logo
Kraft Heinz, Uber Eats team up for program designed to show consumers which restaurants serve Heinz products

Kraft Heinz, Uber Eats team up for program designed to show consumers which restaurants serve Heinz products

CBS News18-05-2025

Kraft Heinz and Uber Eats have announced a collaboration and the introduction of Heinz Verified, a new program that allows consumers to find restaurants that serve Heinz products.
In addition to Pittsburgh, consumers can find Heinz Verified restaurants on the Uber Eats app in Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Los Angeles, and Miami.
"By introducing Heinz Verified, we want to help restaurants succeed so communities can thrive – delivering quality and value for both restaurants and individuals through meaningful, best-in-class products and experiences," said Peter Hall, President of Elevation, North America at Kraft Heinz. "Our ambition is to help restaurant operators excel while also providing elevated dining experiences for people wherever they eat away from home."
"This exciting new partnership with Heinz spotlights restaurants on the Uber Eats platform across the country serving the products people know and crave," said Alex DiValerio, Head of Restaurant Operations, North America at Uber. "This collaboration makes it easier than ever for consumers to discover local favorites featuring Heinz products – and helps drive even more value to our restaurant partners."
The program aims to support local restaurant operators while further elevating the dining experience for customers, an accompanying press release said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A 4-step guide to investing success for recent college grads
A 4-step guide to investing success for recent college grads

