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Beloved Food Court Staple is Closing After 40 Years
Beloved Food Court Staple is Closing After 40 Years

Yahoo

time03-07-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Beloved Food Court Staple is Closing After 40 Years

For a long time, Orange Julius has been a staple at malls all across America. As of June 2025, there are 981 locations across the United States, although some have been closing lately. In Portland, Oregon, the Orange Julius store at the Lloyd Center mall is now closing after 42 years, per Samantha Swindler of The Oregonian. This comes after the death of franchise owner Bob Slayton. "After 42 years, Portland's last remaining Orange Julius — and what is likely the second-oldest retail tenant at the Lloyd Center mall — is closing. The franchise's owner, Bob Slayton, died May 19 at age 82. He spent nearly his entire adult life working at Lloyd Center, where he got his first job shortly after the mall itself opened in 1960," Swindler wrote. The company began as an orange stand in Los Angeles in 1926 and eventually became a household name for malls across the United States. In 1987, Dairy Queen purchased Orange Julius, and now it is common to see the Dairy Queen/Orange Julius stores combined into one, as was the case with the one at the Lloyd Center. Slayton had another location at the Vancouver Mall, although that one is set to close in August, per the report. So, after 42 years of the Orange Julius being a common sight at the Portland Mall, it will no longer be Food Court Staple is Closing After 40 Years first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 20, 2025

Farewell, Orange Julius, You Sweet 42-Year-Old Summer Child
Farewell, Orange Julius, You Sweet 42-Year-Old Summer Child

Eater

time25-06-2025

  • Business
  • Eater

Farewell, Orange Julius, You Sweet 42-Year-Old Summer Child

The Lloyd Center Dairy Queen-Orange Julius combo, likely the second-oldest tenant in the mall at 42 years old, is closing. The final day of service is Sunday, June 29. The closing marks the last location for the Dairy Queen-owned destination for the eponymous frigid drink and DQ Dilly Bars. According to the Oregonian , the location has been long held together by franchise owner Bob Slayton. The 82-year-old owner died on Monday, May 19. Slayton was working six days a week when he was diagnosed with cancer in February. He began working at Lloyd Center in 1961 while still in high school. After a career as a professional barrel jumper, in 1983 he converted the mall's Bob's Hol'n One into an Orange Julius. At one time, Slayton had three Orange Julius locations including the Clackamas Town Center and Vancouver Mall. Moises Sotelo-Casas, the owner of pruning and landscaping business Novo Start Vineyard Service in Newberg, has been detained by a much-emboldened ICE immigration enforcement. Bridgetown Bites reports Sotelo-Casas arrived in the U.S. in the mid-1990s and was working to gain his U.S. citizenship with the help of a former employer. The local wine industry is calling out the federal government for detaining a beloved member of the Willamette Valley wine community. Sotelo-Casas's family has established a GoFundMe to assist with costs in freeing him (immigration attorneys, bond fees, translation fees, and more), provide stability for his business, and to help his family secure alternative housing. For those in the know, Euzumeh and L'Echelle teaming up is no small thing. The former is Jordanian American chef Tamara Hattar's pop-up, riddled with Levantine flavors and standout dishes including cumin-and-cardamom-seasoned chicken wings served with yogurt sauce and zhoug. The latter is the Division Street newcomer that opened in late May, a final effort from the late Naomi Pomeroy and co-owner Luke Dirks. Hattar will take over L'Echelle throughout the summer. The debut service takes place from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Saturday, June 28. Hunnymilk Brunch, a favorite for powerful portions of fried chicken and McGriddle dupes, is leaving West Burnside. In an email, owner Brandon Weeks says the final day of service at the current location is Sunday, June 29. For now, Hunnymilk will head back to its roots: as a pop-up inside La Buca restaurant at 40 NE 28th Avenue. The first day of service there will be Friday, July 4 with the same service schedule as now. See More:

People Who Were Stuck In Comas Are Revealing What It's Actually Like, And It's So, So Freaky
People Who Were Stuck In Comas Are Revealing What It's Actually Like, And It's So, So Freaky

Yahoo

time30-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

People Who Were Stuck In Comas Are Revealing What It's Actually Like, And It's So, So Freaky

