American entrepreneur and businessman
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2025.02.13 Harland Sanders y KFCLa derrota es una decisión, no una circunstanciaEsta semana estamos hablando de cuatro grandes empresarios que comenzaron sus negocios después de los 40 años, y aprendiendo de los éxitos y fracasos de estos gigantes. Busca Cápsulas Gerenciales en tu plataforma de podcast favorita, y descubre como Harland Sanders fundó KFC después de los 65 años y con varias derrotas encima. #cápsulasgerenciales #capsulasgerenciales #desarrollopersonalholistico #mejorcadadia #inspiracionyexito
Aujourd'hui, penchons-nous sur l'homme qui sourit depuis des décennies sur les devantures de KFC : Colonel Harland Sanders. Ce personnage est bien réel, et son histoire est tout aussi savoureuse que le poulet frit qu'il a rendu célèbre. Né en 1890 dans l'Indiana, Harland Sanders a connu une vie mouvementée avant de devenir un symbole mondial. Orphelin de père à 6 ans, il a dû cuisiner pour ses frères et sœurs, une nécessité qui allait influencer sa carrière bien plus tard. Sanders a essayé de nombreux métiers : pompier, vendeur d'assurances, et même agriculteur. Mais c'est dans une station-service du Kentucky, dans les années 1930, qu'il a commencé à cuisiner pour les voyageurs. Son poulet frit, préparé avec une recette secrète de 11 épices et aromates, a rapidement conquis les cœurs – et les estomacs. Le titre de "Colonel" qu'il porte fièrement n'a rien de militaire. Il s'agit d'un titre honorifique décerné par l'État du Kentucky pour sa contribution à la gastronomie. Sanders a ouvert son premier restaurant KFC en 1952. Le succès fut tel qu'il a décidé de franchiser son concept, même s'il n'a vraiment percé qu'après ses 60 ans. Le logo de KFC, avec son sourire bonhomme, son nœud papillon noir et sa barbe blanche, incarne à la fois la convivialité et l'authenticité de ce personnage hors du commun. Passons maintenant à des faits étonnants sur KFC. Saviez-vous que la recette secrète de leur poulet est l'un des secrets commerciaux les mieux gardés au monde ? Elle est conservée dans un coffre-fort à Louisville, et seulement deux personnes en connaissent l'intégralité. Autre anecdote surprenante : au Japon, KFC est devenu le repas incontournable… du jour de Noël ! Cette tradition, née d'une campagne marketing dans les années 1970, pousse des millions de Japonais à commander leur menu des semaines à l'avance. Et pour finir, en 2017, KFC a envoyé un sandwich au poulet… dans l'espace ! Une opération marketing délirante qui symbolise à quel point la marque n'a pas peur de viser les étoiles. Alors, la prochaine fois que vous croisez le sourire du Colonel Sanders, souvenez-vous : derrière ce logo se cache une histoire d'opportunités tardives, de recettes bien gardées et de succès mondial. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
El Coronel Harland Sanders fundó Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) en 1952, convirtiendo su receta secreta de 11 hierbas y especias en un ícono de la comida rápida mundial. Todo comenzó siendo el encargado de una estación de gas y su imagen terminó siendo sinónimo del pollo frito que ha conquistado paladares en todo el mundo. Síguenos y visita nuestro sitio oficial: https://www.instagram.com/eldollop https://twitter.com/eldollop https://www.facebook.com/eldolloppodcast http://eldollop.com
In Episode 16, Season 6 of Ravage Love we rap Chappell Roan and discover what America means to us. We read: Charly by Jack Weyland Tender Wings of Desire by Harland Sanders
2024.02.08 Harland Sanders y KFC La derrota es una decisión, no una circunstancia Esta semana estamos hablando de cuatro grandes empresarios que comenzaron sus negocios después de los 40 años, y aprendiendo de los éxitos y fracasos de estos gigantes. Busca Cápsulas Gerenciales en tu plataforma de podcast favorita, y descubre como Harland Sanders fundó KFC después de los 65 años y con varias derrotas encima. #cápsulasgerenciales #capsulasgerenciales #desarrollopersonalholistico #mejorcadadia #inspiracionyexito
For this year's annual, inspirational episode and wrap-up, I share the surprisingly inspiring and entertaining tale of Colonel Harland Sanders, man behind the KFC empire. Then I go over what went down in Bad Magic 2023, and what I'm hoping to do in 2024. Hail Nimrod and THANK YOU! It was such a good year and thanks to your continual support, I am more excited going into the next year of Bad Magic than I've ever been. Hope you had a great 2023, and really looking forward to 2024! Thank you for listening this year!! Watch the Suck on YouTube: https://youtu.be/C8Ftc_wADm4Merch: https://www.badmagicmerch.comTimesuck Discord! https://discord.gg/tqzH89vWant to join the Cult of the Curious Private Facebook Group? Go directly to Facebook and search for "Cult of the Curious" to locate whatever happens to be our most current page :)For all merch-related questions/problems: store@badmagicproductions.com (copy and paste)Please rate and subscribe on Apple Podcasts and elsewhere and follow the suck on social media!! @timesuckpodcast on IG and http://www.facebook.com/timesuckpodcastWanna become a Space Lizard? Click here: https://www.patreon.com/timesuckpodcast.Sign up through Patreon, and for $5 a month, you get access to the entire Secret Suck catalog (295 episodes) PLUS the entire catalog of Timesuck, AD FREE. You'll also get 20% off of all regular Timesuck merch PLUS access to exclusive Space Lizard merch. And you get the download link for my secret standup album, Feel the Heat.
Annoying Christmas Songs? A Kraft cooking infomercial disguised as a children's Christmas movie? Drunk nighttime photography? It's a fever dream masquerading as a winter wonderland on Episode 124 of the podcast.We begin with a new Dedication to the Craft segment dealing with nighttime photography. There will be some helpful tips on getting the most out of shooting after dark. There will also be some hilarious and head-scratching stories of previous night photo shoots for your entertainment.Christmas music can add a warm, fuzzy feeling to anyone's holiday season. This week's Top 5 will not be featuring those songs. The return of Me v. AI Top 5 showcases the most annoying Christmas songs ever released. Yes, even ChatGPT had choices for annoying music.Kids have their favorite holiday specials to watch each year. Many of them debuted in years long gone by. One Christmas movie that might have slipped through the cracks of 80s kids' minds comes back to the forefront as we go way Back In the Day. The Christmas Toy, created by Jim Henson Studios, debuted in 1986. However, the movie itself is not the most interesting part. No, that goes to the fact that Kraft sponsored the entire show. This meant that in place of commercials, there were nonstop Kraft Holiday Recipes to be shared!There is also a brand new This Week In History and Time Capsule looking back at the death and legacy of Col. Harland Sanders, founder of Kentucky Fried Chicken.For more great content become a subscriber on Patreon or Buzzsprout!Helpful Links from this EpisodeThe Lady of the Dunes.comPurchase My New Book Cape Cod Beyond the Dunes!In My Footsteps: A Cape Cod Travel Guide(2nd Edition)Kiwi's Kustoms - EtsyDJ Williams MusicKeeKee's Cape Cod KitchenChristopher Setterlund.comCape Cod Living - Zazzle StoreThe Art of Making A PodcastKraft Holiday Recipes - YouTube.comSupport the show
In “Tasting Kentucky in Tiananmen,” Gravy producers Ishan Thakore and Katie Jane Fernelius explore how KFC became one of the most popular restaurant chains in China, and what its dominance reveals about other huge Southern firms. KFC is now part of the corporate conglomerate Yum! Brands, which includes chains like Taco Bell and Pizza Hut. But it has humble origins — Harland Sanders started the brand in Corbin, Kentucky, as a service station off the road. The chain grew through franchise agreements and by the 1980s was looking to expand abroad. As Zachary Karabell, author of Superfusion: How China and America Became One Economy and Why the World's Prosperity Depends on It, explains, China in the ‘80s was a blank canvas for businesses. That presented all sorts of risks, but also potentially unlimited upside. Like a hungry youth soccer team diving into a bucket of fried chicken after a game (an oddly specific reference from Ishan's childhood), KFC went all in. It brought in middle-managers from Taiwan, developed a logistics network, and treated store openings like grand affairs. But it could not avoid major geopolitical issues. Two years after KFC opened its flagship branch off of Tiananmen Square, Chinese troops there killed an estimated hundreds of people to quash political protests. But within a week, KFC reopened on the Square, catering now to soldiers instead of students demanding change. KFC took off and, by 2011, according to a Harvard Business Review case study, KFC was on average opening one restaurant a day in China. This growth came at a cost. Bart Elmore, an environmental historian and associate professor of history at the Ohio State University, charted the rise of several Southern multinationals, including FedEx, Delta Airlines and Coca-Cola in his book Country Capitalism: How Corporations from the American South Remade Our Economy and the Planet. Elmore explains how servicing goods to the countryside made corporations enormously wealthy, and how those firms relied on the Global South for materials and markets. But that quest for global ubiquity had severe environmental impacts, including by KFC, such as emissions and pollution. For Elmore, and hopefully for listeners, acknowledging the economic history of the South is one step towards addressing the social and environmental issues wrought by unchecked economic growth. Music featured in this episode includes "Borough" and "The Crisper" by Blue Dot Sessions. Acknowledgments Special thanks to guest Zachary Karabell and his book Superfusion, which lays out the history of KFC in China. Zachary also founded The Progress Network and hosts the podcast What Could Go Right? Thanks to Bart Elmore for his perspective on the impact of Southern companies around the world. You can read more about those firms in his newly released book Country Capitalism. Although they were not featured in this episode, a big thank you to historian Adrian Miller for providing context about fried chicken's origins, as well as to Christine Ha, who owns several restaurants in Houston. Gravy is proud to be a part of APT Podcast Studios. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
THEY'REEEEEEEE BAAAAACCCCCKKKKK and it was only a month since the last time you've heard from them. The guys finally hear from Fred Stoller who never wants to be on the podcast. Talk about the upcoming annual Pod Worthy 4th of July Wiffle Ball Bonanza and dive into the history of Harland Sanders. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pod-worthy/support
At what age are you supposed to forget about your dreams? How old is too old to do something new? Short answer: Never! In this episode we learn about Harland Sanders who first franchised a KFC outlet at 62, Mani aunty who transformed her hobby into a successful business at 88, Harry Bernstein who became a successful author at 96, Boman Irani who got his big break in movies at 44, Gladys Burrill who completed a marathon at 92, and more such inspirational stories. After listening to these stories, you will agree that it is never to late to start anything new. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/poorvi-daxini/message
Access Louisville is a weekly podcast from Louisville Business First. Follow us on popular podcast services to never miss an episode. Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | StitcherWe discuss all this and more on Access Louisville.Owners of the Claudia Sanders Dinner House have edited the listing with changes that could help attract a buyer.The Shelbyville restaurant was established by KFC founder Col. Harland Sanders for his wife Claudia. It went on the market in June for $9 million and has now been lowered to $4.9 million.The price decreased because the original listing included Sanders family memorabilia and the trademark and likeness of Claudia Sanders. The owners will sell that separately. Now the listing includes just the physical real estate and the restaurant business.Reporter Eleanor Tolbert explains that this could help them attract a new buyer.In other KFC news, we also discuss a beloved menu item returning to the Louisville-based chicken chain for a limited time. The Double Down, famous for its use of fried chicken as bread, is returning to KFC menus across the nation beginning on March 6. With its double chicken, double bacon, and double cheese, it has what the company calls a “cult following like no other.”Reporter Stephen P. Schmidt also joined the show to discuss a recent trip to the Old Forester distillery and what he learned.Schmidt also talks about how two Louisville tech companies are helping those in Ukraine after a year at war. The companies are helping in different ways, but both are making an impact.We discuss all this and more on the Access Louisville Podcast.Access Louisville is a weekly podcast from Louisville Business First. It's co-hosted by David A. Mann and Laurel Deppen. Our guests this week are Tolbert and Schmidt. It's available on popular podcast services, including Apple Podcasts and Spotify, which are linked above. You also can listen to the show in the player above.
