logo
Applebee's fan favorite deal returns

Applebee's fan favorite deal returns

Daily Mail​19-05-2025

By
Published: Updated:
Applebee's All You Can Eat (AYCE) specials are back in restaurants nationwide today. The restaurant chain is allowing customers to enjoy Riblets, Double Crunch Shrimp, and Chicken Tenders with endless fries.
This marks Chicken Tenders' AYCE debut, and it comes with the choice of 8 delectable sauces, including Classic Buffalo, Honey BBQ, and Spicy Honey Mustard. 'Every combination is a win when it comes to our All You Can Eat Riblets, Double Crunch Shrimp, and Chicken Tenders,' said Reid Leslie, vice president of marketing.
'Whether starting with Riblets or Chicken Tenders paired with your favorite two sauces, followed by Double Crunch Shrimp, or sticking with your favorite - the combinations are endless.' The popular deal is running for a limited time and starts at $15.99 per person.
The special comes in the midst of the restaurant chain's 'Lookin' Good' reimaging program, a multi-year effort aiming to make the look and feel of locations meet customer expectations. Applebee's is implementing the plan to help the chain climb out of its longtime financial struggles.
Before the plan was initiated, around 300 Applebee's were closed between 2016 and 2023. The restaurant chain went on to shutter up to 35 restaurants closed in 2024.
Applebee's employees and customers have also been adjusting to Toast Go handhelds and its kitchen display systems. Despite the changes, the brand suffered a 4.7 percent decline in sales during last year's fourth quarter.
When not enjoying scrumptious AYCE food and Toast Go technology, customers can enjoy Strawberry Daq-A-Rita, Rum Breeze, or Part on the Beach Bacardi Buckets. The buckets feature $6 Watermelon Mana Margaritas containing Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson's Teremana Tequila Blanco. Guests can also enjoy the restaurant chain's new dirty fountain sodas.
Want more stories like this from the Daily Mail? Visit our profile page and hit the follow button above for more of the news you need.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump makes Second World War joke about Germany re-arming during Merz meeting
Trump makes Second World War joke about Germany re-arming during Merz meeting

The Independent

time29 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Trump makes Second World War joke about Germany re-arming during Merz meeting

Donald Trump made a Second World War joke about Germany re-arming while meeting the country's chancellor, Friedrich Merz, in the Oval Office on Thursday, 5 June, amid negotiations over tariffs. Mr Merz went into the meeting hoping to keep Western support for Ukraine, make progress on trade, and bolster German military spending. 'I know that you're spending more money on defence now,' the US president began. 'They said never let Germany rearm." Mr Trump added that Germany's rearming is a good thing, "at least to a certain point".

Trump says he is ‘very disappointed' in Elon Musk after attacks on tax bill
Trump says he is ‘very disappointed' in Elon Musk after attacks on tax bill

The Guardian

time32 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Trump says he is ‘very disappointed' in Elon Musk after attacks on tax bill

