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Limo company accused of scamming nonprofit, standing up Eaton fire survivors before prom
Limo company accused of scamming nonprofit, standing up Eaton fire survivors before prom

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Limo company accused of scamming nonprofit, standing up Eaton fire survivors before prom

A limo company is accused of taking thousands of dollars that a nonprofit donated to help give young Eaton fire survivors a prom night to remember — then vanishing without a word, leaving two dozen dolled-up teenagers without a ride. Students at Marshall Fundamental Secondary School, many of whom lost their homes in the January firestorm, were stood up Saturday by limousine service Wize Guy Entertainment, which nonprofit organization Alice's Kids had paid to transport them to the dance, according to the head of the nonprofit. "Alice's Kids is outraged and heartbroken over the failure of Shawn Lasley, owner of Wize Guy Entertainment, to provide limousine services — for which he was paid $4,320 — services meant to give 24 deserving high school students affected by the Eaton wildfires a special and memorable prom night," Sean Fitzsimmons, Alice's Kids executive director, said in a statement. Longtime Alice's Kids supporter Steve Carell released a video in March announcing that the Virginia-based nonprofit would donate $175,000 to cover prom tickets for some 800 students at six schools in Altadena and Pasadena. Fitzsimmons then traveled to Los Angeles last weekend to attend a preprom celebration and offered to cover the cost of the limo rides as a bonus. Read more: Pasadena high school seniors, Steve Carell has a surprise for you: Free prom tickets Lasley did not respond to The Times' request for comment. The Wize Guy Entertainment website was taken down after a slew of negative reviews were left by furious parents on the business' Yelp page. Altadena mother Carrie Meyers said she was enraged when she realized that the kids were being stood up. Meyers lost both her home that had been in the family for four decades and her business Steve's Pets, which was founded by her uncle in 1971, to the Eaton fire. This year has been a nightmare for the whole family, and she said this fiasco on a night that was meant to provide a joyful respite felt like a sucker punch. Read more: After the Eaton fire, they didn't think prom would happen. Now these teens are ready to dance Fortunately, the students still made it to prom after parents ordered Ubers for the group, Meyers said. But they did have to miss a professional photo shoot that was scheduled to take place en route. Fitzsimmons said Alice's Kids is committed to holding the limousine company accountable for the alleged no-show. "As a nonprofit dedicated to helping children in need, Alice's Kids finds this breach not only unacceptable, but a misuse of charitable funds," he said. "We are demanding a full refund and are prepared to pursue every legal and public avenue to ensure accountability." Meyers added that parents of the affected teens are also upset. "The point is, you don't mess with my kids," she said. "All us moms, you don't mess with our kids." Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Limo company accused of scamming nonprofit, standing up Eaton fire survivors before prom
Limo company accused of scamming nonprofit, standing up Eaton fire survivors before prom

Los Angeles Times

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Los Angeles Times

Limo company accused of scamming nonprofit, standing up Eaton fire survivors before prom