2023.02.09 Harland Sanders y KFC La derrota es una decisión, no una circunstancia Esta semana estamos hablando de cuatro grandes empresarios del Siglo 20 y extrayendo lecciones de sus éxitos y fracasos. Busca Cápsulas Gerenciales en tu plataforma de podcast favorita, y descubre como Harland Sanders fundó KFC después de los 65 años y con varias derrotas encima. #cápsulasgerenciales #capsulasgerenciales #desarrollopersonalholistico #mejorcadadia #inspiracionyexito
Kentucky Fried Chicken was founded by Harland Sanders in 1930 when he inaugurated the first Sanders Court & Café in Corbin, Kentucky. After six years of success, Sanders was awarded the Kentucky Colonel position for supplying extensive resources to his community. Throughout these 68 years, the franchise has expanded to over 20,000 stores in 145 countries which are committed to spreading the unique Colonel Sanders chicken dinners both domestically and internationally. KFC is currently headquartered in Louisville, Kentucky, and is run by CEO, Sabir Sami. As of 2021, KFC has 3900+ locations across the USA. This podcast was based on an exclusive Vetted Biz analysis, click here for the full report: https://www.vettedbiz.com/buying-a-kfc-franchise/ Need help finding the right franchise? Click here: https://www.vettedbiz.com/franchise-search/ 00:00 Introduction 00:19 About KFC 01:16 KFC In Numbers 04:22 Competitors 05:02 Conclusion #KFCFranchise #FranchiseFindings If you are looking for more information, you can connect with us through our networks: https://www.vettedbiz.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/company/vettedbiz/ https://www.facebook.com/vettedbiz https://www.tiktok.com/@businessandfranchiseinus
This week's story is about Harland David Sanders, or as most of us know him as, Colonel Sanders, the face of Kentucky Fried Chicken, or now known as KFC. What most people don't know though is what an interesting life, and what a difficult, traffic life filled with obstacles, that Harland Sanders lived.Losing his father at the age of 6, was simply the first tragedy and setback that Sanders had to overcome. In this short, 10-minute episode, you'll hear just how many setbacks and failures Sanders had to overcome before launching one of the most successful fast-food restaurants of all time!Website:www.BetterPlaceProject.orgFollow us on social media:Instagram: @BetterPlaceProjTo follow Steve & Erin on Instagram:@SteveNorrisOfficial@ErinorrisFacebook: Facebook.com/BetterPlaceProjectPodcastEmail: BetterPlaceProjectPodcast@gmail.com
Get ready for another episode filled with more (whore) maniacal laughter. Join us this week as Nicole tells us about the weird world of mushrooms, and Liv takes us through the life and times of a man named Harland Sanders (perhaps a Colonel?) up until he reached his restaurant fame. As always, if you enjoyed this week's episode be sure to like, follow, and subscribe so you never miss a new one. And if you could leave us a 5 star rating and positive review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Audible we'd be forever indebted to you.
Esta semana estamos hablando acerca de emprendedores que fundaron empresas después de haber cumplido 40, 50 y hasta 60 años. Escucha esta cápsula y descubre como Harland Sanders fundó KFC cuando tenía 65 años, después de dos bancarrotas y con su jubilación como único ingreso.
In the years before KFC, Colonel Sanders ruled Hell's Half Acre with a loaded shotgun - but whatever you do, heed his wise words and "Don't eat the Gravy". The Legend of the Colonel known as 'Old Man Kentucky' still lives on, especially in Japan - with every striped bucket and Japanese 'Party Barrel'. But what was Harland Sanders really like behind the white suit and cane? Could he be Santa Claus? Did he shoot a man down? The evidence is mounting... Find out the insane history of the world's most infamous Chicken Man. Tuck in.
Jeff Heggie Daily Success Strategies 459: It's Not Too Late www.JeffHeggie.com/Goals People Who Became Highly Successful After The Age of 40 Sam Walton – founded Walmart (44) Sam Walton had a fairly successful retail-management career in his 20s and 30s, but his path to astronomical success began at age 44, when he founded the first Walmart in Rogers, Arkansas, in 1962. Henry Ford – Model T (45) Henry Ford was 45 when he created the revolutionary Model T car in 1908. Samuel L Jackson – Jungle Fever (46) Samuel L. Jackson has been a Hollywood staple for years now, but he'd had only bit parts before landing an award-winning role at age 43 in Spike Lee's film "Jungle Fever" in 1991. Steve Carell – Michael Scott (42) Beloved comedian Steve Carell is known for his many blockbuster hits, including "The 40-year-old Virgin" and "The Big Short." But he didn't land his hit role as Michael Scott in "The Office" until he was 42. Ray Kroc - McDonalds (52) Most people know Ray Kroc as the legendary McD's “founder,” however, what they don't know is that Kroc didn't purchase the burger and shake franchise until he was 52. Kroc would then go on to work through his 50s to grow McDonald's into the world's largest fast-food franchise. Harland Sanders - KFC (62) It seems some people believe Colonel Sanders is just a mascot, the face behind the brand of a now billion-dollar fast-food company. However, that classic logo is the gleeful mugshot of the one and only Harland Sanders, also known as Colonel Sanders, the original founder of KFC. He franchised the company back in 1952 at the age of 62 and would later sell the company for several million dollars. Chip Baker SHG - Show Up - Have a Great Attitude - Give it your all Set Your Goals: www.JeffHeggie.com/Goals Make a decision and take action “Decisions Shape Your Destiny” – Thomas S. Monson Sun Tzu: “Victorious warriors win first and then go to war. Defeated warriors go to battle and seek to win.” Begin with the end in mind The Confident Athlete Program: www.JeffHeggie.com/ConfidentAthlete High Achievers: https://mindset.jeffheggie.com/ Arizona Home Mortgages: https://www.genevafi.com/jeff-heggie/
9 Tháng 9 Là Ngày Gì? Hôm Nay Là Ngày Sinh Của Ca Sĩ Như Quỳnh SỰ KIỆN 1948 – Nước Cộng hòa Dân chủ Nhân dân Triều Tiên được thành lập tại miền bắc bán đảo Triều Tiên, Kim Nhật Thành nhậm chức thủ tướng nội các. 1791 – Thủ đô Hoa Kỳ được đặt tên theo Tổng thống George Washington. Sinh 1987 – Jung Il Woo, diễn viên người Hàn Quốc 1985 – Luka Modrić, cầu thủ bóng đá người Croatia 1970 – ca sĩ Như Quỳnh .Cô tuy hoạt động ở hải ngoại là chủ yếu nhưng lại có một lượng lớn những người yêu thích và thần tượng ở Việt Nam. Những ca khúc do Như Quỳnh thể hiện đều được khá nhiều người yêu thích. Điển hình nhất là hai bài hát Vùng lá me bay và Duyên phận mà Như Quỳnh từng thể hiện vào năm 2010 đã trở thành một hiện tượng vào những năm 2016 - 2017, khi dòng nhạc Bolero bùng nổ mạnh mẽ tại Việt Nam. " 1941 – Dennis Ritchie, nhà khoa học máy tính người Mỹ, tạo ra ngôn ngữ lập trình C (m. 2011) 1890 – Harland Sanders, doanh nhân người Mỹ, sáng lập KFC (m. 1980) Mất 1978 – Jack Warner, nhà sản xuất phim người Canada, đồng sáng lập Warner Bros. (s. 1892) Chương trình "Hôm nay ngày gì" hiện đã có mặt trên Youtube, Facebook và Spotify: - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aweekmedia - Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/AWeekTV - Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6rC4CgZNV6tJpX2RIcbK0J #aweektv #9thang9 #LukaModrić #NhưQuỳnh #KFC #WarnerBros Các video đều thuộc quyền sở hữu của Adwell jsc, mọi hành động sử dụng lại nội dung của chúng tôi đều không được phép. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/aweek-tv/message
Harland Sanders niegdyś z sukcesem prowadził knajpę w Kentucky. Jednak gdy jego biznes splajtował, wyprzedał swój majątek spłacając zobowiązania, a jego jedynym stałym dochodem było 105 dolarów zapomogi. Pozostając bez większych perspektyw na utrzymanie, 65-letni Harland postanowił podróżować od restauracji do restauracji sprzedając przepis na kurczaka. Kolejni właściciele próbowali specjału, odmawiając. Dziesiątki, setki, a może i z tysiąc razy. Ale Harland nie dawał za wygraną. W wieku 73 lat sprzedał sieć restauracji KFC za 2 mln dolarów. Dożył 90 lat. KFC było wówczas w 48 krajach. Dziś, znając historie Gatesa, Jobsa czy Zuckerberga, można odnieść wrażenie, że wyłącznie 20-latkowie mają niezwykłą moc podejmowania się nowych przedsięwzięć. Jednak warto pamiętać, że Harold Stanley założył Morgan Stanley w wieku 50 lat. Pięć lat starszy był Ferdinand Porsche. A Charles Flint miał 61 lat gdy założył IBM. *** Pamiętaj o subskrypcji naszego podcastu, a jeżeli chcesz nas wesprzeć zostaw recenzję. Codzienne posty i ciekawostki historyczne znajdziesz na naszym fanpage https://www.facebook.com/historiajakiejnieznacie
