Friday, TreeHouse Foods said it was voluntarily recalling some of its frozen waffle products after routine testing at one of its manufacturing facilities identified a potential listeria contamination. There have been no confirmed reports of illness linked to the frozen waffle items so far, the company added.
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simply-ivanka · 4 months ago
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At Wendy's recently I heard a guy ask for his senior discount. The girl at the register apologized and charged him less. When I asked the man what the discount was, he told me that seniors over age 55 ...get 10% off everything on the menu, every day. (But you need to ASK for your discount.)
This incident prompted me to do some research, and I came across a list of restaurants, supermarkets, department stores, travel deals and other types of offers giving various discounts with different age requirements. I was actually surprised to see how many there are and how some of them start as young as 50. The list is evolving and many chains are independently operated so discounts may vary at participating locations only.
This list may not only be useful for you, but also friends and family, too.
Dunkin Donuts gives FREE coffee to people over 55. If you're paying for a cup every day, you might want to start getting it FREE. (At participating stores only)
YOU must ASK for your discount!
RESTAURANTS:
Applebee's: 15% off w/Golden Apple Card (60+)
Arby's: 10% off (55 +)
Ben & Jerry's: 10% off (60+)
Bob's Big Boy: discount varies by location (60+)
Boston Market: 10% off (65+)
Burger King: 10% off (60+)
Chick-Fil-A: 10% off or free small drink or coffee ( 55+) At participating locations
Chili's: 10% off ( 55+)
CiCi's Pizza: 10% off (60+)
Denny's: 10% off, 20% off for AARP members ( 55 +)
Dunkin' Donuts: 10% off or free coffee ( 55+)
Einstein's Bagels: 10% off baker's dozen of bagels (60+)
Fuddrucker's: 10% off any senior platter (55+)
Gatti's Pizza: 10% off (60+)
Golden Corral: 10% off (60+)
Hardee's: $0.33 beverages everyday (65+)
IHOP: 10% off (55+)
Jack in the Box: up to 20% off (55+)
KFC: free small drink with any meal (55+)
Krispy Kreme: 10% off (50+)
Long John Silver's: various discounts at locations (55+)
McDonald's: discounts on coffee everyday (55+)
Mrs. Fields: 10% off at participating locations (60+)
Shoney's: 10% off
Sonic: 10% off or free beverage (60+)
Steak 'n Shake: 10% off every Monday & Tuesday ( 50+)
Subway: 10% off (60+)
Sweet Tomatoes: 10% off (62+)
Taco Bell : 5% off; free beverages for seniors (65+)
TCBY: 10% off (55+)
Tea Room Cafe: 10% off (50+)
Village Inn: 10% off (60+)
Waffle House: 10% off every Monday (60+)
Wendy's: 10% off ( 55 +)
Whataburger: 10% off (62+)
White Castle: 10% off (62+)
RETAIL & APPAREL :
Banana Republic: 30% off ( 50 +)
Bealls: 20% off first Tuesday of each month ( 50 +)
Belk's: 15% off first Tuesday of every month ( 55 +)
Big Lots: 30% off
Bon-Ton Department Stores: 15% off on senior discount days ( 55 +)
C.J. Banks: 10% off every Wednesday (50+)
Clarks : 10% off (62+)
Dress Barn: 20% off ( 55+)
Goodwill: 10% off one day a week (date varies by location)
Hallmark: 10% off one day a week (date varies by location)
Kmart: 40% off (Wednesdays only) (50+)
Kohl's: 15% off (60+)
Michael's: 10% off everyday (55+)
Modell's Sporting Goods: 30% off
Rite Aid: 10% off on Tuesdays & 10% off prescriptions
Ross Stores: 10% off every Tuesday ( 55+)
Salvation Army Thrift Stores: up to 50% off ( 55+)
Stein Mart: 20% off red dot/clearance items first Monday of every month ( 55 +)
GROCERY :
Albertson's: 10% off first Wednesday of each month ( 55 +)
American Discount Stores: 10% off every Monday ( 50 +)
Compare Foods Supermarket: 10% off every Wednesday (60+)
DeCicco Family Markets: 5% off every Wednesday (60+)
Fry's Supermarket: free Fry's VIP Club Membership & 10% off every Monday (55 +)
Great Valu Food Store: 5% off every Tuesday (60+)
Gristedes Supermarket: 10% off every Tuesday (60+)
Harris Teeter: 5% off every Tuesday (60+)
Hy-Vee: 5% off one day a week (date varies by location)
Kroger: 5% off (date varies by location)
Morton Williams Supermarket: 5% off every Tuesday (60+)
The Plant Shed: 10% off every Tuesday (50 +)
Publix: 5% off every Wednesday (55 +)
Rogers Marketplace: 5% off every Thursday (60+)
Uncle Guiseppe's Marketplace: 15% off (62+)
TRAVEL :
Airlines:
Alaska Airlines: up to 50% off (65+)
American Airlines: various discounts up to 50% off non-peak periods (Tuesdays - Thursdays) (62+)and up (call before booking for discount)
Continental Airlines: no initiation fee for Continental Presidents Club & special fares for select destinations
Southwest Airlines: various discounts for ages 65 and up (call before booking for discount)
United Airlines: various discounts for ages 65 and up (call before booking for discount)
Rail:
Amtrak: 10% off (62+)
Bus:
Greyhound: 5% off (62+)
Trailways Transportation System: various discounts for ages 50+
Car Rental:
Alamo Car Rental: up to 25% off for AARP members
Avis: up to 25% off for AARP members