The internet can give you the behind-the-scenes of just about anything, so if you were ever curious about what it's like to be in a coma, you're about to find out. A while back, people of the BuzzFeed Community revealed what it's like to be in a coma — and their experiences are truly wild. Here's what they had to say: Note: Some responses were pulled from these three Reddit threads. 1."During COVID, I was in a coma for 32 days. I can honestly say I don't remember anything. No light nor darkness — just nonexistent. Remembering nothingness should be terrifying, right? But it was actually liberating; I no longer fear death." —glitterycookie64 2."I had a back surgery, and two days later, they did a mylogram and dragged bacteria into my spine. I ended up with bacterial meningitis and was in a coma for 28 days. I felt as though I was in a warm, calm, benevolent place when, in fact, I was thrashing in pain. When I finally woke up, I was in pain for a couple of days. I only remembered my close friend talking to me directly into my ear. All in all, it was a pleasant experience." —coppersmoothie12 3."I was in a coma for a short period. When I woke up, it was like no time had passed, and I remembered nothing. I had to remember how to do everything again: walk, talk, eat, go to the bathroom, etc. I was told what happened, which I had no memory of, and I was even told I died and they had to fight to bring me back. However, as time passes, I have flashbacks of memories of everything. I remember bits and pieces, and I'm connecting the dots. I can remember A LOT from when I was asleep." "I ask my husband often, 'Did this happen?' and he shockingly says yes! It's weird how my brain is putting pieces together over a year later. I have a lot of trauma now because I remember things at horrible times, and it freaks me out." —rachway 4."I have a friend who was in a coma for several days after multiple rattlesnake bites. Two things she told me stood out the most: It was very peaceful, and she saw all the dogs she had ever had again. Secondly, she heard the doctor say she had a 30% chance of survival, so she decided to show him she was going to make it." —beanielebean 5."I was in a coma for a little over a month due to sepsis following a perforated ulcer in my GI tract. I don't remember hearing anyone, although family and friends read to me, played recorded videos, etc. I remember 'being' in a dim, small room with velvet-flocked wallpaper, and 'being' in an Orange Julius in a mall food court with strangers. Then, I heard my mom say she was leaving on Thursday. I woke up and thought two days had passed." "I lost more than a month, a third of my body weight, all my muscle tone, a lot of hair, and my vocal cords were damaged due to an emergency intubation. It took another month to regain muscle control to write notes and for my vocal cords and esophageal muscles to start healing. I had failed three swallow tests before I finally passed. It took over 11 weeks from ER admit to discharge. I had months of OT, PT, and speech afterwards. Fifteen months after discharge, I was completely cleared by all but GI doctor!!!" —sportygoose966 Related: "I Know You Aren't Trying To Hurt Me." Doctors, Nurses, And First Responders Are Revealing The Most "Haunting" Last Words They've Heard From A Patient 6."A friend of mine was in a coma for six months after he had thrombosis from nonstop traveling for work for days. He said the entire time he was out, he dreamt that he was floating in the ocean, chasing his Hermes trunk luggage. Turns out, his sister had put an ocean sound machine by his bed for six months." "I had the pleasure of knowing him for about three months before he sadly passed away during yet another work trip." —privatefaces 7."I was in a coma for four days. When I woke up, everyone was talking about the baby boy I had. I had lost my long-term memory and didn't even remember being pregnant. My son was at the children's hospital in the NICU. I delivered him via C-section at 29 weeks. All this was due to me having Crohn's disease (which I found out after I woke up); my colon had ruptured during my pregnancy. My husband said I was talking like a child when I first woke up." "When I woke up, I felt super tired, but then the next few days, kinda restless. I remembered one conversation my mom had with a nurse while I was under. After a couple of days, I got my long-term memory back and remembered everything up until my second surgery, then nothing until I woke up. My son was my third surgery. So, my son was what surprised me." —u/PennyCundiff 8."I was in a coma for 11 days from a severe brain injury. I don't remember being in a coma or waking up from a coma. I lost several years of memories prior to the coma, and my brain didn't really start to 'retain' information again until about six weeks after I came out of the coma. I'm told that my personality changed afterward. I had to rebuild most areas of my life. It sucked, but it was probably a good thing." "Although, I'd be lying if I said I never wondered what my life would be like if I'd never had the coma." —u/heyrainyday 9."A friend of mine was in a six-month coma after an accident. Afterward, he made sure to tell everyone around him to talk to people in a coma because they can hear you. BUT he noted that they should always tell the person in a coma what happened, where they are, and what's happening to them because he said that his moments of lucidity were mixed with some truly horrifying dreams — and he had trouble distinguishing between what was real and what were dreams." "He said he just wanted to be told what was real and what was happening." —u/Blameking27 Related: 27 Grown-Ass Adults Who Threw Such Unbelievable Temper Tantrums, Even The Brattiest Toddler Couldn't Compete 10."This