Roy Allen opened his first root beer stand in 1919, in Lodi, California. He'd bought a recipe for root beer and boy, it sure was a hit. He brought in people to help. One was Frank Wright, who would become a partner in the endeavor and they'd change the name to A&W Root Beer, for their names, and open a restaurant in 1923 in Sacramento, California. Allen bought Wright back out in 1925, but kept the name. Having paid for the root beer license he decided to franchise out the use of that - but let's not call that the first fast food chain just yet. After all, it was just a license to make root beer just like he'd bought the recipe all those years ago. A&W's Allen sold the company in 1950 to retire. The franchise agreements moved from a cash payment to royalties. But after Allen the ownership of the company bounced around until it landed with United Fruit which would become United Brands, who took A&W to the masses and the root beer company was split from the restaurant chain with the chain eventually owned by Yum! Brands now nearly 1,000 locations and over $300M in revenues. White Castle As A&W franchised, some experimented with other franchising options or with not going that route at all. Around the same time Wright opened his first stand, Walt Anderson was running a few food stands around Witchita. He met up with Billy Ingram and in 1921 they opened the first White Castle, putting in $700 of their own money. By 1927 they expanded out to Indianapolis. As is often the case, the original cook with the concept sold out his part of the business in 1933 when they moved their headquarters to Columbus, Ohio and the Ingram family expanded all over the United States. Many a fast food chain is franchised but White Castle has stayed family owned and operates profitably not taking on debt to grow. Kentucky Fried Chicken KFC îs fried chicken. They sell some other stuff I guess. They were started by Harland Sanders in 1930 but as we see with a lot of these they didn't start franchising until after the war. His big hack was to realize he needed to cook chicken faster to serve more customers and so he converted a pressure cooker into a pressure fryer, completely revolutionizing how food is fried. He perfected his original recipe in 1940 and by 1952 was able to parlay the success of his early success into franchising out what is now the second largest fast food chain in the world. But the largest is McDonald's. McDonalds 1940 comes around and Richard and Maurice McDonald open a little restaurant called McDonalds. It was a drive-up barbecue joint in San Bernadino. But drive-in restaurants were getting competitive and while looking back at the business, they realized that four fifths of the sales were hamburgers. So they shut down for a bit and got rid of the car hops that were popular at the time, simplified the menu and trimmed out everything they could - getting down to less than 10 items on the menu. They were able to get prices down to 15 cent hamburgers using something they called the Speedee Service System. That was an assembly-line of food preparation that became the standard in the fast food industry over the next few decades. They also looked at industrial equipment and used that to add french fries and shakes, which finally unlocked an explosion of sales and profits doubled. But then the milkshake mixer salesman payed a visit to them in San Bernadino to see why the brothers need 8 of his mixers and was amazed to find they were, in fact, cranking out 48 shakes at a time with them. The assembly-line opened his eyes and he bought the rights to franchise the McDonalds concept opening his first one in Des Plaines, Illinois. One of the best growth hacks for any company is just to have an amazing sales and marketing arm. OK, so not a hack but just good business. And Ray Kroc will go down as one of the greatest. From those humble beginnings selling milkshake mixers he moved from licensing to buying the company outright for $2.7 million dollars in 1961. Another growth hack was to realize, thanks to a former VP at Tastee-Freez, that owning the real estate brought yet another revenue stream. A low deposit and a 20% or higher increase in the monthly spend would grow into a nearly 38 billion dollar revenue stream. The highway system was paying dividends to the economy. People were moving out to the suburbs. Cars were shipping in the highest volumes ever. They added the filet-o-fish and were exploding internationally in the 60s and 70s and now sitting on over 39,000 stores with about a $175 billion market cap with over $5 billion dollars in revenue. Diners, Drive-ins, and Dives Those post-war years were good to fast food. Anyone that's been to a 50s themed restaurant can see the car culture on display and drive-ins were certainly a part of that. People were living their lives at a new pace to match the speed of those cars and it was a golden age of growth in the United States. The computer industry was growing right along with those diners, drive-ins, and dives. One company that started before World War II and grew fast was Dairy Queen, started in 1940 by John Fremont McCullough. He'd invented soft-serve ice cream in 1938 and opened the first Dairy Queen in Joliet, Illinois with his friend Sherb Noble, who'd been selling his soft-serve ice cream out of his shop for a couple of years. During those post-war 1950s explosive years they introduced the Dilly Bar and have now expanded to 6,800 locations around the world. William Rosenberg opened a little coffee shop in in Quincy, Massachusetts. As with the others in this story, he parlayed quick successes and started to sell franchises in 1955 and Dunkin' Donuts grew to 12,400 locations. In-N-Out Burger started in 1948 as well, by Harry and Esther Snyder and while they've only expanded around the west coast of the US, they've grown to around 350 locations and stay family owned. Pizza Hut was started in 1958 in Wichita, Kanas. While it was more of a restaurant for a long time, it's now owned by Yum! Brands and operates well over 18,000 locations. Yum! Also owns KFC and Taco Bell. Glen Bell served as a cook in World War II and moved to San Bernardino to open a drive-in hot dog stand in 1948. He sold it and started a taco stand, selling them for 19 cents a piece, expanding to three locations by 1955 and went serial entrepreneur - selling those locations and opening four new ones he called El Tacos down in Long Beach. He sold that to his partner in 1962 and started his first Taco Bell, finally ready to start selling franchises in 1964 and grew it to 100 restaurants by 1967. They took Taco Bell public in 1970 when they had 325 locations. And Pepsi bought the 868 location in 1978 for $125 million in stock, eventually spinning the food business off to what is now called Yum! Brands and co-branding with cousin restaurants in that portfolio - Pizza Hut and Long John Silver's. I haven't been to a Long John Silver's since I was a kid but they still have over a thousand locations and date back to a hamburger stand started in 1929 that over the years pivoted to a roast beef sandwich shop and pivoting many times until landing on the fish and chips concept in 1969. The Impact of Computing It's hard to imagine that any of these companies could have grown the way they did without more than an assembly-line of human automation. Mechanical cash registers had been around since the Civil War in the United States, with early patents filed in 1883 by Charles Kettering and James Ritty. Arguably the abacus and counting frame goes back way further but the Ritty Model I patent was sparked the interest of Jacob Eckert who bought the patent, added some features and took on $10,000 in debt to take the cash register to market, forming National Manufacturing Company. That became National Cash Register still a more than 6 billion dollar market cap company. But the growth of IBM and other computing companies, the release of semiconductors, and the miniaturization and dropping costs of printed circuit boards helped lead to the advent of electronic cash registers. After all those are just purpose-built computers. IBM introduced the first point of sale system in 1973, bringing that cash register into the digital age. Suddenly a cash register could be in the front as a simplified terminal to send print outs or information to a screen in the back. Those IBM 3650s evolved to the first use of peer-to-peer client-server technology and ended up in Dillard's in 1974. That same year McDonald's had William Brobeck and Associates develop a microprocessor-based terminal. It was based on the Intel 8008 chip and used a simple push-button device to allow cashiers to enter orders. This gave us a queue of orders being sent by terminals in the front. And we got touchscreens registers in 1986, running on the Atari 520ST, with IBM introducing a 486-based system running on FlexOS. Credit Cards As we moved into the 90s, fast food chains were spreading fast and the way we payed for goods was starting to change. All these electronic registers could suddenly send the amount owed over an electronic link to a credit card processing machine. John Biggins launched the Charg-it card in 1946 and it spread to Franklin National Bank a few years later. Diners Club Card picked up on the trend and launched the Diners Club Card in 1950, growing to 20,000 cardholders in 1951. American Express came along in 1958 with their card and in just five years grew to a million cards. Bank of America released their BankAmericard in 1958, which became the first general-purpose credit card. They started in California and went national in the first ten years. That would evolve into Visa by 1966 and by 1966 we got MasterCard as well. THat's also the same year the Barclaycard brought credit cards outside the US for the first time, showing up first in England. Then Carte bleue in 67 in France and the Eurocard as a collaboration between the Wallenberg family and Interbank in 1968 to serve the rest of Europe. Those spread and by the 90s we had enough people using them to reach a critical mass where fast food needed to take them as well. Whataburger and Carl's Jr added the option in 1989, Arby's in 1990, and while slower to adopt taking cards, McDonald's finally did so in 2002. We were well on our way to becoming a cashless society. And the rise of the PC led to POS systems moving a little down-market and systems from and others like Aloha, designed in 1998 (now owned by NCR). And lots of other brands of devices as well as home-brewed tooling from large vendors. And computers helped revolutionize the entire organization. Chains could automate supply lines to stores with computerized supply chain management. Desktop computers also led to management functions being computerized in the back office, like scheduling and time clocks and so less managers were needed. That was happening all over post-War America by the 90s. Post-War America In that era after World War II people were fascinated with having the same experiences over and over - and having them be identical. Think about it, before the war life was slower and every meal required work. After it was fast and the food always came out hot and felt like a suburban life, wherever you were. Even when that white flight was destroying city centers and the homogeneity leading to further centralized organizations dividing communities. People flocked to open these restaurants. They could make money, it was easier to get a loan to open a store with a known brand, there were high profit margins, and in a lot of cases, there was a higher chance of success than many other industries. This leads to even more homogeneity. That rang true for other types of franchising on the rise as well. Fast food became a harbinger of things to come and indicative