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New Hampshire resident charged in shooting at Canadian border

**New Hampshire Man Charged in Border Shooting Incident** CONCORD, N.H. – Authorities have charged a New Hampshire resident in connection…

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BusinessTechnology

Tesla Cybertruck Deal May Last Only 10 Days: Musk Says New Price Will Depend ‘On How Much Demand’ At $60K

One way to drum up demand for a product that saw declining sales is by lowering the price. Tesla Inc…

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Politics take center stage as Paramount submits new offer for Warner Bros. Discovery

As Paramount moved Monday to sweeten its bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, a high-stakes political battle is playing out behind…

olympicsSports

With Winter Olympics over, L.A. is officially on the clock for 2028 Summer Games

In fair Verona, L. A., unofficially, takes the torch. While the Olympic flag passed from Italy to France at Sunday’s…

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How A Holiday Collectible Became A Test Of Modern Loyalty

The post How A Holiday Collectible Became A Test Of Modern Loyalty appeared com. Storm In A Bear-Cup: The ‘Bearista’ Cup sold out almost immediately. Starbucks had shipped “more Bearista cups to coffeehouses than almost any other merchandise item this holiday season,” according to its statement to People. Yet the supply wasn’t enough. The apology followed quickly: “We understand many customers were excited about the Bearista cup and apologize for the disappointment this may have caused.” Joshua Trujillo/Starbucks By the time the doors opened on 6 November, the Starbucks ‘Bearista’ Cup had already accumulated millions of views across social platforms. A 20-ounce bear-shaped iced coffee cup: whimsical, seasonal, photogenic, should have been an uncomplicated win. Instead, it became a cultural pressure test for a brand in the midst of a significant course correction. The Cup That Became a Cultural Weather Vane The ‘Bearista’ Cup sold out almost immediately. Starbucks had shipped “more Bearista cups to coffeehouses than almost any other merchandise item this holiday season,” according to its statement to People magazine. Yet the supply wasn’t enough. The apology followed quickly: “We understand many customers were excited about the Bearista cup and apologize for the disappointment this may have caused.” For a brand with nearly 38 million active Starbucks Rewards members in the U. S. and a global footprint of over 38, 000 stores, disappointment is not a small word. In consumer psychology, disappointment is rarely about the object itself. It is about the perceived breach in the emotional contract. A Brand Trying to Rebuild Trust Meets a Consumer Base That Has Become Less Forgiving Only weeks before this sell-out storm in a bear-cup, Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol delivered an unusually transparent update to employees. The company would close some U. S. and Canadian stores, resulting in about a 1% decline in company-operated locations in FY2025, because certain sites could no longer deliver the environment customers expect.

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Steve Kerr Compares Will Richard to 3 Golden State Warriors’ Champions

The Golden State Warriors are coming off a tough November 5th loss to the Sacramento Kings. The Warriors have very real title aspirations, but as their core ages, role players need to step up in the event of injury. Against the Kings, Stephen Curry, Draymond Green, and Jimmy Butler all sat, so a loss was to [.] The post Steve Kerr Compares Will Richard to 3 Golden State Warriors’ Champions appeared first on Heavy Sports.

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