is really bizarre, but my uncle — a very serious, strict, and rather dry man — had an accident and went into a coma a few years back. He never believed anything he couldn't touch, no talks about souls, or anything similar. But he was in a coma for a few weeks until he woke up and had this crazy AF story. He said he saw himself in a bubble, floating around in a white place, and it was peaceful and beautiful. But then, he said there were other bubbles he could see around him, and they had other people in them. He distinctly remembered a black-haired woman singing in the bubble closest to his, until one day, her bubble burst, and she disappeared. When he woke up, he could give a very clear description of her body, age, and all that. Now here's the wild part..." "There was a woman, one floor below him, in a coma who sadly had passed away before he woke up. You guessed it — black hair, age, body all correct. He had never met or seen this woman in his life. His whole idea of life changed after this. It still makes me think sometimes... Where was he? He thinks all the people in bubbles around him were patients in the same hospital. Could it be? We'll probably never know." —u/KayPet 11."I was in a coma for three days after a car accident where I hit my head. Pretty much, I was driving then I saw the color purple, and then I woke up three days later. There really was nothing. It's not even like sleeping because when you wake up from sleeping, you know you were asleep. It is like blinking; one second you are doing something, then the next something totally different. I do have a vague memory of being on a table with a cute guy wiping my nose and it hurting really bad. I remember saying, 'You are super cute,' but that's all." "I believe that was before I went into the coma after the accident. I had a brain bruise or something like that, and it caused speech problems for about six months after." —u/sharms2010 12."A friend of ours fell into a coma at age 25 (around 1992) and woke up at age 36 (around 2002). She was a Rhodes Scholar nominee (I think, second-hand information) and quite brilliant. She was still 25 mentally — as if everything was just on pause. Her body was really well-preserved; she's really fun and cool and sort of the ultimate cougar. Plus, she totally woke up to the internet." —u/horsman 13."I spent eight days in a coma last year after a particularly traumatic surgery, my waking thoughts were wondering if I had died or made it. I couldn't open my eyes, and I was on a medical air mattress, so I felt like I was floating; this lead me to think that I had died, and I remember thinking it wasn't so bad and wondering if my dad would come find me. Once I realized that I was still alive, I thought I had been injured fighting in a war and worried that my wife might not know I was still alive. Trying to communicate with the nurses while intubated and drugged was very difficult." "What I learned later from my wife is that she was there the whole time and while I was fighting against the doctors and nurses, I would immediately calm down and cooperate when she held my hand and sang to me. It still brings tears to my eyes to think of the love and devotion she has shown to me during this time." —u/Tinman556 14."I was in a coma for four days from bacterial meningitis. When I woke up, I was completely deaf! I had to communicate with my parents and doctors with a notepad and pen. Some hearing gradually returned in my left ear, but my right ear is still 100% deaf to this day." —u/austin_cody 15."My wife was in a medically induced coma for four days. She had a reaction to contrast dye, and her heart stopped for 20 minutes. For nearly three months, she was confabulating about her long-dead parents. She would speak about them like they were in the next room. Or, she would say her daughter or brother they hadn't. Over and over, she thought her mom was alive, then her dad. Drove me nuts having to (gently) correct her many times per day. She would come up with amazing tales about what people (relatives, friends, neighbors) were doing, what they said — truly creative fiction. Three months later, she began to come back." "The confabulations stopped, and now, things are reversed. She can remember recent events, but her long-term memories are gone. I don't know what that's like, but it must be awful. She cries sometimes for her lost memories, but overall, she is doing very well." —u/urgent45 And finally... 16."I was in a coma for about two weeks following a cardiac arrest as a teen. I was technically dead for over an hour, in fact. People often ask me if I could hear my family talking to me or if I was dreaming. The answer is 'No.' There is a huge hole in my memory beginning about two weeks before the coma through a week after 'waking up.' And waking up is in quotes because I would wake up, ask a bunch of semi-incoherent questions, fall back under, then wake up again and ask the exact same questions, in the exact same order. Repeat six or seven times." "The coma was not even blackness. It just does not exist. I remember having the hardest time believing it was actually mid-October when the last day I remembered was late-September." —u/iwillcorrectyou Note: Some responses have been edited for length and/or clarity. If you (or someone you know) have ever been stuck in a coma, what was it like? Feel free to share your story in the comments, or use this anonymous form below. Also in Internet Finds: 51 Wildly Fascinating Photos Of Disorders, Injuries, And Variations In The Human Body That I Cannot Stop Staring At Also in Internet Finds: 23 People Who Tried Their Best, But Crapped The Bed So Bad Also in Internet Finds: 19 Things Society Glorifies That Are Actually Straight-Up Terrible, And We Need To Stop Pretending Otherwise

