BenBurch
Gatekeeper of The Left
Do they count as food or chemicals for customs purposes?![]()
Ordinance.
Do they count as food or chemicals for customs purposes?![]()
I hope not. Many people use the wrong kind that expands too much and busts the window frame.
Ordinance.
I heard they were recently bought by a vulture capitalist, so they're busy paying for their own takeover as well as their sales problems.I can't help but wonder what kinds of other terrible decisions the company might have made to get into such bad shape. In my experience, Hostess products sell like hotcakes...so they must have either failed to contain costs or had some serious misfortunes that cost too much to recover from.
Ordinance.

I keep seeing this all over the internet.
For the 100th time:
TWINKIES ARE NOT GOING AWAY
a friend of mine has an elaborate theory that twinkies were invented for social engineering purposes. Specifically to desensitize resistance to performing a particular activity involving tubes and creamy filling.
Fruit pies are gross, IMO.
Way, way too sweet.
I heard they were recently bought by a vulture capitalist, so they're busy paying for their own takeover as well as their sales problems.
Anyway: http://www.ebay.com/itm/OMG-RARE-Tw...21750393?pt=Art_Sculpture&hash=item1c2d755c79
Read the Q&A.
BCTGM members are well aware that as the company was preparing to file for bankruptcy earlier this year, the then CEO of Hostess was awarded a 300 percent raise (from approximately $750,000 to $2,550,000) and at least nine other top executives of the company received massive pay raises. One such executive received a pay increase from $500,000 to $900,000 and another received one taking his salary from $375,000 to $656,256.
Well, that certainly does explain why executives running a failing company should get hundreds of thousands of dollars per year. Wait, no it doesn't.The CEO was converted from salary+bonuses to salary-only as is typical in bankruptcy proceedings. Other management personnel were treated similarly. Perhaps you were just unaware of the actual facts ... but it doesn't seem like that.
Well, that certainly does explain why executives running a failing company should get hundreds of thousands of dollars per year. Wait, no it doesn't.
Simple question: Should a CEO - leaving out those who actually found and own the companies they're running, though that shouldn't matter - be paid millions of dollars for failure?