of other business trends as well. These days we think of high fructose corn syrup, fried food, and GMOs when we think of fast food. And that certainly led to the rise. People who eat fast food want that. Following the first wave of fast food we got other brands rising as well. Arby's was founded in 1964, Subway in 1965, Wendy's in 1969, Jack in the Box in 1961, Chick-fil-A in 1946, just a few miles from where I was born. And newer chains like Quiznos in 1981, Jimmy John's in 1983, and Chipotle in 1993. These touch other areas of the market focusing on hotter, faster, or spicier. From the burger craze to the drive-in craze to just plain fast, fast food has been with us since long before anyone listening to this episode was born and is likely to continue on long after we're gone. Love it or hate it, it's a common go-to when we're working on systems - especially far from home. And the industry continues to evolve. A barrier to opening any type of retail chain was once the point of sale system. Another was finding a way to accept credit cards. Stripe emerged to help with the credit cards and a cadre of tablet and app-based solutions for the iPhone, Android, and tablets emerged to help make taking credit cards simple for new businesses. A lot of the development was once put into upmarket solutions but these days downmarket is so much more approachable. And various fraud prevention machine learning algorithms and chip and pin technologies makes taking a credit card for a simple transaction safer than ever. The Future The fast food and retail in general continues to evolve. The next evolution seems to be self-service. This is well underway but a number of companies are looking at kiosks to take orders and all those cashiers might find RFID tags as another threat to their jobs. If a machine can see what's in a cart on the way out of a store there's no need for cashiers. Here, we see the digitization as one wave of technology but given the inexpensive cost of labor we are just now seeing the cost of the technology come down to where it's cheaper. Much as the cost of clockworks and then industrialization caused first the displacement of Roman slave labor and then workers in factories. Been to a parking ramp recently? That's a controlled enough environment where the people were some of the first to be replaced with simple computers that processed first magnetic stripes and now license plates using simple character recognition technology. Another revolution that has already begun is how we get the food. Grubhub launched in 2004, we got Postmates in 2011, and DoorDash came in 2013 to make it where we don't even have to leave the house to get our burger fix. We can just open an app, use our finger print to check out, and have items show up at our homes often in less time than if we'd of gone to pick it up. And given that they have a lot of drivers and know exactly where they are, Uber attempted to merge with DoorDash in 2019, but that's fine because they'd already launched Uber Eats in 2014. But DoorDash has about half that market at $2.9 billion in revenues for 2020 and that's just with 18 million users - still less than 10% of US households. I guess that's why DoorDash enjoys a nearly $60 billion market cap. We are in an era of technology empires. And yet McDonald's is only worth about three times what DoorDash is worth and guess which one is growing faster. Empires come and go. The ability to manage an empire that scales larger than the technology and communications capabilities allows for was a downfall of many an empire - from Rome to Poland to the Russian Czarist empire. Each was profoundly changed by splitting up the empire as with Rome, becoming a pawn between neighboring empires, or even the development of an entirely new system of governance, as with Russia. Fast food employs four and a half million people in the US today, with another almost 10 million people employed globally. About half of those are adults. An industry that's grown from revenues of just $6 billion to a half trillion dollar industry since just 1970. And those employees often make minimum wage. Think about this, that's over twice the number of slaves as there were in the Roman Empire. Many of whom rose up to conquer the empire. And the name of the game is automation. Has been since that McDonald's Speedee Service System that enthralled Ray Kroc. But the human labor will some day soon be drastically cut. Just as the McDonald brothers cut car hops from their roster all those years ago. And that domino will knock down others in every establishment we walk into to pay for goods. Probably not in the next 5 years, but certainly in my lifetime. Job displacement due to technology is nothing new. It goes back past the Romans. But it is accelerating faster than at other points in history. And you have to wonder what kinds of socio, political, and economical repercussions we'll have. Add in other changes around the world and the next few decades will be interesting to watch.
Welcome to the fourth and final installment of our epic epicurean exploration of Harland Sanders! The crew get extra crispy chatting about the Colonel's distaste for deviations from his recipes, battles with brewmeisters, knife fights in diner kitchens, gravy apostates, and investigate Sanders' legacy in the land of the rising sun. Headline: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/georgia-man-final-paycheck-oil-covered-pennies_n_605caf88c5b67ad3871d6490 Sources: https://www.foodandwine.com/comfort-food/real-colonel-sanders-hated-everything-kfc-becamehttps://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1970/02/14/kentucky-friedhttps://the-delve.com/2019/04/18/kentucky-fried-chicken-romance-novel/https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonel_Sandershttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KFCOutro:Semi-Funk by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://filmmusic.io/song/4333-semi-funkLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
On an extra crispy and singularly-sourced installment of Disinformed, we are broadcasting from the same space for the first time in over a year as we delve once more into the compelling and chicken-fried life of Harland Sanders... Headline: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/may/06/arizona-republicans-bamboo-ballots-audit-2020Sources: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonel_Sandershttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KFCOutro:Semi-Funk by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://filmmusic.io/song/4333-semi-funkLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
On a deliciously deadly edition of Disinformed, the crew take a trip to the southland to discover the various exploits of a young Harland Sanders long before he conceived his world-famous Kentucky Fried Chicken. In other fun, Shane's turning over a new leaf, Jon meets attempted extortionist Bigness Mitchell, Courtney regrets her revelations on Twitter, and Michael is eagerly awaiting gravy... Join us, won't you? Headline : https://www.huffpost.com/entry/not-haunted-house-massachusetts_n_605dfe6fc5b6531eed04792c Sources:https://gizmodo.com/no-colonel-sanders-never-killed-a-man-in-a-shootout-1651797965 https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonel_Sanders Outro:Semi-Funk by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://filmmusic.io/song/4333-semi-funkLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
It’s the 1970’s and Kentucky Fried Chicken has yet another new owner: Heublein, the company known for introducing Americans to Smirnoff’s vodka. But KFC brand ambassador Harland Sanders creates a PR fiasco by accusing his new corporate bosses of letting standards slide and ruining the company. As the recession and Sanders wrath hammer revenues, the chain radically changes course, and commits to a “Re-colonelization,” reinstating many of Sanders’ original recipes, and reinvesting in its disenchanted franchisees. Kentucky Fried Chicken surges just as Chick-fil-A makes a series of fatal errors; they lose millions in a marketing misstep, and take on debt to expand rapidly in shopping centers. As the recession deepens, and consumers as well as developers shun malls, Chick-fil-A faces financial ruin. Meanwhile, Popeyes has his own debt-fueled misadventures. Owner Al Copeland leans hard into the 1980s junk bond market and attempts to catch up with KFC by leveraging a hostile takeover of Church’s Fried Chicken, with fatal results.Pre-order our new book The Art of Business Wars now before it is released on April 13.Listen to new episodes 1 week early and to all episodes ad free with Wondery+. Join Wondery+ for exclusives, binges, early access, and ad free listening. Available in the Wondery App https://wondery.app.link/businesswars.Support us by supporting our sponsors! Expensify - Visit Expensify.com/BW to get started with a free trial.
It’s the late 1960s and Kentucky Fried Chicken’s new owner takes the rapidly expanding franchise public. America’s hottest new IPO makes dozens of employees instant millionaires, but not Harland Sanders, who sold his company for cash. Now brand ambassador, Sanders regrets his decision and attempts a coup. As civil war rages at Kentucky Fried Chicken, diner owner Truett Cathy in Georgia makes a life-changing decision: to open his own restaurant chain in the brand new frontier of the American shopping mall. But while Kentucky Fried Chicken and Chick-fil-A focus on growing their fiefdoms, a young donut shop owner in New Orleans turns his attention to creating the perfect spicy fried chicken recipe, and finds inspiration for its name from an unlikely source: a movie about an aging cop called Popeye Doyle. Listen to new episodes 1 week early and to all episodes ad free with Wondery+. Join Wondery+ for exclusives, binges, early access, and ad free listening. Available in the Wondery App https://wondery.app.link/businesswars.Pre-order our new book The Art of Business Wars now before it is released on April 13.Support us by supporting our sponsors! ZipRecruiter - Try ZipRecruiter FOR FREE at ZipRecruiter.com/BW. NetSuite - Let NetSuite show you how they’ll benefit your business with a FREE Product Tour at NetSuite.com/WARS.