A limo company is accused of taking thousands of dollars that a nonprofit donated to help give young Eaton fire survivors a prom night to remember — then vanishing without a word, leaving two dozen dolled-up teenagers without a ride. Students at Marshall Fundamental Secondary School, many of whom lost their homes in the January firestorm, were stood up on Saturday by limousine service Wize Guy Entertainment, which nonprofit organization Alice's Kids had paid to transport them to the dance, according to the head of the nonprofit. 'Alice's Kids is outraged and heartbroken over the failure of Shawn Lasley, owner of Wize Guy Entertainment, to provide limousine services — for which he was paid $4,320 — services meant to give 24 deserving high school students affected by the Eaton wildfires a special and memorable prom night,' said Sean Fitzsimmons, Alice's Kids executive director, in a statement. Longtime Alice's Kids supporter Steve Carell released a video in March announcing that the Virginia-based nonprofit would donate $175,000 to cover prom tickets for some 800 students at six schools in Altadena and Pasadena. Fitzsimmons then traveled out to Los Angeles last weekend to attend a pre-prom celebration and offered to cover the cost of the limo rides as a bonus. Lasley did not respond to The Times' request for comment. The Wize Guy Entertainment website was taken down after a slew of negative reviews were left by furious parents on the business' Yelp page. Altadena mother Carrie Meyers said she was enraged when she realized that the kids were being stood up. Meyers lost both her home that had been in the family for four decades and her business Steve's Pets, which was founded by her uncle in 1971, to the Eaton fire. This year has been a nightmare for the whole family, and she said that this fiasco on a night that was meant to provide a joyful respite felt like a sucker punch. Fortunately, the students still made it to prom after parents ordered Ubers for the group, Meyers said. But they did have to miss a professional photo shoot that was scheduled to take place en route. Fitzsimmons said Alice's Kids is committed to holding the limousine company accountable for the alleged no-show. 'As a nonprofit dedicated to helping children in need, Alice's Kids finds this breach not only unacceptable, but a misuse of charitable funds,' he said. 'We are demanding a full refund and are prepared to pursue every legal and public avenue to ensure accountability.' Meyers added that parents of the impacted teens are also upset. 'The point is, you don't mess with my kids,' she said. 'All us moms, you don't mess with our kids.'

After the Eaton fire, they didn't think prom would happen. Now these teens are ready to dance
After the Eaton fire, they didn't think prom would happen. Now these teens are ready to dance

Yahoo

time07-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

After the Eaton fire, they didn't think prom would happen. Now these teens are ready to dance