Budget Rental Cars: 40% off; up to 50% off for AARP members (50+)
Dollar Rent-A-Car: 10% off ( 50+) Enterprise Rent-A-Car: 5% off for AARP members Hertz: up to 25% off for AARP members
National Rent-A-Car: up to 30% off for AARP members
Overnight Accommodations:
Holiday Inn: 20-40% off depending on location (62+)
Best Western: 15% off (55+)
Cambria Suites: 20%-30% off (60+)
Waldorf Astoria - NYC $5,000 off nightly rate for Presidential Suite (55 +)
Clarion Motels: 20%-30% off (60+)
Comfort Inn: 20%-30% off (60+)
Comfort Suites: 20%-30% off (60+)
Econo Lodge: up to 40% off (60+)
Hampton Inns & Suites: 40% off when booked 72 hours in advance
Hyatt Hotels: 25%-50% off (62+)
InterContinental Hotels Group: various discounts at all hotels (65+)
Mainstay Suites: 10% off with Mature Traveler's Discount (50+); 20%-30% off (60+)
Marriott Hotels: 25% off (62+)
Motel 6: 5% off (60+)
Myrtle Beach Resort: 30% off (55 +)
Quality Inn: 40%-50% off (60+)
Rodeway Inn: 20%-30% off (60+)
Sleep Inn: 40% off (60+)
ACTIVITIES & ENTERTAINMENT ;:
AMC Theaters: up to 30% off ( 55 +)
Bally Total Fitness: $100 off memberships (62+)
Busch Gardens Tampa, FL: $13 off one-day tickets ( 50 +)
Carmike Cinemas: 35% off (65+)
Cinemark/Century Theaters: up to 35% off
Massage Envy - NYC 20% off all "Happy Endings" (62 +)
U.S. National Parks: $80 lifetime pass; 50% off additional services including camping (62+)
Regal Cinemas: 50% off Ripley's Believe it or Not: @ off one-day ticket ( 55 +)
SeaWorld, Orlando , FL : $3 off one-day tickets ( 50 +)
CELL PHONE DISCOUNTS :
AT&T: Special Senior Nation 200 Plan $19.99/month (65+)
Jitterbug: $19/month cell phone service ( 50 +)
Verizon Wireless: Verizon Nationwide 65 Plus Plan $29.99/month (65+).
MISCELLANEOUS:
Great Clips: $8 off hair cuts (60+)
Supercuts: $8 off haircuts (60+)
ARMSTRONG NUSERY 10% off daily 🌺
NOW, go out there and claim your discounts!! Remember YOU must ASK for discount - no ask, no discount.
I Know everyone knows someone over 50 please pass this on!!!
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firebuug · 10 months ago
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can you draw him in a supermarket. not really any specific one i just want to see him puzzled by nutrition labels. no im not projecting
I can't get myself to draw digitally right now but I did sit down to draw this because I felt like it would be something I could draw.
Here is a Floridian special I call it "Adam goes to Publix and gets left by Abel and Abraham at the register because they said they'd be back to pay they just needed to grab the milk but they didn't come back and now the cashier is waiting for him to pay but he had no idea what's going on right now because he literally just emerged from Architecture department and doesn't know where he is"
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retropopcult · 1 year ago
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Publix supermarket promotional photo, dated 1980
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the-official-publix · 6 months ago
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did you just tag 'bennet is the best supermarket'
IN FRONT OF ME???
What about the murders?
~ @bennet-the-official-supermarket
stfu
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briearesea · 18 days ago
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Hey, if you hadn't heard there is yet another food recall happening. This time it's waffles.
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tiniedemon · 2 years ago
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— ♡
reasons kenny mccormick has been banned from us supermarkets
inspired by maxx’s oneshots
walmart
jumped in the ball pit
hid behind the toilet paper and sprayed passing shoppers with a water gun
accidentally knocked an entire rack of milk on the floor and busted all of them open
target
stood on top of the built in starbucks’ table and took his shirt off, then did the muscle man maneuver with it
wore a red shirt and pretended to be an employee, told old people that the dental glue was in the isle with condoms and vibrators
fed the self checkout monopoly money and broke it
aldi
dropped a watermelon on the floor and busted it open
tried to climb a shelf and broke it
ate an apple, sticker and all, while shopping without paying for it
publix
climbed into a freezer and pretended to be stuck every time a customer walked by
climbed on top of said freezers and started doing push-ups
tripped and fell into a produce stand, breaking it and crushing all the produce
costco
climbed onto the top shelf and proceeded to fortnite dance
took a nap on top of the toilet paper
stole an entire table worth of samples
ikea
broke too much furniture
tried to assemble a desk in the middle of the store without buying it (brought his own tools and everything)
sam’s club
rode around on a forklift
stuffed two watermelons up his shirt and walked around the store pretending they were his boobs, dropped and cracked both watermelons
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