It’s the 1950s in Kentucky and Harland Sanders faces bankruptcy once again. 65-years-old, broke, unemployed and desperate, he barnstorms the country, living out of his car, selling his secret fried chicken recipe to restaurant and diner owners. Franchising is a new concept and it’s hard going, but Sanders makes an invaluable convert of Pete Harman, a Utah restaurateur, who becomes his first franchisee. Harman creates the icons of the Kentucky Fried Chicken brand, including its name, and becomes a lifelong champion of the company. Meanwhile in Atlanta, a local airline presents Truett Cathy with a surplus of boneless chicken, which he slips into a bun and turns into pure southern fried chicken gold. Pre-order our new book The Art of Business Wars now before it is released on April 13.Listen to new episodes 1 week early and to all episodes ad free with Wondery+. Join Wondery+ for exclusives, binges, early access, and ad free listening. Available in the Wondery App https://wondery.app.link/businesswars.Support us by supporting our sponsors!Sunday - Visit GETSUNDAY.COM/BW to get $20 off your custom lawn plan at checkout!Butcher Box - Right now, ButcherBox is offering new members ground beef for life. That’s TWO pounds of ground beef in every box for the life of their subscription. Just go to ButcherBox.com/BW.
It’s the 1900’s and a young Harland Sanders learns how to cook out of sheer necessity when his widowed mother leaves him at home to care for his younger brother and sister. Crushing poverty prompts his mother to loan him out as a field hand when he’s just twelve, and from then on he’s on his own. He labors as a farmworker, a blacksmith’s helper, and a railroad fire stoker. Eventually Sanders bamboozles his way into a career as a correspondence course lawyer, only to lose his practice due to his fiery temper and tendency towards violence. Meanwhile, as the nation sinks into a depression, poverty leaves scars and forges ambition in eight-year-old Truett Cathy. He learns to cook in the family’s boarding-house in Atlanta, and contributes desperately needed cash with a thriving coca-cola stand and newspaper delivery route. As his family’s finances worsen, they end up in the city’s first housing project, and Truett’s father teaches his son hard lessons at the end of a razor strap.Pre-order our new book The Art of Business Wars now before it is released on April 13.Listen to new episodes 1 week early and to all episodes ad free with Wondery+. Join Wondery+ for exclusives, binges, early access, and ad free listening. Available in the Wondery App https://wondery.app.link/businesswars.Support us by supporting our sponsors!Podium - Find out how Podium can help your business reach more customers. Get started free today at Podium.com/BW.
It's the Great Depression, and in one of Kentucky’s toughest corners, Harland Sanders defends his gas station business with sheer moxie and a loaded shotgun. He expands it into a thriving motel and restaurant, but impatient tourists balk at long wait times for his most popular dish — fried chicken. Eager to woo customers, Sanders risks life and limb experimenting with a new kitchen invention and creates a hit secret recipe. Along the way, he discovers a unique marketing gimmick: dressing up like a Kentucky Colonel from the frontier days. Meanwhile in the post-war boom a young devout Christian named Truett Cathy opens a diner with his brother in Atlanta. Soon enough his company, Chick-fil-A, will hit KFC right where it hurts, in between two buttered buns. Pre-order our new book The Art of Business Wars now before it is released on April 13.Listen to new episodes 1 week early and to all episodes ad free with Wondery+. Join Wondery+ for exclusives, binges, early access, and ad free listening. Available in the Wondery App https://wondery.app.link/businesswars.Support us by supporting our sponsors!Pitney Bowes - Go to pb.com/BW to access this special offer for a FREE 30-day trial PLUS a FREE 10 - pound scale to get started.
Bid adieu to 2020, that hell year, and kick off Season 6 of otipêyimisiw-iskwêwak kihci-kîsikohk with Molly Swain and Chelsea Vowel as they review "Recipe For Seduction," a 15-minute KFC and Lifetime mini-movie featuring "a young heiress struggling to choose between a wealthy suitor chosen by her mother, and the new house chef Harland Sanders." Somehow this also involves a lot of discussion about the work of trophy wives, and comparisons to various Star Trek series.
Now every Friday! Hulu The Ultimate Playlist of Noise (Jan. 15) - Young adult romance about a teen with cancer (stop me if you’ve heard this one before). Netflix History of Swear Words (Jan. 5) - Nicholas Cage takes us through a cheeky history of profanity in six 20-minute episodes. Martin Scorsese Presents | Pretend It’s A City (Jan. 8) - Martin Scorsese has hosted a hodge-podge of varying topics under his “Martin Scorsese Presents” banner, from Polish cinema to the blues. Here he spends time with irreverent author Fran Lebowitz as she gives us her opinions on New York City. Night Stalker: The Hunt for a Serial Killer (Jan. 13) - More true-crime badness coming to Netflix. CBS All-Access Coyote (Jan. 7) - Michael Chiklis stars as a border patrol agent coerced into helping the very criminals he’s supposed to be stopping. ViacomCBS shifted it from Paramount Network to CBS All-Access. AMC+ The Watch, season 1 (Jan. 3) - "Inspired" by the characters from Terry Pratchett's Discworld series. Gangs of London - Finn Wallace (Colm Meaney) was the most powerful criminal in London. Now, his son Sean (Joe Cole) must prove he's ready to take his father's place. See why critics are raving about Gangs of London, available exclusively on AMC+ beginning October 1. Starz American Gods, season 3 (Jan. 10) - Marilyn Manson and Danny Trejo join the cast. Epix Helter Skelter: An American Myth - A Charles Manson true-crime docu-series which Epix calls “the most definitive recounting of the Manson Family story ever put on screen.” Lifetime on YouTube A Recipe for Seduction - Starring Mario Lopez as Harland Sanders, as the holidays draw near, a young heiress contends with the affections of a suitor handpicked by her mother. When the handsome chef Colonel Sanders arrives with nothing more than his fried chicken recipe and a dream, he sets in motion a series of events that unravel into chaos.
A crisp detailing about Harland Sanders commitment towards the rejections he faced at his initial stages... How he became a motivation of todays business startups..... --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/sandyponders/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/sandyponders/support
Happy New Year's Eve! Surprise! Nathan and Brendan pop in with a brand new (mini) episode as they discussed the recent television phenomenon A Recipe for Seduction starring Mario Lopez as Harland Sanders. In this brief breakdown, the guys question if the movie truly embraces the sheer lunacy of the whole idea or if they play it too straight and they also question the "KFC heiress" who had some unkind words to say about the production... and more! They also read some New Year's resolutions from friends and guests of the show. Next week: the show returns to full episodes with the start of the series Recently Regrettable (focusing on films released in 2020). Questions? Comments? Suggestions? You can always shoot us an e-mail at wwttpodcast@gmail.com Patreon: www.patreon.com/wwttpodcast Facebook: www.facebook.com/wwttpodcast Twitter: www.twitter.com/wwttpodcast Instagram: www.instagram.com/wwttpodcast Theme Song recorded by Taylor Sheasgreen: www.facebook.com/themotorleague Logo designed by Mariah Lirette: www.instagram.com/mariahhx Montrose Monkington III: www.twitter.com/montrosethe3rd What Were They Thinking is sponsored by GameItAll.com and HostGator (use the coupon code 'SCHLOCK' for 25% off your first purchase) and is a proud member of the Age of Radio Podcast Network (www.ageofradio.org) A Recipe for Seduction stars Mario Lopez, Justene Alpert, Tessa Munro, Chad Doreck, Martin Morrow and Emily Lemos; directed by Eric Eckelman, Armand Prisco & Natalie Prisco (3 directors!?). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this very special Christmas episode of everybody's favorite cinema podcast, Barry and Mike examine the gloriously absurd pop culture phenomenon Recipe for Seduction, the Lifetime Kentucky Fried Chicken mini-movie starring Mario Lopez that tells the steamy tale of KFC founder Harland Sanders. Topics touched upon include Mario Lopez on Mount Rushmore, Shakes the Clown as a Ronald McDonald origin story and Tom Cruise visiting for the holidays.
We couldn’t help ourselves! Stephanie and Rachel HAD to record an emergency mini-sode to celebrate A RECIPE FOR SEDUCTION (2020): The Lifetime/KFC joint that we didn’t know we needed, and we certainly don’t deserve. A young heiress must make a choice: marry her wealthy douchebag of a beau and save her family from financial ruin, or run into the arms of the new house chef who has big dreams of changing the world with his secret recipe of eleven herbs and spices. Who knew Harland Sanders was this finger-licking good? Lifetime packs so much heat and flavor into this minuscule feature, you’ll need extra napkins! Support the show (https://patreon.com/lifewinepodcast)
Have we got a great episode for you! Larry has Adam Ziegler, his podcasting partner (Zig & Larry Ignore a Topic) and friend for over 20 years on for an interview (you guys really should know more about him), a special movie review of the new Lifetime classic A Recipe for Seduction starring Mario Lopez as Harland Sanders (yes, that one), and Zig tries to convince Larry sports are overrated and why being wrong isn't so bad! When you're done with this episode head over to the episode of Zig & Larry where the review may be the same, but you will get an entirely different episode! (Keep in mid, this has some language...but it's fun!) FEATURING: Larry Smith & Adam Ziegler Don't forget to follow/reach us at: Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/frontrownetwork Website: www.nprillinois.org/programs/front-row-network Twitter: @frontrowreviewz Email: thefrontrowmoviereviews@gmail.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thefrontrownetwork/ Instagram: frontrownetwork YouTube: https://bit.ly/2NyawO0 Please enjoy this episode of CONVINCE ME and as always, we'll see you in the front row!
Oh boy, is this a special episode! Zig & Larry do a crossover episode with Larry's other OTHER show, Convince Me with Larry Smith (on The Front Row Network and NPRIllinois) and they review the Lifetime movie A Recipe for Seduction starring Mario Lopez as Harland Sanders (yes, The Colonel himself)! The review of the movie is the same, but head over to the other show and you get a whole other pile of content! It's a lot of fun! Happy Holidays you beauties!
When we first heard that KFC and Lifetime joined together to create a mini movie we didn't think it was real. It was and it was delicious.Join us for this ridiculous and tasty bonus episode as we meet Harland Sanders as played by Mario Lopez. Follow us @HallmarkSnark on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.