Donald Trump said on Thursday he was 'very disappointed' with Elon Musk, after the Tesla CEO and former head of the president's 'department of government efficiency' (Doge) spent days attacking the tax and spending plan Republicans are working to pass through the Senate. Trump accused Musk of turning against the bill because of its provisions revoking incentives for consumers to purchase electric vehicles that had been approved by Congress during Joe Biden's term. 'I can understand that, but he knew every aspect of this bill. He knew it better than almost anybody, and he never had a problem until right after he left,' Trump said in the Oval Office as he welcomed the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz. 'I'm very disappointed in Elon. I've helped Elon a lot.' Trump also said at one point: 'Elon and I had a great relationship. I don't know if we will any more.' Musk almost immediately rejected the president's statement, writing on X: 'False, this bill was never shown to me even once and was passed in the dead of night so fast that almost no one in Congress could even read it!' The tech boss's criticism has become the latest obstacle facing the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which the House of Representatives approved last month by a single vote. The bill is expected to extend tax cuts enacted during Trump's first term in 2017, step up spending on deportations, border fortifications and the military, and impose funding cuts and work requirements on federal safety net programs to partially offset its costs. The measure is nonetheless expensive, with the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office estimating it will add $2.4tn to the deficit over the next 10 years. Arguing that cost is unaffordable, Musk has made dozens of posts on X criticizing the proposal in recent days, including referring to it as 'the Debt Slavery Bill' and encouraging people to call their lawmakers and ask them to vote against it. Musk has also warned it would undo the efforts of Doge, the Trump-sanctioned initiative he stepped down from leading last week after months of directing its layoffs of federal workers and cancellations of programs. So far, the initiative has saved less than 20% of the $1tn Musk said it could cut. The House speaker, Mike Johnson, spent weeks negotiating with his fractious Republican majority to get the bill passed narrowly through his chamber, and on Wednesday said he had been trying to speak with Musk about his concerns. In an interview with Bloomberg TV on Thursday, he called the Tesla CEO 'a good friend' and said the two had exchanged text messages ahead of a call he expected to take place that morning. 'I just want to make sure that he understands what I think everybody on Capitol Hill understands. This is not a spending bill, my friends, this is a a budget reconciliation bill. And what we're doing here is delivering the America first agenda,' Johnson said. 'He seems pretty dug in right now, and I can't quite understand the motivation behind it,' the speaker added. The 'big, beautiful bill' is now being considered by the Senate, where Republican leaders have shown no indication that they share Musk's concerns. Instead, they are eyeing changes to some aspects of the bill that were the result of hard-fought negotiations in the House, and could throw its prospects of passage into jeopardy. One issue that has reappeared is the deductibility of state and local tax (Salt) payments, which the tax bill passed under Trump in 2017 limited to $10,000 per household. House Republicans representing districts in Democratic-run states that have higher tax burdens managed to get a provision increasing the deduction to $40,000 into the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. But there are almost no Republican senators representing blue states. The majority leader, John Thune, said after a meeting with Trump on Wednesday that his lawmakers were not inclined to keep that provision as they negotiate the bill. 'We also start from a position that there really isn't a single Republican senator who cares much about the Salt issue. It's just not an issue that plays,' Thune said. That could upset the balance of power in the House, where Republicans can lose no more than three votes on any bill.

Apple's loses bid to halt court ruling that blocks some fees from its iPhone app store
Apple's loses bid to halt court ruling that blocks some fees from its iPhone app store

The Independent

time34 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Apple's loses bid to halt court ruling that blocks some fees from its iPhone app store

A three-judge appeals panel rejected Apple 's request to pause an April 30 order banning the company from charging a fee on in-app iPhone transactions processed outside its once-exclusive payment system in a two-page decision issued late Thursday. The setback threatens to divert billions of dollars in revenue away from Apple while it tried to overturn the order reining in its commissions from e-commerce within iPhone apps. Apple sought to put the order on hold after it was issued by U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez-Rogers in a stinging rebuke that also held the Cupertino, California, company in civil contempt of court and recommended opening a criminal investigation into whether one of its executives had committed perjury while testifying in her Oakland, California, courtroom. It marked another twist of the screw in a legal battle initiated nearly five years ago by video game maker Epic Games, which alleged Apple had turned the iPhone's app store had been turned into a price-gouging monopoly. The antitrust case focused largely on the 15% to 30% commissions that Apple rakes in from a portion of the commerce conducted within iPhone apps under a system that prohibited app makers from offering alternative payment methods. Apple is still seeking to overturn Gonzalez-Rogers' ruling in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, but her order blocking Apple's commissions on some in-app commerce will remain in effect while potentially leaving a dent in its profits. 'The long national nightmare of the Apple tax is ended,' Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney wrote in a post after the appeals court denied Apple's request. Apple didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. Although Gonzalez-Rogers mostly sided with Apple in her initial 2021 ruling in the case, she ordered the company to begin allowing apps to include links to alternative payment systems — a decision that withstood appeals that went all the way to the Supreme Court in 2024. Apple then complied by requiring commissions of 12% to 27%, provoking Epic to ask Gonzalez-Rogers to hold Apple in contempt of her order. After holding a new round of hearings that unfolded over a nine-month period straddling last year and this year, Gonzalez-Rogers brought down another legal hammer on Apple.

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