On a drizzling Saturday night, a herd of teenagers dressed in floor-length gowns and fitted suits enter a hotel ballroom through a blue and gold balloon arch. It's prom night for Pasadena's John Muir High School. For the students whose graduating year was upended by the Eaton fire, the evening feels particularly monumental. About 175 John Muir students and 16 staff members lost their homes in the January fire that raged through Altadena, and more than 150 students were displaced. The disaster left many students wondering whether they'd get to experience certain adolescent rites of passage, including prom. But help came pouring in. In March, actor Steve Carell announced he was working with Virginia-based charity Alice's Kids to send every senior at six Pasadena high schools, including John Muir, to prom for free. Community members, organizations and even local students organized pop-up shops and other events for fire victims to receive free dresses, suits and other prom necessities leading up to the big day. 'These seniors have been through so much,' says John Muir principal Lawton Gray, an alumni of the school who was also temporarily displaced by the wildfire. 'The students [experienced] COVID and didn't have their eighth grade graduation and a lot of students are now dealing with this, but they're resilient and they're strong. They make me work harder just because they're pushing through.' For some John Muir students, prom night, which took place at Le Méridien hotel in Arcadia, offered a rare sense of normalcy and a chance to celebrate with their friends. We caught up with some students before they hit the dance floor. They shared how their lives have changed, how they put their looks together and what they're looking forward to. Responses have been lightly edited for length and clarity. Fletcher Paddock,18 Fletcher Paddock, 17 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? We evacuated that morning on Jan. 8. We all thought, like everybody else, that we were just going to be coming back, but we didn't come back to our home being there, so that was devastating. It was hard. We have a place now in La Cañada [Flintridge], so it's nice to be stable and we've been there for two months now. We've collected furniture and made it feel nice. I can't say it's "home," but still very nice. It's good to be in a new place and settle down out of hotels, but displacement is definitely hard. It's hard on the mind. It's hard on the body. It's hard on our actions and emotions toward each other. It's definitely been a struggle. Read more: 'Everybody around here lost something': How teens are coping after the Eaton fire Prom is the event that most high school students anticipate. After the year you've had so far, how does it feel to be here? When we were not going to school for those two weeks, we didn't know if anything would be happening towards the end of the year. There was no guarantee for anything. There was no guarantee that we'd even go back, so it's just a benefit in general to be able to be here today, have prom, also even have like sports seasons and different events like that on campus sometimes. So it's pretty crazy and I'm definitely glad to be here today. Tell us about your outfit. This outfit, I actually got donated. I got to go to a warehouse to try on different things and I just liked this one. I'm really glad it fit really well and then I just adjusted the arms and the legs just a little bit. The donation drive was a part of my dad's work, so we were able to go into their warehouse where they keep all their costumes and things like that, but it's not just costumes, it's a pretty nice suit, so I was able to get a lot of stuff from there. What are you most looking forward to tonight? Just being around friends. The most memorable events are the ones when friends are around and we make the most of the moment. Jada Dean, 17 Jada Dean, 17 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? We were already evicted in November, and the house we were about to move into [burned]. We put our cat in there, and then it ended up burning down. We were already struggling. We were living at our tia's house and we were already broke. I remember when I drove over there, I couldn't stop crying. It was hard. I still think that — even though I lost my cat — I'm pretty lucky compared to others, because, like, I didn't lose everything. How does it feel to be at prom? It feels really relieving because, first off, I didn't know if I would be able to come before Steve Carell paid for us and stuff, so I'm really grateful that happened. And it honestly feels like a relief off my chest like I got everything that I needed to get done for the senior year because it's been hard so far. So I'm very grateful. Read more: 'Everybody around here lost something': How teens are coping after the Eaton fire Tell us about your outfit. I was going for like an Old Hollywood glamour look for sure, and I got it for free, which is good, because they're helping the fire victims at school. I like the gold and I like how simple it is, but it's also understated. I got it at Macy's, which was helping the school. What are you most looking forward to tonight? I'm just looking forward to having a time. Trying to connect with people that I haven't connected with in a long time and having a time with my friends. I'm just trying to have a good time. We need it. Silvia Pinto,17 Silvia Pinto, 17 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? My family lost our house in the Eaton fire. My sister is in college now, but she was home for winter break. I have two rabbits and a dog. Thankfully they are all safe. We're all safe, but it was hard evacuating with them because they don't get along, so having to put them in the same car together was a little challenging. It's definitely impacted us. We've had to deal with a lot of problems with mental health and of course finding new housing and rebuilding, so it's been a pretty big struggle. We're staying in Silver Lake right now. We're renting from my sister's friend's mom. Tell us about your outfit. I got this dress from Jazzy Jam [for Empowerment], which is an organization that gives out free prom dresses and this one was one of the first ones I found. I really loved the color and I've never worn a strapless dress before so it was really hard doing that at