Who knew that Lifetime's fifteen minute drama, “Recipe for Seduction,” starring Mario Lopez as a young Harland Sanders, could stir up so much conversation? Villainous moms, croutons, a bizarre sweater, and an obsession with Pizza Hut are just a few topics of discussion. A full circle “aha” moment is one for the history books. Subscribe, like, and review—wherever you get your podcasts.Follow us on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. sarahcolonna.commaryradzinski.com © 2020 Are You My Podcast?
As the holidays draw near, a young heiress contends with the affections of a suitor handpicked by her mother. When the handsome chef, Harland Sanders, arrives with his secret fried chicken recipe and a dream, he sets in motion a series of events that unravels the mother’s devious plans. Will our plucky heiress escape to her wintry happily ever after with Harland at her side, or will she cave to the demands of family and duty?
Thirty years since his death - Roald Dahl's family apologises for the beloved childrens author's antisemitic views. How and why was this done?As screen and theatre gigs have dried up during the pandemic, Australian actors have been finding new opportunities in podcast audio fiction. Noni Hazlehurst and Yael Stone co-star in Winding Road, an Audible mystery drama set in Queensland. Finally, BL + BW discuss two teen reboots, Saved By The Bell (2020) and Heartbreak High (2022) and whether they feel hungry and aroused by the trailer for A Recipe for Seduction a sponsored Lifetime 'mini movie' starring Mario Lopez as a sexy Col. Harland Sanders.Show notes:Heartbreak High gets a reboot: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-12-07/heartbreak-high-coming-back-netflix-new-generation-of-teenagers/12956722Mario Lopez takes on a role as Col. Sanders: https://deadline.com/2020/12/mario-lopez-stirs-up-a-recipe-for-seduction-as-kfcs-colonel-sanders-in-new-lifetime-mini-movie-1234651880/Roald Dahl's family issues apology for anti-semitic comments: https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/roald-dahls-family-posts-quiet-apology-for-antisemitism-ftbx9wj09Questions about timing of Dahl apology: https://antisemitism.org/roald-dahl-story-company-finally-issues-discreet-apology-for-authors-antisemitism-as-his-estate-signs-lucrative-hollywood-deals/Yael Stone on a year of growth: https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2019/nov/20/yael-stone-on-a-year-of-growth-i-dont-want-to-be-anybodys-plaything-again
Thirty years since his death - Roald Dahl's family apologises for the beloved childrens author's anti-Semitic views. How and why was this done? As screen and theatre gigs have dried up during the pandemic, Australian actors have been finding new opportunities in podcast audio fiction. Noni Hazelhurst and Yael Stone co-star in Winding Road, an Audible mystery drama set in Queensland. Finally, BL + BW discuss two teen reboots, Saved By The Bell (2020) and Heartbreak High (2022) and whether they feel hungry and aroused by the trailer for A Recipe for Seduction a sponsored Lifetime 'mini movie' starring Mario Lopez as a sexy Col. Harland Sanders. Show notes: Heartbreak High gets a reboot: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-12-07/heartbreak-high-coming-back-netflix-new-generation-of-teenagers/12956722 Mario Lopez takes on a role as Col. Sanders: https://deadline.com/2020/12/mario-lopez-stirs-up-a-recipe-for-seduction-as-kfcs-colonel-sanders-in-new-lifetime-mini-movie-1234651880/ Roald Dahl's family issues apology for anti-semitic comments: https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/roald-dahls-family-posts-quiet-apology-for-antisemitism-ftbx9wj09 Questions about timing of Dahl apology: https://antisemitism.org/roald-dahl-story-company-finally-issues-discreet-apology-for-authors-antisemitism-as-his-estate-signs-lucrative-hollywood-deals/ Yael Stone on a year of growth: https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2019/nov/20/yael-stone-on-a-year-of-growth-i-dont-want-to-be-anybodys-plaything-again
Thirty years since his death - Roald Dahl's family apologises for the beloved childrens author's anti-Semitic views. How and why was this done? As screen and theatre gigs have dried up during the pandemic, Australian actors have been finding new opportunities in podcast audio fiction. Noni Hazelhurst and Yael Stone co-star in Winding Road, an Audible mystery drama set in Queensland. Finally, BL + BW discuss two teen reboots, Saved By The Bell (2020) and Heartbreak High (2022) and whether they feel hungry and aroused by the trailer for A Recipe for Seduction a sponsored Lifetime 'mini movie' starring Mario Lopez as a sexy Col. Harland Sanders. Show notes: Heartbreak High gets a reboot: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-12-07/heartbreak-high-coming-back-netflix-new-generation-of-teenagers/12956722 Mario Lopez takes on a role as Col. Sanders: https://deadline.com/2020/12/mario-lopez-stirs-up-a-recipe-for-seduction-as-kfcs-colonel-sanders-in-new-lifetime-mini-movie-1234651880/ Roald Dahl's family issues apology for anti-semitic comments: https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/roald-dahls-family-posts-quiet-apology-for-antisemitism-ftbx9wj09 Questions about timing of Dahl apology: https://antisemitism.org/roald-dahl-story-company-finally-issues-discreet-apology-for-authors-antisemitism-as-his-estate-signs-lucrative-hollywood-deals/ Yael Stone on a year of growth: https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2019/nov/20/yael-stone-on-a-year-of-growth-i-dont-want-to-be-anybodys-plaything-again
#HBOMax #LetitiaWright #T3Medias 1. Deadline: Mario Lopez Stirs Up ‘A Recipe For Seduction’ As KFC’s Colonel Sanders In New Lifetime Mini-Movie. Why did the chicken cross the road? To see Mario Lopez act as Kentucky Fried Chicken’s Colonel Sanders on Lifetime, of course. On Monday, Lifetime turned heads when it announced an unusual casting for an even odder title. The network shared a poster on Twitter promoting its new “original mini-movie,” A Recipe For Seduction. The Lifetime original mini-movie follows a young heiress as she struggles to pick between a rich suitor selected by her mother and the new house chef, Harland Sanders who brings more than his 11 herbs and spices secret recipe to the table. 2. LA Times: AT&T Inc. Chief Executive John Stankey on Tuesday defended the company’s industry-shaking decision to put Warner Bros.’ entire 17-film slate on the streaming service, HBO Max, next year, saying it “needed to try something different” to respond to the pandemic. The decision to release movies — including potential hits such as “Dune” and “Matrix 4" — on HBO Max as soon as they hit theaters has shaken Hollywood in an unprecedented way, with some filmmakers and experts believing the decision will do irreparable damage to the traditional film exhibition business. Warner Bros. partners, including theater chains and production companies such as Legendary Entertainment, also were taken aback by the decision to put movies directly onto the streaming service at no extra charge. Movie theater giant AMC Entertainment blasted WarnerMedia’s HBO Max decision last week, saying the company clearly intended to sacrifice studio profits to “subsidize its HBO Max startup.” 3. Entertainment Weekly: Letitia Wright responds to anti-vaxxer claims after sharing a controversial COVID-19 vaccine video. Wright said she didn't mean to hurt anyone after sharing a video questioning the effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccine. Engaging with multiple user accounts online, Wright further stated she wasn't suggesting to take the COVID-19 vaccine, just that she was "concerned about what's in it." She added, "I think it’s valid and fair to simply ask what’s in it." Marvel movie actors came out in droves on social media recently to defend colleague Chris Pratt for attending a church with a history of making homophobic remarks. In Wright's case, co-workers have remained largely silent on the matter as of Friday.
Thirty years since his death - Roald Dahl's family apologises for the beloved childrens author's antisemitic views. How and why was this done? As screen and theatre gigs have dried up during the pandemic, Australian actors have been finding new opportunities in podcast audio fiction. Noni Hazlehurst and Yael Stone co-star in Winding Road, an Audible mystery drama set in Queensland. Finally, BL + BW discuss two teen reboots, Saved By The Bell (2020) and Heartbreak High (2022) and whether they feel hungry and aroused by the trailer for A Recipe for Seduction a sponsored Lifetime 'mini movie' starring Mario Lopez as a sexy Col. Harland Sanders. Show notes: Heartbreak High gets a reboot: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-12-07/heartbreak-high-coming-back-netflix-new-generation-of-teenagers/12956722 Mario Lopez takes on a role as Col. Sanders: https://deadline.com/2020/12/mario-lopez-stirs-up-a-recipe-for-seduction-as-kfcs-colonel-sanders-in-new-lifetime-mini-movie-1234651880/ Roald Dahl's family issues apology for anti-semitic comments: https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/roald-dahls-family-posts-quiet-apology-for-antisemitism-ftbx9wj09 Questions about timing of Dahl apology: https://antisemitism.org/roald-dahl-story-company-finally-issues-discreet-apology-for-authors-antisemitism-as-his-estate-signs-lucrative-hollywood-deals/ Yael Stone on a year of growth: https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2019/nov/20/yael-stone-on-a-year-of-growth-i-dont-want-to-be-anybodys-plaything-again
Thirty years since his death - Roald Dahl's family apologises for the beloved childrens author's antisemitic views. How and why was this done? As screen and theatre gigs have dried up during the pandemic, Australian actors have been finding new opportunities in podcast audio fiction. Noni Hazlehurst and Yael Stone co-star in Winding Road, an Audible mystery drama set in Queensland. Finally, BL + BW discuss two teen reboots, Saved By The Bell (2020) and Heartbreak High (2022) and whether they feel hungry and aroused by the trailer for A Recipe for Seduction a sponsored Lifetime 'mini movie' starring Mario Lopez as a sexy Col. Harland Sanders. Show notes: Heartbreak High gets a reboot: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-12-07/heartbreak-high-coming-back-netflix-new-generation-of-teenagers/12956722 Mario Lopez takes on a role as Col. Sanders: https://deadline.com/2020/12/mario-lopez-stirs-up-a-recipe-for-seduction-as-kfcs-colonel-sanders-in-new-lifetime-mini-movie-1234651880/ Roald Dahl's family issues apology for anti-semitic comments: https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/roald-dahls-family-posts-quiet-apology-for-antisemitism-ftbx9wj09 Questions about timing of Dahl apology: https://antisemitism.org/roald-dahl-story-company-finally-issues-discreet-apology-for-authors-antisemitism-as-his-estate-signs-lucrative-hollywood-deals/ Yael Stone on a year of growth: https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2019/nov/20/yael-stone-on-a-year-of-growth-i-dont-want-to-be-anybodys-plaything-again
#HBOMax #LetitiaWright #T3Medias 1. Deadline: Mario Lopez Stirs Up ‘A Recipe For Seduction’ As KFC’s Colonel Sanders In New Lifetime Mini-Movie. Why did the chicken cross the road? To see Mario Lopez act as Kentucky Fried Chicken’s Colonel Sanders on Lifetime, of course. On Monday, Lifetime turned heads when it announced an unusual casting for an even odder title. The network shared a poster on Twitter promoting its new “original mini-movie,” A Recipe For Seduction. The Lifetime original mini-movie follows a young heiress as she struggles to pick between a rich suitor selected by her mother and the new house chef, Harland Sanders who brings more than his 11 herbs and spices secret recipe to the table. 2. LA Times: AT&T Inc. Chief Executive John Stankey on Tuesday defended the company’s industry-shaking decision to put Warner Bros.’ entire 17-film slate on the streaming service, HBO Max, next year, saying it “needed to try something different” to respond to the pandemic. The decision to release movies — including potential hits such as “Dune” and “Matrix 4" — on HBO Max as soon as they hit theaters has shaken Hollywood in an unprecedented way, with some filmmakers and experts believing the decision will do irreparable damage to the traditional film exhibition business. Warner Bros. partners, including theater chains and production companies such as Legendary Entertainment, also were taken aback by the decision to put movies directly onto the streaming service at no extra charge. Movie theater giant AMC Entertainment blasted WarnerMedia’s HBO Max decision last week, saying the company clearly intended to sacrifice studio profits to “subsidize its HBO Max startup.” 3. Entertainment Weekly: Letitia Wright responds to anti-vaxxer claims after sharing a controversial COVID-19 vaccine video. Wright said she didn't mean to hurt anyone after sharing a video questioning the effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccine. Engaging with multiple user accounts online, Wright further stated she wasn't suggesting to take the COVID-19 vaccine, just that she was "concerned about what's in it." She added, "I think it’s valid and fair to simply ask what’s in it." Marvel movie actors came out in droves on social media recently to defend colleague Chris Pratt for attending a church with a history of making homophobic remarks. In Wright's case, co-workers have remained largely silent on the matter as of Friday.
