Tag Archives: Hot Dogs

Beer and Hot Dogs: Which Ballparks Charge Most

By CNNMoney

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Tom Szczerbowski, Getty Images

By MELANIE HICKEN

It’s opening day for baseball Monday — the start of the season when many fans flock to their favorite stadium. But a day at the ballpark can get pricey, especially if you include the cost of food and drink to get through nine innings.

Classic baseball refreshments like hot dogs and beer can vary widely in price depending on the ballpark, CNNMoney found when it surveyed the 30 major league teams.

Mets fans at New York’s Citi Field shell out the most for a regular hot dog — $6.25 a pop. Meanwhile, Cincinnati Reds‘ watchers at Great American Ball Park can get a dog for just a buck — the cheapest of any of the 26 stadiums that replied to our price requests. So Cincinnati fans can get six franks for less than the price of a single hot dog at Citi Field.

Meanwhile, thirsty fans pay the most at Washington Nationals games — where, unless they take advantage of a $5 drink special before the first pitch, the cheapest beer available is a 16-ounce can for $8. For half that, beer drinkers can get a 12-ounce draft at Cleveland Indians games. The best deal? A 14-ounce beer for $4 at Arizona Diamondbacks‘ Chase Field.

Some stadiums offer unique food options to cater to local taste buds — those items generally carry even higher price tags.

At Giants games, seafood lovers can enjoy an $8.75 bread bowl of clam chowder or a $16.50 crab sandwich on San Francisco sourdough bread. For those with a sweet tooth, the stadium offers a $10 Ghirardelli hot fudge sundae in homage to San Francisco‘s famous Ghirardelli Square.

At Comerica Park, Detroit Tigers fans can buy a variety of fried options, including a $7 deep-fried red hot sausage on a stick and a $5 package of deep-fried peanuts.

Minnesota Twins fans can enjoy “state fair classics” like fried pickles ($7.50) and Turkey drumsticks ($9.75) at Target Field in Minneapolis.

Texas Rangers Ballpark in Arlington, Texas, is home to a $26 monster of a hot dog dubbed the “Boomstick,” a 2-foot-long beef hot dog, smothered in chili, nacho cheese, jalapenos and caramelized onions on a potato bun.

Some stadiums are trying to lure more fans with lower food prices. At most stadiums, fans pay between $3 and $5 for a basic hot dog and $5 to $7 for the cheapest beer — for a total of $8 to $12. But at Arizona Diamondbacks‘ ballpark, a 14-ounce beer and a “value” hot dog costs just $5.50 — less than a beer alone at other parks.

Low concession prices became a priority after the financial crisis of 2008, said Diamondbacks President and CEO Derrick Hall.

“For us, it was a challenge to make sure that we …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Chevrolet’s New “Find New Roads” Ad Campaign: We’re Lost [The Ad Section]

By Don Klein

Chevrolet is about to launch an ad campaign that exemplifies how being slavish to global messaging can result in weak advertising. The goal is no longer to come up with a smart combination of words that will resonate with a national audience; the drill now is to find slogans that will work in every market around the world. These slogans don’t have to be clever or motivating, so long as they don’t lose anything in translation.

Despite seismic shifts in foreign consumers’ acceptance of bold new American products like smartphones and tablets, the prevailing thought for global marketing messaging is apparently to play it safe. And although it’s an urban legend, the story about Chevy’s Nova failing in Latin America because the name means “doesn’t go” in Spanish seems to remain a respected cautionary tale, at least for GM: Better to be innocuous than confusing, or even worse, stupid. And Chevy’s new tag line is most assuredly innocuous. What’s not to like? Nothing. But the real question is, what’s to like? Same answer.

In the past, Chevy has given us campaigns that were uniquely American, from the iconic “See the USA in Your Chevrolet” and “Baseball, Hot Dogs, Apple Pie, and Chevrolet” to “An American Revolution” and “Like a Rock.” Even the soon-to-be-departed “Chevy Runs Deep” evoked an emotional, nationalistic response. But times have changed and Americans have learned that Europe and Asia make good cars, too. So, yes, Chevy’s share of domestic market slippage in recent years might well call for fresh creative to go along with the 20 or so new products the brand says it’s bringing to market worldwide in 2013. But if anything, that makes a case for a campaign that’s unique to Chevy—not a theme that’s vague and generic, especially when other global auto marketers are saying essentially the same thing. Toyota’s new campaign is “Let’s Go Places.” Ford’s is “Go Further.” How are they meaningfully different from “Find New Roads?”

2014 Chevrolet Impala

The 2014 Chevrolet Impala, a car Chevy hopes you go find roads in.

In a press release about the new theme, GM says it will “guide every aspect of our business going forward” including design, engineering, and retail operations. In other words, it’s as much a corporate mantra as consumer campaign. As car enthusiasts, do we really care about GM’s internal pep rallies? Don’t we expect the General to keep innovating and improving? Better it should use its annual global ad budget (all $4.5 billion of it) to tell us something about GM cars. For the company’s sake, let’s hope it does, despite the insipid tag line.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Car & Driver

‘Chevy Runs Deep’ Finally Deep-Sixed

By Kurt Ernst

History, we suspect, will not be kind to ad slogans developed by Chevrolet in recent years. While past pitches such as “Like A Rock” were at least evocative, phrases like “An American Revolution” and “We’ll Be There” didn’t do much to conjure up images of cars. While “Excellence For Everyone” had promise, Chevy used it for about 15 minutes before embracing “Chevy Runs Deep.”

To be honest, even we don’t know what that was supposed to mean, and we suspect that “Chevy… Because Wolverine” would have been equally effective. Regardless of our negative opinion (and for the record, an opinion shared by virtually everyone else who writes about cars for a living), GM stuck with the tagline for two years, which is about three years longer than it should have.

Now that former marketing head Joel Ewanick is gone, it’s time for a new slogan, and Chevy’s latest pitch will be “Find New Roads.” It’s no “Like A Rock,” to be sure, and we don’t think it measures up to “Baseball, Hot Dogs, Apple Pie and Chevrolet,” but it’s a giant improvement over “Chevy Runs Deep.”

Mary Barra, Chevy’s senior vice president of global product development, explains the slogan as, “Find New Roads embraces the spirit of ingenuity that has been in Chevrolet’s DNA since the beginning and it will continue to guide every aspect of our business moving forward. We have sold Chevrolets around the world for almost a century, but this is the first time we have aligned behind one global vision.”

As a global rallying slogan, we suppose that could work. Until, of course, someone realizes that the phrase means something entirely unfavorable in another language.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Automotive Addicts