first, but I really love it and I think it's a perfect fit. I had a dress that I bought sophomore year. I was ready to wear it for prom and unfortunately I lost that dress in the fire, but I'm really glad I found this one. How does it feel to be at prom? It feels really good. I've been looking forward to it. I mean, prom night, you see it in all the movies and it's such a big part of a teenager's life, so I was really looking forward to it especially after this whole year and everything coming to an end, it feels really good to be here. Beckett Pollard, 17 Beckett Pollard, 17 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? My house burned down and it was a lot, but we found a place. We're moving into our new apartment tomorrow, actually, so we're pretty good with that. We got an Airbnb pretty early on, like maybe a day after we were staying in a hotel, and we've been staying there for like a month [or] two months. We're kicked out of the Airbnb on May 8th so we have some time to move in. How does it feel to be at prom? It feels great. Tell us about your outfit. My girlfriend is wearing blue, so I tried to color coordinate. I had a suit, but it came and it didn't fit. So I had to go, like quickly, pick up a new suit and I just liked that it fit. What are you most looking forward to tonight? Probably the food. I'm really excited about that. Maybe dancing too. I like dancing. Abigail Milton, 18 Abigail Milton, 18 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? I lived next door to my grandparents, my auntie and uncle. There was my auntie, my uncle, their five kids, my grandparents — the two of them — and then us, my dad has five kids, so that was three households. We all lost our houses. My dad grew up in that house. His siblings and my siblings and my cousins, and we had a whole bunch of family reunions, family get-togethers. We also spent Thanksgiving, Christmas, Fourth of July, all at my grandparents' [house]. Everybody came down to their house to spend time there. Now, I'm living with my dad and we're renting a house, and my grandparents and my auntie, uncle and with their kids are renting a house in Tujunga, so that's our living situation right now. Sometimes it feels empty because I want to be in my bed that I'm used to, but I come back to reality and say "OK, this is where I am now, so let me get used to it." It is what it is. It's material things. A home is not a house. A home is a family — that's what I learned. So as long as I'm with my family, I'm all good. Read more: Hauntingly beautiful tintype photos memorialize what was lost in Altadena Tell us about your outfit. I remember in the Bible they talk about how the gates of heaven are going to be gold, so I went with gold for new beginnings. My hair, my natural color is this color. How does it feel to be at prom? I feel good about prom. I was really excited to come. I was really excited to pop out with my date. I'm excited for after prom so I can hang out with my friends and my date. That's what I'm actually most excited about. Heavyn Harmon, 17 Heavyn Harmon, 17 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? We lost our entire home, so it's like you feel robbed. But our community is great. Our school is great. I actually got to graduate early, so I haven't had to do the school part, but it's still been bittersweet trying to heal [mentally] and just come to terms with something so new. My family lived in Altadena for 57 years. We've been from Airbnb to Airbnb [through] 211LA, just trying to get vouchers because there were a lot of us in the house, so it's like a lot to stay in like one space still. So we've been kind of spread out all over the place. It was my grandma, my great aunt, two of my uncles and like anybody. Our house was like a home to Altadena, so a lot of their friends, a lot of my friends. So it was just a big household in general. Tell us about your outfit. I wanted to do like Jessica Rabbit. I was a cheerleader, so I never could really wear red, because our rival school was red. I always get blond braids and I love how girls look with grills, so I was like, I need a grill too. How does it feel to be at prom? It feels really good. It feels like normal, in a way, because everything has been so abnormal and uncertain. So it feels good to be with everybody again, and just everybody looks good, everybody feels good. Kayla Vasquez, 17 Kayla Vasquez, 17 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? I was awake [on the day of the fire], making sure that it wasn't getting close to us, and once the smoke started coming to our house, I was like, "We have to leave" because I have a younger brother. He was 2 years old at the time and the smoke was going to really impact him. So we got packed up. We got our dogs. My brother has two parrots, so I had to put them in a crate. My dad's cousin offered us a place to stay in North Hollywood and it was perfect. We had a bed, we had a couch, we had a stove and a shower, so we were like, "It's perfect." We stayed for like a month and I wasn't able to go to the first week [back at] school, so I was really behind and I missed my friends. I had to get rid of a lot of my stuff, but I'm glad that we're all safe and I was able to stick with my family. Almost all the houses in front of my house are not livable and now there's a family living in a trailer on my street in front of their house, since there's nothing left. Tell us about your outfit. I was going for school colors, trying to play it safe. So like a dark color and then I wanted glitter, but it was just solid fabric, so I just sprayed a whole bunch of glitter on it. We visited Altadena Girls and I was able to get expensive, high-end beauty products and new makeup, and I was so happy. It made me focus on something else, rather than all the stuff I lost. How does it feel to be at prom? I am so happy. I have been looking forward to this day to spend with my friends. I feel like it's such a huge milestone because my parents didn't go to prom. My dad didn't graduate high school. My mom graduated from a continuation school, so it's really big that I'm able to get here today and have their support as well. Sign up for The Wild newsletter to get weekly insider tips on the best of our beaches, trails, parks, deserts, forests and mountains. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