Business Insider

timean hour ago

  • Business Insider

A 4-step guide to investing success for recent college grads

So you've just graduated from college. Congratulations! It's an exciting time in your life as you get ready to enter the workforce. One of the great things about being at the start of your career journey is that you have ample time to figure out the path you want to take in life and where your passions lie. Time is also your greatest asset when it comes to setting yourself up for a life of investing success. Thanks to the power of compounding, which Albert Einstein famously called the eighth wonder of the world, the earlier you start investing, the better. According to insurance firm Mass Mutual, a 22-year-old who invests $500 a month will have $2,255,844 by age 65, assuming the stock market delivers an average annual return of 8%. That number falls to $972,542 if one starts investing at 32. But investing isn't always easy, especially early on in your career when your earnings are lower. The process may also feel daunting and complicated if you haven't done it before. To put those fears to rest, we've come up with a step-by-step guide on how to best get your financial house in order so you'll thank yourself down the road. Come up with a budget There's no one-size-fits-all approach for budgeting, so it's important to come up with a plan that works for you, said Melissa Cox, the Dallas-based owner of Future-Focused Wealth. Trying to keep up with someone who may have a different budget than you do is one of the most common mistakes she sees young people make. "So many people come out of school and they just go crazy spending money," Cox said. "Social media and everyone sees what everyone else is doing — don't fall into that." A good rule of thumb is to set aside 20% of your pre-tax income, according to Bryan Kuderna, the founder of New Jersey-based Kuderna Financial Team. So, if your salary is $100,000, you should be trying to save $20,000 a year. But again, the practical savings rate will vary from person to person. Many recent grads have student loans to tackle, so it's good to understand what your repayment options are, Cox said. Maybe forgiveness is possible, or lower monthly payments based on your income. Perhaps refinancing your loans will allow for more manageable payments. Finally, it's important to keep yourself a priority, Cox said. For example, perhaps you really value traveling or shopping — it's good to set some money aside for those things as well. Build a buffer When you start working, it's smart to set up a retirement account like a 401(k) or Roth IRA and start contributing right away. But we'll get to that in the next section. When it comes to your money outside those accounts, the first thing you want to do — assuming you don't have credit-card debt — is build up a buffer of six months of living expenses, Kuderna said. This is because people in their 20s often have big life events that they need the money for, he said. Having it in risky assets like stocks makes it vulnerable to downside in the near term. "I always say liquidity is huge for a young professional," Kuderna said. "I might move out, I might have to get a new car, I might be getting engaged, married, a kid — all these things that can happen in your 20s." While you might not want your money invested in stocks right away, you also don't want to have it just sitting in a checking account. Instead, plug it into a high-yield savings account or a money market fund to collect a better yield while short-term interest rates are still high. Open multiple investment accounts OK, now for the investment accounts. First, make sure you have a Roth IRA or 401(k) set up with your employer and are collecting their monthly minimum match. As of 2025, you can contribute up to $23,500 to a 401(k) and $7,000 to a Roth IRA. 401(k) contributions are made with pre-tax money; the money is then taxed upon withdrawal. Roth IRA contributions are made with post-tax income, and eventual withdrawals are not taxed. Setting these accounts up is important because the money comes straight out of your paychecks — it's like it never existed, and there's less of a temptation to spend it since withdrawals before you're 59-and-a-half years old are penalized at 10%. Plus, you can take advantage of the tax benefits. "I'm huge on Roth options, especially for young people," Kuderna said. "If we can get tax-free growth for another four or five decades, that's worth its weight in gold." Once those are set up, open up a brokerage account to invest your excess savings. Considering your cash savings, Kuderna said this is taking a three-pronged approach: having cash for the short-term, a brokerage account with stock investments for the medium-term (maybe a down payment for a house in five, 10, or 20 years), and retirement accounts for the long-term. Having a brokerage account for medium-term investments will allow you to capture potential market upside while not being subject to the 10% penalty of withdrawing money from a 401(k) or Roth IRA early. "You don't want to neglect the mid-term," he said. "When you're 40 or you're 50 and you need money, you don't want to hit your retirement accounts, and you don't want to have it all just sitting in cash." Decide where to invest Now that you have your accounts set up, it's time to decide where to invest. The classic portfolio structure is 60% stocks and 40% bonds. Stocks, while riskier, offer greater upside potential. Meanwhile, bonds are supposed to act as a buffer to stock market volatility by protecting your capital, producing a steady yield, and appreciating during times of economic distress. But since you're in your 20s, you might consider allocating even more of your money to stocks since you can likely withstand more volatility, according to Chris Chen, the founder of Insight Financial Strategists. He said an 80/20 portfolio may be more appropriate. How you allocate money in your medium-term and long-term investment accounts may look different, however. For your 401(k) or Roth IRA, one simple way to invest for the long term is by buying a target-date fund. For example, you might choose the Vanguard Target Retirement 2065 Fund (VLXVX) or the State Street Target Retirement 2070 Fund (SSGQX). These funds automatically adjust your allocations to stocks and bonds as you age. As you start to approach retirement, the percentage of your money in bonds starts to increase to preserve your capital. Right now, the Vanguard 2065 fund has 53.1% of its assets in the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund, which is made up of US stocks; 37.5% of the fund is in the Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund; 6.5% is in US bonds; and 2.9% is in international bonds. Expense ratios, or the fees that certain funds charge, are also something to keep in mind. The Vanguard Target Retirement funds, for example, have a fairly cheap expense ratio of 0.08% a year. The cheapest S&P 500 index fund is the Fidelity 500 Index Fund (FXAIX) at 0.015%. For your medium-term investments, you should assess your risk-tolerance and timeline. Stock valuations are high at the moment, which suggests average 10-year returns may not be great. So if you need the money in five-to-10 years, being fully in stocks might be the wrong approach. But if you feel you can have a longer timeline than that, Kuderna said investing in bluechip stock indexes like the S&P 500 is a good approach. If you want to be especially aggressive, you might consider investing heavily in tech stocks, he said. The sector is often riskier than other areas of the market, but has seen explosive growth over the last 15 years. Some funds that offer exposure to tech stocks include the Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLK), the iShares US Technology ETF (IYW), and the Invesco NASDAQ 100 ETF (QQQM). "If you look at the greatest returns over a long period of time, it's in equities, it's people who have a higher risk appetite," Kuderna said. "If you've done those beginning steps of building a rainy day fund, setting money aside, not carrying any bad debt — if you're good there and we can afford ourselves a long-term time horizon, then we should try to almost encourage ourselves to be a little more aggressive."

The fine pitching details behind why the Mets are better equipped to hang with the Dodgers
The fine pitching details behind why the Mets are better equipped to hang with the Dodgers

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

The fine pitching details behind why the Mets are better equipped to hang with the Dodgers

