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Happy Thursday. Welcome to another edition of Insider Retail, featuring our top deep dives of the week. Today we re looking at some major drive thru problems, an iconic doll s comeback, and the food tech startups to watch. So without further ado. Chick-fil-A; Jeffrey Greenberg/Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images; Samantha Lee/Insider
Chick-fil-A s massive drive-thru lines are drawing complaints â and even lawsuits. We have the details. Barbie
She s back. An inside look at Barbie s comeback â including how Mattel repositioned the 60-year-old doll as a woke role model. Patrick McMullan/Getty; Skye Gould/Insider
How Roark Capital s Neal Aronson built a $54 billion fast-food juggernaut with brands like Arby s, Jamba and Dunkin .
What 24 celebrity couples wore for their first red-carpet appearances together
What 24 celebrity couples wore for their first red-carpet appearances togetherhttps://www.businessinsider.in/thelife/news/what-24-celebrity-couples-wore-for-their-first-red-carpet-appearances-together/slidelist/80724250.cms2021-02-06T18:26:38+05:30
2021-02-06T01:46:35+05:30
What 24 celebrity couples wore for their first red-carpet appearances together
Amanda KrauseFeb 6, 2021, 18:26 IST
Megan Fox and Machine Gun Kelly in Los Angeles, California, on November 22, 2020.ABC/Getty Images
Celebrity couples often look stylish when making their relationships red-carpet official.
Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith did just that in the 90s.
More recently, Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton made their red-carpet debut in contrasting looks.
Opinion: Should Giants owner Charles B. Johnson have to sell his shares after Republican donations?
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Charles Johnson and Ann Johnson attend the New York Philharmonic s Opening Gala on Sept. 20, 2018.Mike Coppola/Getty Images
Charles B. Johnson is simply
done with this whole mess.
The principal owner of the San Francisco Giants, an 88-year-old billionaire who lives in Florida, heard enough complaints about his propensity for donating to Republican extremists as was reportedby SFGATE last week that he deigned to make a couple of statements to the rest of us, the plebeians. He first opted for a Friday evening news dump, a time-honored public relations tradition where people who have no intention of reflecting on or apologizing for their actions submit an offensively bland note that roughly translates to: Some of you might be mad at me, but I don t actually care, and anyway you’re probably not going to read this because it’s the weekend.