After the Eaton fire, they didn't think prom would happen. Now these teens are ready to dance
After the Eaton fire, they didn't think prom would happen. Now these teens are ready to dance

Los Angeles Times

time07-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Los Angeles Times

After the Eaton fire, they didn't think prom would happen. Now these teens are ready to dance

1 On a drizzling Saturday night, a herd of teenagers dressed in floor-length gowns and fitted suits enter a hotel ballroom through a blue and gold balloon arch. It's prom night for Pasadena's John Muir High School. For the students whose graduating year was upended by the Eaton fire, the evening feels particularly monumental. About 175 John Muir students and 16 staff members lost their homes in the January fire that raged through Altadena, and more than 150 students were displaced. The disaster left many students wondering whether they'd get to experience certain adolescent rites of passage, including prom. But help came pouring in. In March, actor Steve Carell announced he was working with Virginia-based charity Alice's Kids to send every senior at six Pasadena high schools, including John Muir, to prom for free. Community members, organizations and even local students organized pop-up shops and other events for fire victims to receive free dresses, suits and other prom necessities leading up to the big day. 'These seniors have been through so much,' says John Muir principal Lawton Gray, an alumni of the school who was also temporarily displaced by the wildfire. 'The students [experienced] COVID and didn't have their eighth grade graduation and a lot of students are now dealing with this, but they're resilient and they're strong. They make me work harder just because they're pushing through.' For some John Muir students, prom night, which took place at Le Méridien hotel in Arcadia, offered a rare sense of normalcy and a chance to celebrate with their friends. We caught up with some students before they hit the dance floor. They shared how their lives have changed, how they put their looks together and what they're looking forward to. Responses have been lightly edited for length and clarity. 2 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? We evacuated that morning on Jan. 8. We all thought, like everybody else, that we were just going to be coming back, but we didn't come back to our home being there, so that was devastating. It was hard. We have a place now in La Cañada [Flintridge], so it's nice to be stable and we've been there for two months now. We've collected furniture and made it feel nice. I can't say it's 'home,' but still very nice. It's good to be in a new place and settle down out of hotels, but displacement is definitely hard. It's hard on the mind. It's hard on the body. It's hard on our actions and emotions toward each other. It's definitely been a struggle. Prom is the event that most high school students anticipate. After the year you've had so far, how does it feel to be here? When we were not going to school for those two weeks, we didn't know if anything would be happening towards the end of the year. There was no guarantee for anything. There was no guarantee that we'd even go back, so it's just a benefit in general to be able to be here today, have prom, also even have like sports seasons and different events like that on campus sometimes. So it's pretty crazy and I'm definitely glad to be here today. Tell us about your outfit. This outfit, I actually got donated. I got to go to a warehouse to try on different things and I just liked this one. I'm really glad it fit really well and then I just adjusted the arms and the legs just a little bit. The donation drive was a part of my dad's work, so we were able to go into their warehouse where they keep all their costumes and things like that, but it's not just costumes, it's a pretty nice suit, so I was able to get a lot of stuff from there. What are you most looking forward to tonight? Just being around friends. The most memorable events are the ones when friends are around and we make the most of the moment. 3 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? We were already evicted in November, and the house we were about to move into [burned]. We put our cat in there, and then it ended up burning down. We were already struggling. We were living at our tia's house and we were already broke. I remember when I drove over there, I couldn't stop crying. It was hard. I still think that — even though I lost my cat — I'm pretty lucky compared to others, because, like, I didn't lose everything. How does it feel to be at prom? It feels really relieving because, first off, I didn't know if I would be able to come before Steve Carell paid for us and stuff, so I'm really grateful that happened. And it honestly feels like a relief off my chest like I got everything that I needed to get done for the senior year because it's been hard so far. So I'm very grateful. Tell us about your outfit. I was going for like an Old Hollywood glamour look for sure, and I got it for free, which is good, because they're helping the fire victims at school. I like the gold and I like how simple it is, but it's also understated. I got it at Macy's, which was helping the school. What are you most looking forward to tonight? I'm just looking forward to having a time. Trying to connect with people that I haven't connected with in a long time and having a time with my friends. I'm just trying to have a good time. We need it. 4 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? My family lost our house in the Eaton fire. My sister is in college now, but she was home for winter break. I have two rabbits and a dog. Thankfully they are all safe. We're all safe, but it was hard evacuating with them because they don't get along, so having to put them in the same car together was a little challenging. It's definitely impacted us. We've had to deal with a lot of problems with mental health and of course finding new housing and rebuilding, so it's been a pretty big struggle. We're staying in Silver Lake right now. We're renting from my sister's friend's mom. Tell us about your outfit. I got this