LOS ANGELES — Inside the New York Mets dugout Tuesday night, Griffin Canning studied how Tylor Megill pitched to Shohei Ohtani in the middle of a close game. Canning watched Megill throw four consecutive sliders out of the zone before spotting a changeup on the edge for a swinging strikeout. At a key point in the Mets' 6-1 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday night, Canning applied what he had learned. Advertisement With a runner on first base with two outs in the fifth inning and the Mets holding a 3-0 lead, Canning started a matchup against Ohtani with five consecutive sliders. Then, with the count full, Canning unleashed a changeup. Ohtani stared at it for a called third strike. 'That was the best pitch to call there,' catcher Luis Torrens said. 'It's a different view.' The way Canning ended that at-bat against Ohtani — and, really, his entire outing of six scoreless innings — epitomized why the Mets are better equipped this season to hang with the Dodgers, the team that eliminated them last October in the National League Championship Series. Yes, Juan Soto's presence significantly improves the Mets' lineup and that's a major help. But a handful of finer reasons are also responsible for the Mets' ability to take four of the first six regular season games against the Dodgers this season with one matchup left. They all involve New York's pitching staff. And compared to last year, they are all new developments. The Mets value precision. In carrying out prep work to the mound, the Mets' pitchers are doing a better job of sticking to the idea of something like: We want to do this with these pitches in these areas against this hitter, and from there, whatever happens, happens. That's a small shift from the past. Under pitching coach Jeremy Hefner, the Mets always placed an emphasis on trusting strengths. Since spring training, however, there is a heightened intentionality to this idea. With Ohtani, the Mets know they have to mix things up. Before the fifth-inning encounter, Canning didn't show Ohtani a single slider in two prior plate appearances. In Ohtani's second at-bat against Canning, he hit a first-pitch fastball that was out of the strike zone for a single with an exit velocity of 106.9 mph. He was not going to get another fastball in a big spot. 'They're really not throwing fastballs in the hitting zone,' Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. 'If something is in the strike zone, it's spin or changeup, and they're changing a lot of locations, they're going in, crowding him, going away, they're just not repeating a lot.' They're following a plan. Advertisement That's why it was so strange to see deviation during the Mets' loss on Tuesday night. In the ninth inning, Huascar Brazobán threw Max Muncy a 1-2 fastball down the middle. The situation called for a changeup, Brazobán's best pitch. Brazobán and catcher Francisco Alvarez went with the fastball because they believed Muncy was sitting on a changeup. 'That's 100-percent on me,' Alvarez said. The Mets want Brazobán to throw his changeup a lot. Even when the batterymates think someone is sitting on the changeup, they still want Brazobán to throw it. Why? It's what he does best, so they want him to lean into it as much as possible. In spring training, the Mets' front office instructed their catchers to cut down on movement behind the plate. For example, no coming up out of the squat for high pitches or moving over for pitches inside. Instead, they wanted their catchers to set up directly behind the plate. While they were in Milwaukee, president of baseball operations David Stearns and vice president Eduardo Brizuela had the Brewers work this way, too. The way some executives see it, positioning catchers up the middle provides a better tunnel for pitchers. Some pitchers say it gives a better visual for command purposes. 'We started doing that early in the season, and we're getting really good results,' Torrens said. This is a small thing. But four of the six games so far this season between the two teams have been decided by one or two runs. The small details matter. And that's especially true when it comes to the Mets' pitching staff and command. In the six games during the National League Championship series last year, the Mets walked 42 batters. In the six games against the Dodgers so far in the regular season, the Mets have walked 22 batters. Advertisement Still, catchers can only provide the target; it's up to the pitcher to remain confident and execute. The numbers don't exactly bear this out. The Mets are actually throwing fewer strikes than last year (49.8 percent in 2025 compared to 50.1 percent in 2024). But club officials say that they see their pitchers attacking more in the strike zone when it matters most. When explaining success so far against some of the Dodgers' batters, particularly compared to last year, those same club officials point to pitchers challenging more with strikes. In Canning's showdown against Ohtani in the fifth inning on Wednesday, the right-hander threw a strike without using a fastball. 'I didn't want to give in,' Canning said. He didn't have to. Canning shut 'em down 🔥 #LGM — New York Mets (@Mets) June 5, 2025 The Mets entered Wednesday throwing the Dodgers a fastball 48.5 percent of the time. Only the Miami Marlins (44.3 percent) have thrown the Dodgers fewer fastballs. The Dodgers see fastballs 52.6 percent of the time. The Dodgers feast on fastballs. They're not getting many from the Mets, particularly not early in counts. For the Mets, it's working. One of the best examples is late-inning reliever Reed Garrett, who is using his four-seam fastball only sparingly compared to last season. With two runners on and none out in the eighth inning on Tuesday, Garrett relied on his sweeper and splitter to retire Freddie Freeman, Teoscar Hernández and Will Smith without allowing a run. In the NLCS, Garrett appeared in four games and allowed five runs. In three games so far against the Dodgers this season, Garrett has six strikeouts and two walks without allowing a run. More samplings of numbers changing: Ohtani in the NLCS: 8-for-22, 2 home runs, 9 walks, 7 strikeouts Advertisement Ohtani vs. the Mets in 2025: 5-for-24, 2 home runs, 3 walks, 10 strikeouts Mookie Betts in the NLCS: 9-for-26, 2 home runs, 5 walks, 5 strikeouts Betts vs. the Mets in 2025: 4-for-22, 0 home runs, 1 walk, 3 strikeouts Tommy Edman in the NLCS: 9-for-22, 0 home runs, 0 walks, 4 strikeouts Edman vs. the Mets in 2025: 2-for-17. 0 home runs, 1 walks, 5 strikeouts 'They've pitched us really well,' Roberts said. 'The execution, sequencing, we're kind of one step behind as far as anticipating what they're going to do, and then when we do get opportunities with mistakes in the hitting zone, we're not cashing in. I don't know the answer, but I do know you have to give those guys credit for pitching us well.' Mets officials will likely say that they did not build their team specifically to beat the Dodgers. And that they just wanted to construct a better team than last year. The new developments shining through against the Dodgers should help the Mets against all teams. The thing is, improvement means being able to handle the Dodgers. The Mets' brass also would likely say they felt they could hang with the Dodgers last season, too. Last October, the Mets' pitching staff entered the NLCS on fumes after barely making the postseason. Also, they were coming off a series win over the Philadelphia Phillies, an uber-aggressive team and the opposite of the patient Dodgers. For the Mets, the results just weren't there, even dating back to last year's regular-season matchups. Come this October, both clubs' rosters will likely look at least somewhat different than they do now because of health and the upcoming trade deadline. The Mets, however, are demonstrating that they're on the defending champion's level. (Top photo of Mets pitcher Griffin Canning: Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Imagn Images)