16 People Who Were Stuck In Comas Share What Happened
16 People Who Were Stuck In Comas Share What Happened

Buzz Feed

time30-05-2025

  • Health
  • Buzz Feed

16 People Who Were Stuck In Comas Share What Happened

The internet can give you the behind-the-scenes of just about anything, so if you were ever curious about what it's like to be in a coma, you're about to find out. A while back, people of the BuzzFeed Community revealed what it's like to be in a coma — and their experiences are truly wild. Here's what they had to say: "During COVID, I was in a coma for 32 days. I can honestly say I don't remember anything. No light nor darkness — just nonexistent. Remembering nothingness should be terrifying, right? But it was actually liberating; I no longer fear death." "I had a back surgery, and two days later, they did a mylogram and dragged bacteria into my spine. I ended up with bacterial meningitis and was in a coma for 28 days. I felt as though I was in a warm, calm, benevolent place when, in fact, I was thrashing in pain. When I finally woke up, I was in pain for a couple of days. I only remembered my close friend talking to me directly into my ear. All in all, it was a pleasant experience." "I was in a coma for a short period. When I woke up, it was like no time had passed, and I remembered nothing. I had to remember how to do everything again: walk, talk, eat, go to the bathroom, etc. I was told what happened, which I had no memory of, and I was even told I died and they had to fight to bring me back. However, as time passes, I have flashbacks of memories of everything. I remember bits and pieces, and I'm connecting the dots. I can remember A LOT from when I was asleep." "I have a friend who was in a coma for several days after multiple rattlesnake bites. Two things she told me stood out the most: It was very peaceful, and she saw all the dogs she had ever had again. Secondly, she heard the doctor say she had a 30% chance of survival, so she decided to show him she was going to make it." "I was in a coma for a little over a month due to sepsis following a perforated ulcer in my GI tract. I don't remember hearing anyone, although family and friends read to me, played recorded videos, etc. I remember 'being' in a dim, small room with velvet-flocked wallpaper, and 'being' in an Orange Julius in a mall food court with strangers. Then, I heard my mom say she was leaving on Thursday. I woke up and thought two days had passed." "A friend of mine was in a coma for six months after he had thrombosis from nonstop traveling for work for days. He said the entire time he was out, he dreamt that he was floating in the ocean, chasing his Hermes trunk luggage. Turns out, his sister had put an ocean sound machine by his bed for six months." "I was in a coma for four days. When I woke up, everyone was talking about the baby boy I had. I had lost my long-term memory and didn't even remember being pregnant. My son was at the children's hospital in the NICU. I delivered him via C-section at 29 weeks. All this was due to me having Crohn's disease (which I found out after I woke up); my colon had ruptured during my pregnancy. My husband said I was talking like a child when I first woke up." "I was in a coma for 11 days from a severe brain injury. I don't remember being in a coma or waking up from a coma. I lost several years of memories prior to the coma, and my brain didn't really start to 'retain' information again until about six weeks after I came out of the coma. I'm told that my personality changed afterward. I had to rebuild most areas of my life. It sucked, but it was probably a good thing." "A friend of mine was in a six-month coma after an accident. Afterward, he made sure to tell everyone around him to talk to people in a coma because they can hear you. BUT he noted that they should always tell the person in a coma what happened, where they are, and what's happening to them because he said that his moments of lucidity were mixed with some truly horrifying dreams — and he had trouble distinguishing between what was real and what were dreams." "This is really bizarre, but my uncle — a very serious, strict, and rather dry man — had an accident and went into a coma a few years back. He never