dress from Jazzy Jam [for Empowerment], which is an organization that gives out free prom dresses and this one was one of the first ones I found. I really loved the color and I've never worn a strapless dress before so it was really hard doing that at first, but I really love it and I think it's a perfect fit. I had a dress that I bought sophomore year. I was ready to wear it for prom and unfortunately I lost that dress in the fire, but I'm really glad I found this one. How does it feel to be at prom? It feels really good. I've been looking forward to it. I mean, prom night, you see it in all the movies and it's such a big part of a teenager's life, so I was really looking forward to it especially after this whole year and everything coming to an end, it feels really good to be here. 5 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? My house burned down and it was a lot, but we found a place. We're moving into our new apartment tomorrow, actually, so we're pretty good with that. We got an Airbnb pretty early on, like maybe a day after we were staying in a hotel, and we've been staying there for like a month [or] two months. We're kicked out of the Airbnb on May 8th so we have some time to move in. How does it feel to be at prom? It feels great. Tell us about your outfit. My girlfriend is wearing blue, so I tried to color coordinate. I had a suit, but it came and it didn't fit. So I had to go, like quickly, pick up a new suit and I just liked that it fit. What are you most looking forward to tonight? Probably the food. I'm really excited about that. Maybe dancing too. I like dancing. 6 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? I lived next door to my grandparents, my auntie and uncle. There was my auntie, my uncle, their five kids, my grandparents — the two of them — and then us, my dad has five kids, so that was three households. We all lost our houses. My dad grew up in that house. His siblings and my siblings and my cousins, and we had a whole bunch of family reunions, family get-togethers. We also spent Thanksgiving, Christmas, Fourth of July, all at my grandparents' [house]. Everybody came down to their house to spend time there. Now, I'm living with my dad and we're renting a house, and my grandparents and my auntie, uncle and with their kids are renting a house in Tujunga, so that's our living situation right now. Sometimes it feels empty because I want to be in my bed that I'm used to, but I come back to reality and say 'OK, this is where I am now, so let me get used to it.' It is what it is. It's material things. A home is not a house. A home is a family — that's what I learned. So as long as I'm with my family, I'm all good. Tell us about your outfit. I remember in the Bible they talk about how the gates of heaven are going to be gold, so I went with gold for new beginnings. My hair, my natural color is this color. How does it feel to be at prom? I feel good about prom. I was really excited to come. I was really excited to pop out with my date. I'm excited for after prom so I can hang out with my friends and my date. That's what I'm actually most excited about. 7 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? We lost our entire home, so it's like you feel robbed. But our community is great. Our school is great. I actually got to graduate early, so I haven't had to do the school part, but it's still been bittersweet trying to heal [mentally] and just come to terms with something so new. My family lived in Altadena for 57 years. We've been from Airbnb to Airbnb [through] 211LA, just trying to get vouchers because there were a lot of us in the house, so it's like a lot to stay in like one space still. So we've been kind of spread out all over the place. It was my grandma, my great aunt, two of my uncles and like anybody. Our house was like a home to Altadena, so a lot of their friends, a lot of my friends. So it was just a big household in general. Tell us about your outfit. I wanted to do like Jessica Rabbit. I was a cheerleader, so I never could really wear red, because our rival school was red. I always get blond braids and I love how girls look with grills, so I was like, I need a grill too. How does it feel to be at prom? It feels really good. It feels like normal, in a way, because everything has been so abnormal and uncertain. So it feels good to be with everybody again, and just everybody looks good, everybody feels good. 8 How were you and your family affected by the Eaton fire? I was awake [on the day of the fire], making sure that it wasn't getting close to us, and once the smoke started coming to our house, I was like, 'We have to leave' because I have a younger brother. He was 2 years old at the time and the smoke was going to really impact him. So we got packed up. We got our dogs. My brother has two parrots, so I had to put them in a crate. My dad's cousin offered us a place to stay in North Hollywood and it was perfect. We had a bed, we had a couch, we had a stove and a shower, so we were like, 'It's perfect.' We stayed for like a month and I wasn't able to go to the first week [back at] school, so I was really behind and I missed my friends. I had to get rid of a lot of my stuff, but I'm glad that we're all safe and I was able to stick with my family. Almost all the houses in front of my house are not livable and now there's a family living in a trailer on my street in front of their house, since there's nothing left. Tell us about your outfit. I was going for school colors, trying to play it safe. So like a dark color and then I wanted glitter, but it was just solid fabric, so I just sprayed a whole bunch of glitter on it. We visited Altadena Girls and I was able to get expensive, high-end beauty products and new makeup, and I was so happy. It made me focus on something else, rather than all the stuff I lost. How does it feel to be at prom? I am so happy. I have been looking forward to this day to spend with my friends. I feel like it's such a huge milestone because my parents didn't go to prom. My dad didn't graduate high school. My mom graduated from a continuation school, so it's really big that I'm able to get here today and have their support as well.