The Middle with Barrett Brooks, Eytan Shander, & Harry Mayes
Fake News, 2 stories are real, 1 is a fake An Italian man went for a 280 mile walk to calm down after an argument with his wife; he the was fined for breaching coronavirus lockdown regulations #LifetimeFilms has announced that in addition to their upcoming movie "Recipe For Seduction" which stars #MarioLopez as Col. Harland Sanders, they will be releasing other films under the fast food genres. An Englishman named #WilliamShakespeare became the first man in the UK to receive the #Covid19 vaccine outside of testing.
We discuss how to win a PS5 at Wendy's, Mario Lopez starring in a Lifetime movie about a sexy Harland Sanders, and James Harden partying with rappers instead of showing up to Rockets training camp. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
KFC (HARLAND SANDERS) Success Story | Biography by RJ AMAIKA
2020.10.19 Empresarios Fundadores despues de los 40 KFC Harland Sanders
Scheerer´s Impulse: female Unternehmerinnen, Leadership, enterpreneur, mindset
Teil 3: KFC-Kentucky Fried Chicken - wurde von Harland Sanders gegründet. Sein Vater ist früh verstorben, er arbeite auf einer Farm und verdiente Geld für seine allein erziehende Mutter. Im Alter von 40 Jahren pachtete er eine Tankstelle, wo er nebenbei selbstgemachtes Essen verkaufte. 1930 eröffnete er sein erstes Restaurant. 1952 begann er, sein Geheimrezept an andere Lokale zu verkaufen und verlangte pro verkauftem Hühnchen fünf Cent. Mit 66 war er pleite und fing neu an...
Scheerer´s Impulse: female Unternehmerinnen, Leadership, enterpreneur, mindset
KFC-Kentucky Fried Chicken - wurde von Harland Sanders gegründet. Sein Vater ist früh verstorben, er arbeite auf einer Farm und verdiente Geld für seine allein erziehende Mutter. Im Alter von 40 Jahren pachtete er eine Tankstelle, wo er nebenbei selbstgemachtes Essen verkaufte. 1930 eröffnete er sein erstes Restaurant. 1952 begann er, sein Geheimrezept an andere Lokale zu verkaufen und verlangte pro verkauftem Hühnchen fünf Cent. Mit 66 war er pleite und fing neu an...Wie wurde er so erfolgreich..?
Scheerer´s Impulse: female Unternehmerinnen, Leadership, enterpreneur, mindset
KFC wurde von Harland Sanders gegründet. Sein Vater ist früh verstorben, er arbeite auf einer Farm und verdiente Geld für seine allein erziehende Mutter. Im Alter von 40 Jahren pachtete er eine Tankstelle in Corbin in Kentucky, wo er nebenbei selbstgemachtes Essen verkaufte. 1930 eröffnete er gegenüber der Tankstelle sein erstes Restaurant. 1952 begann er, sein Geheimrezept an andere Lokale zu verkaufen und verlangte pro verkauftem Hühnchen fünf Cent. Mit 66 war er pleite und fing neu an...Wie wurde er so erfolgreich..?
Colonel Sanders' story could have only happened at a specific place in time. A time devoid of social networks and reference checks where you could get away with cussing out your boss and find a job in the next town over. Again and again. If the American Dream is to start with absolutely nothing and end on a mountain of money you legitimately earned, well then, Mr. Harland Sanders was living the dream. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/michelle-doll4/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/michelle-doll4/support
On this week’s episode, a story of how chasing opportunity is often the best response to threat.The idea of using opportunity to fend off threat isn’t new, but in the risk management world, particularly in the last 10 to 15 years, the general response to threat is to bunker down and defend. To retreat into your shell, weather out the storm, and then resume business as usual. The reality it, KFC wouldn’t exist if Harland Sanders, aka Colonel Sanders, had retreated. KFC exists because Sanders – in the face of existential threat– came out swinging with opportunity as his ride or die partner. The KFC Origin Story is a story of inspiring resilience, eternal optimism and, to quote the great philosopher, Billy Ocean, when the going gets tough, the tough get going.The Risktory Podcast is created, written, produced and hosted by Jacinthe A Galpin. Soundtrack (sourced from www.freemusicarchive.org)Alan Spiljak – CloudsAlan Spiljak – ForgottenAlan Spiljak – Light blueAlan Spiljak – Empty daysAlan Spiljak – Stars aboveAlan Spiljak – Not the endAlan Spiljak – SunAlan Spiljak – Flying awayAlan Spiljak – TimeAlan Spiljak – Fantasy in my mind Related Episodeshttps://www.spreaker.com/user/jacintheagalpin/20-02-24-how-they-did-it-airbnbhttps://www.spreaker.com/user/jacintheagalpin/20-03-02-masters-of-the-risk-universe-mahttps://www.spreaker.com/user/jacintheagalpin/20-04-27-masterrs-of-the-risk-universe-chttps://www.spreaker.com/user/jacintheagalpin/20-01-13-master-of-the-risk-universe-madBibliographyhttps://www.timetoast.com/timelines/kfchttps://www.snagajob.com/blog/post/the-inspiring-life-story-of-kfcs-colonel-sandershttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KFC https://www.biography.com/business-figure/colonel-harland-sandershttps://www.businessinsider.com/how-kfc-founder-colonel-sanders-achieved-success-in-his-60s-2015-6https://www.theverge.com/2016/7/5/12096466/colonel-sanders-kfc-meme-life-storyEquipment I use*RODE NT USB Bundle Pack (mic, tripod and boom arm included) - https://amzn.to/37OZI6T *Adobe Audition - https://amzn.to/2OjXchn * Disclosure: These links are Amazon.com affiliate links. If you use them to make a purchase, the Risktory Podcast will earn a commission. Keep in mind that we link these companies and their products because of their quality and relevance to this week’s episode, and not because of the commission we receive from your purchases. The decision is yours, and whether or not you decide to buy something is completely up to you. Thank you for your ongoing support of the Risktory Podcast.
On this week’s episode, a story of how chasing opportunity is often the best response to threat.The idea of using opportunity to fend off threat isn’t new, but in the risk management world, particularly in the last 10 to 15 years, the general response to threat is to bunker down and defend. To retreat into your shell, weather out the storm, and then resume business as usual. The reality it, KFC wouldn’t exist if Harland Sanders, aka Colonel Sanders, had retreated. KFC exists because Sanders – in the face of existential threat– came out swinging with opportunity as his ride or die partner. The KFC Origin Story is a story of inspiring resilience, eternal optimism and, to quote the great philosopher, Billy Ocean, when the going gets tough, the tough get going.The Risktory Podcast is created, written, produced and hosted by Jacinthe A Galpin. Soundtrack (sourced from www.freemusicarchive.org)Alan Spiljak – CloudsAlan Spiljak – ForgottenAlan Spiljak – Light blueAlan Spiljak – Empty daysAlan Spiljak – Stars aboveAlan Spiljak – Not the endAlan Spiljak – SunAlan Spiljak – Flying awayAlan Spiljak – TimeAlan Spiljak – Fantasy in my mind Related Episodeshttps://www.spreaker.com/user/jacintheagalpin/20-02-24-how-they-did-it-airbnbhttps://www.spreaker.com/user/jacintheagalpin/20-03-02-masters-of-the-risk-universe-mahttps://www.spreaker.com/user/jacintheagalpin/20-04-27-masterrs-of-the-risk-universe-chttps://www.spreaker.com/user/jacintheagalpin/20-01-13-master-of-the-risk-universe-madBibliographyhttps://www.timetoast.com/timelines/kfchttps://www.snagajob.com/blog/post/the-inspiring-life-story-of-kfcs-colonel-sandershttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KFC https://www.biography.com/business-figure/colonel-harland-sandershttps://www.businessinsider.com/how-kfc-founder-colonel-sanders-achieved-success-in-his-60s-2015-6https://www.theverge.com/2016/7/5/12096466/colonel-sanders-kfc-meme-life-storyEquipment I use*RODE NT USB Bundle Pack (mic, tripod and boom arm included) - https://amzn.to/37OZI6T *Adobe Audition - https://amzn.to/2OjXchn * Disclosure: These links are Amazon.com affiliate links. If you use them to make a purchase, the Risktory Podcast will earn a commission. Keep in mind that we link these companies and their products because of their quality and relevance to this week’s episode, and not because of the commission we receive from your purchases. The decision is yours, and whether or not you decide to buy something is completely up to you. Thank you for your ongoing support of the Risktory Podcast.