Keith hits tiebreaking double in 8th as Tigers regroup to beat White Sox 5-4
Keith hits tiebreaking double in 8th as Tigers regroup to beat White Sox 5-4

Washington Post

time3 hours ago

  • Washington Post

Keith hits tiebreaking double in 8th as Tigers regroup to beat White Sox 5-4

CHICAGO — Colt Keith hit a tiebreaking RBI double in the eighth inning to help the major league-leading Detroit Tigers beat the lowly Chicago White Sox 5-4 on a rainy Wednesday night. The Tigers regrouped after blowing a four-run lead and bounced back from an 8-1 pounding the previous day. Wenceel Pérez was ruled safe at second with a leadoff double to center against Brandon Eisert (2-1) in the eighth after a successful replay challenge by Detroit. He scored with one out on Colt Keith's bloop double down the left field line that landed just fair beyond a sliding left fielder Andrew Benintendi's glove, making it 5-4. Will Vest (5-0) pitched two scoreless innings, and Tommy Kahnle worked the ninth for his eighth save in 11 chances. The Tigers tagged White Sox starter Jared Shuster for four runs in the first after a 95-minute delay. Riley Greene drove in two with a single and scored in the inning. Chicago's Mike Tauchman hit an RBI double and scored in the third. Benintendi doubled leading off the fourth and came around when Josh Rojas chased Tigers starter Sawyer Gipson-Long with a sacrifice fly. Benintendi tied it at 4 in the fifth with a bases-loaded sac fly against Tyler Holton. Gipson-Long lasted 3 2/3 innings in his first start in nearly two years, allowing three runs and five hits. The 27-year-old right-hander missed last season with elbow and hip injuries that required surgery. Shuster, the opener in a bullpen game, gave up four runs and five hits in one inning. Both teams loaded the bases in the fifth. The Tigers came away empty-handed when Steven Wilson struck out Colt Keith. After Benintendi tied it in the bottom half, pinch hitter Austin Slater flied to center, ending the inning. The Tigers have won 20 of 25 against Chicago. The Tigers send RHP Casey Mize (6-1, 2.82 ERA) to the mound Thursday, while the White Sox go with Sean Burke (3-6, 4.20). ___ AP MLB:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store