No April Fools': Chili's is opening a 'Scranton Branch' that celebrates 'The Office'
No April Fools': Chili's is opening a 'Scranton Branch' that celebrates 'The Office'

USA Today

time01-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • USA Today

No April Fools': Chili's is opening a 'Scranton Branch' that celebrates 'The Office'

No April Fools': Chili's is opening a 'Scranton Branch' that celebrates 'The Office' Show Caption Hide Caption Steve Carell teams up with nonprofit to surprise high school seniors A nonprofit org, Alice's Kids, set up a special announcement for high school seniors who were affected by the Eaton Fire, delivered by Steve Carell. Do you feel God in this Chili's? The restaurant chain announced on March 26 its plans to open a Chili's "Scranton Branch" that will "pay homage to some of Chili's most notable on-screen moments, with throwback nods and decor," in addition to being the only Chili's restaurant to have the Awesome Blossom on its menu, according to a news release. A Chili's spokesperson confirmed to USA TODAY Tuesday that this is not an April Fools' joke. The restaurant, set to open on April 7, will feature a giant Chili's Scranton Branch chalk art mural created by the original Chili's artist from the early 2000s, according to the news release, and will also include other throwback elements include "vintage artwork, Chili's iconic tile tables, and a perfectly recreated business lunch booth photo opp to snap the perfect 2005 frame." "Seeing Chili's Scranton Branch was like stepping into a time machine, especially if that time machine could also spit out the greatest appetizer of all time, the Awesome Blossom," Brian Baumgartner, who played the role of Kevin Malone in the popular sitcom, said in the news release. "Scranton is a city I'm very protective of, and working with Chili's to open this location was a natural fit. The Chili's team pulled out all the stops in creating this restaurant, and I'll be stopping in for an Awesome Blossom every time I come visit," Baumgartner said. What is an Awesome Blossom and a Scranton Marg? The Awesome Blossom is a deep-fried onion cut into a blossom shape with "easy to pull petals" and served with Chili's Buffalo Ranch dipping sauce, according to the chain. The item was removed from menus in 2008 and will be available exclusively at the Chili's Scranton Branch. The company is also offering customers a Scranton Marg, a "$5 party in a glass" that will be offered at Chili's locations nationwide on April 7 to celebrate the grand opening of the Scranton branch. "I'm the daughter of a bar owner and I've had enough margaritas through the years that I'm getting picky about them, and the Scranton Marg is a really good one," Kate Flannery, who portrayed Meredith Palmer on the show, said in the news release. "For fans who come to Scranton, Chili's Scranton Branch has everything you need in one place, and for those who can't make it on opening day, find the $5 Scranton Marg wherever your closest Chili's is," Flannery added. New Chili's commercial featuring famous 'locals' To promote the opening of the Scranton Branch restaurant, Chili's released a video on its YouTube channel on March 26 featuring some famous "locals." Andy Buckley and Melora Hardin, who played David Wallace and Jan Levinson in the sitcom, star in the ad, filmed in the style of a classic local TV commercial and highlighting the location's unique decor. The ad ends with Hardin being serenaded to the famous Chili's Baby Back Ribs jingle. You can watch the full ad in the embedded video below. This story has been updated to add new information. Gabe Hauari is a national trending news reporter at USA TODAY. You can follow him on X @GabeHauari or email him at Gdhauari@

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