Some of the most accomplished people on the planet will tell you about the failures that came before the successes. Although I prefer Popeye's, the Colonel makes some great chicken. You're probably familiar with his story. In retirement he started traveling by car to different restaurants and cooked his fried chicken on the spot for restaurant owners. If the owner liked it, they would enter into a handshake agreement to sell the tasty birds. Sounds easy right? Did you know he was turned down 1009 times before his chicken was accepted once! He was considered a failure, but his story was just beginning. By 1964 Harland Sanders had 600 franchises selling his trademark recipe.Many of us have had some epic failures. Jonah can relate. He ran away from God. This always leads to a dark and desperate destination. He finds himself wrapped in seaweed under the raging waters of a storm. Previously he was down in the belly of a ship hiding, now he's down in the depths of the sea drowning. Jonah can't get any lower but God hasn't abandoned him. God interrupts our lives with storms in order to get our attention. Why? Because the human heart can't simply be told it is sinful, it has to be shown, and oftentimes this comes through brutal experience. It's not until we are under extreme distress that we call out to God. In the bottom of the pit we have nowhere to look but up. Sometimes God brings us out and sometimes we see him coming down to us, giving us the gift of his presence so that we might know peace in the midst of our storms.
This episode of the Bliss Life podcast focuses on the life and trials of Harland Sanders,
Today we talk about something that we are very passionate about, it's NEVER too late to find success. You don't need to make it by 25 or by 30 to be successful and we share with you a handful of some of the most successful people, like Samuel L. Jackson or Stan Lee, who made it big later in life.
Brent and Jason finally discuss a longtime symbol of Kentucky and marketing icon, Col. Harland Sanders. Born across the river in Indiana in 1890, Sanders went on to start KFC and star in countless commercials and promotions. Tell us what you think about OKT with comments on iTunes and Instagram. You can also here us on the Amazon Fire podcast app and at NPR.org. This episode features Fake History Sponsors: a 1915 ad for ladies' brassieres and mail order wigs from the 1850s. OKT is produced by sound engineer Todd Birdsong at WKCTC's Paducah School of Art and Design.
For this year's “War on Christmas” holiday special – Jaye is joined by her husband Chuckles as they react to strange stories and answer listener questions. Jaye waxes poetic about KFC on an open fire while Chuckles reveals something that even Jaye didn't know about him. Citations: “Col. Harland Sanders 11 Herbs and Spices Firelog.” KFC. https://www.kfc.com/fire-log “German Chocolate Factory Spill Makes for Sweet Street.” Reuters. December 12, 2018. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/german-chocolate-factory-spill-makes-sweet-street-n947301 Hay, Andrew. 2018. “No Free Money in New Jersey: Police Want Spilled Banknotes Back.” Reuters. December 13. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-new-jersey-truck-money/no-free-money-in-new-jersey-police-want-spilled-banknotes-back-idUSKBN1OD059 Hooper, Ben. 2018. “Deputies Find Suspected Burglar Was Deer Trapped in Bathroom.” UPI. December 13. https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2018/12/13/Deputies-find-suspected-burglar-was-deer-trapped-in-bathroom/4181544730120/ Hooper, Ben. 2018. “KFC Creates Fried Chicken Scented Fire Log.” UPI. December 13. https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2018/12/13/KFC-creates-fried-chicken-scented-fire-log/7401544720429/ Wamsley, Laurel. 2018. “Satanic Sculpture Installed at Illinois Statehouse, Just in Time for the Holidays.” National Public Radio. December 4. https://www.npr.org/2018/12/04/673422143/satanic-sculpture-installed-at-illinois-statehouse-just-in-time-for-the-holidays Music: Carol of the Bells composed by Audionautix Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Artist: http://audionautix.com/ Happy Little Elves composed by Audionautix Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Artist: http://audionautix.com/
Today, cooking with Mrs. Z!. Plus, iPhones... a Nerf update... power washing... Harland Sanders... and hooray for Vicks!
Welcome to Rapidly Rotating Records, bringing you vintage music to which you can’t *not* tap your toes, from rapidly rotating 78RPM records of the 1920s and’30s. On this week’s edition of the show we’re going to satisfy our heart’s desires. And we’ll celebrate the birthdays of Harland Sanders, Blondie, Paul Harvey and the State of […] The post Listening Party! Rapidly Rotating Records 78RPM Show – September 9, 2018 appeared first on Rapidly Rotating Records.
After a long break we have returned to talk about a man. He had humble origin, and a crazy rise to fast food emperor. Join us as we talk about Harland Sanders, aka Colonel Sanders, and how he formed the KFC franchise!
We all know Col. Harland Sanders as the founder of Kentucky Fried Chicken, but what you may not know is the colorful path he took to get there. Today's episode walks you quickly through the many valleys The Colonel had..it wasn't easy- crushing failures late in life but he kept at it...& you should too.
Join "the Baxman" ,"the Brain", and "the wizard" for our traditional year end showgram and see us kick 2017 out the door on its broken down butt: We have the final scorecard of the year, a visit from "the pope", and General Big Jimmy billy bob bo schwartz with the insidious belch of the year ,in fact what we do to 2017, would make Jerry Springer look like a monk! , Col. Harland Sanders and Beaureguard , even Lord Hawthorne Hayes and Jethro Depew stop by for a bit of champagne. and yes...live from his perch in valhallah, looking over Times Square, counting us down to 2018..."Mr. New Years Eve" and we dont mean Ryan Seacrest..or Carson Daly! call us at 1-646-668-8531 and tell us YOUR resolutions and predictions for 2018 !
¡Hola Branders!. Esta semana os traemos la historia de la marca Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) y su fundador, el empresario estadounidense Harland Sanders. Veremos la curiosa vida empresarial del Coronel Sanders y sus avances culinarios para elaborar su famoso pollo frito. Recordad que podéis apoyar nuestro trabajo realizando vuestras compras en Amazon a través del enlace de afiliados que tenemos en nuestra página web; y haciéndoos mecenas de BrandStocker en Patreon. Ya sabéis que nos podéis seguir en Twitter, en Facebook e Instagram, donde nos encontraréis con el usuario BrandStocker.Y por supuesto no olvidéis comentar este programa, darle a "me gusta", valorarlo con todas estrellas que podáis y compartirlo en vuestras redes sociales. Y si os habéis quedado con ganas de más, podéis conocer la historia de muchas otras marcas en nuestros canales de Spreaker, Ivoox, iTunes y en sobre todo en https://www.brandstocker.com/podcast/kfc-el-autentico-rey-del-pollo-frito/
Today's show is another remarkable story of another entrepreneur, a permaculture entrepreneur. It's the story of someone who went from being an anti-money activist to running a $1M permaculture design and build business. A business that catches millions of gallons of water, builds soil on hundreds of acres, plants hundreds of useful trees every year, restores native habit, redesigns our cites our schools and new developments. It is a success story that is 10 years in the making. And one was almost derailed a few times along the way. But just like with Harland Sanders, it was persistence and a strong belief in what he was doing that allowed my guest today, Erik Ohlsen of Permaculture Artisans, to continue his vision and build it into a $1M design business. If you don't think that permaculture based business can be profitable or be big, here's an example of one to change your mind... Learn more at permaculturevoices.com/cd6
Colonel Harland David Sanders (September 9, 1890 – December 16, 1980) was an American businessman, best known for founding fast food chicken restaurant chain Kentucky Fried Chicken (now known as KFC) and later acting as the company's goodwill ambassador and symbol.He began selling fried chicken from his roadside restaurant in Corbin, Kentucky, during the Great Depression.Colonel Sanders.mp4
This engrossing biography of Kentucky Fried Chicken/KFC founder Harland Sanders tells a uniquely American story of a dirt-poor striver with unlimited ambition who launched one of the world’s most successful brands—and then ended up as a mere symbol for the corporation that bought him out.
We are meeting with Lawrence “Doc” Cohen, a veteran of the franchise industry who first franchised Great American Cookies 33 years ago, became the first-ever franchisee inducted into the International Franchise Association's (IFA) Hall of Fame. Mr. Cohen's Houston-based Cookie Associates, also owns TCBY, Coffee Beanery, and Pretzelmaker. The award, which was presented to Cohen at the IFA's annual convention last year in Las Vegas, recognizes individuals who have contributed to the advancement of the IFA and the franchising community. The Hall of Fame includes quick-serve greats such as Dave Thomas, Ray Kroc, Fred DeLuca, and Col. Harland Sanders. In part 2, we hear from another legend in franchising George Naddaff, and George is considered by many to be the Guru of Franchising in America, specializes in the development and marketing of franchise concepts. As a man frequently featured in leading business publications like Forbes, Inc., Success, Entrepreneur, The Wall Street Journal, and in numerous trade publications, he is a recognized visionary.