believed anything he couldn't touch, no talks about souls, or anything similar. But he was in a coma for a few weeks until he woke up and had this crazy AF story. He said he saw himself in a bubble, floating around in a white place, and it was peaceful and beautiful. But then, he said there were other bubbles he could see around him, and they had other people in them. He distinctly remembered a black-haired woman singing in the bubble closest to his, until one day, her bubble burst, and she disappeared. When he woke up, he could give a very clear description of her body, age, and all that. Now here's the wild part..." "I was in a coma for three days after a car accident where I hit my head. Pretty much, I was driving then I saw the color purple, and then I woke up three days later. There really was nothing. It's not even like sleeping because when you wake up from sleeping, you know you were asleep. It is like blinking; one second you are doing something, then the next something totally different. I do have a vague memory of being on a table with a cute guy wiping my nose and it hurting really bad. I remember saying, 'You are super cute,' but that's all." "A friend of ours fell into a coma at age 25 (around 1992) and woke up at age 36 (around 2002). She was a Rhodes Scholar nominee (I think, second-hand information) and quite brilliant. She was still 25 mentally — as if everything was just on pause. Her body was really well-preserved; she's really fun and cool and sort of the ultimate cougar. Plus, she totally woke up to the internet." "I spent eight days in a coma last year after a particularly traumatic surgery, my waking thoughts were wondering if I had died or made it. I couldn't open my eyes, and I was on a medical air mattress, so I felt like I was floating; this lead me to think that I had died, and I remember thinking it wasn't so bad and wondering if my dad would come find me. Once I realized that I was still alive, I thought I had been injured fighting in a war and worried that my wife might not know I was still alive. Trying to communicate with the nurses while intubated and drugged was very difficult." "I was in a coma for four days from bacterial meningitis. When I woke up, I was completely deaf! I had to communicate with my parents and doctors with a notepad and pen. Some hearing gradually returned in my left ear, but my right ear is still 100% deaf to this day." "My wife was in a medically induced coma for four days. She had a reaction to contrast dye, and her heart stopped for 20 minutes. For nearly three months, she was confabulating about her long-dead parents. She would speak about them like they were in the next room. Or, she would say her daughter or brother they hadn't. Over and over, she thought her mom was alive, then her dad. Drove me nuts having to (gently) correct her many times per day. She would come up with amazing tales about what people (relatives, friends, neighbors) were doing, what they said — truly creative fiction. Three months later, she began to come back." And finally... "I was in a coma for about two weeks following a cardiac arrest as a teen. I was technically dead for over an hour, in fact. People often ask me if I could hear my family talking to me or if I was dreaming. The answer is 'No.' There is a huge hole in my memory beginning about two weeks before the coma through a week after 'waking up.' And waking up is in quotes because I would wake up, ask a bunch of semi-incoherent questions, fall back under, then wake up again and ask the exact same questions, in the exact same order. Repeat six or seven times." If you (or someone you know) have ever been stuck in a coma, what was it like? Feel free to share your story in the comments, or use this anonymous form below.

In ‘The Electric State,' Jolting a Robot to Life
In ‘The Electric State,' Jolting a Robot to Life

New York Times

time05-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

In ‘The Electric State,' Jolting a Robot to Life

Kid Cosmo's head is enormous, as robot heads go. The primary nonhuman hero of the film 'The Electric State' (on Netflix March 14), Cosmo has a bright yellow globe of a head the size and shape of an exercise ball, propped atop an incongruously spindly frame. Cute? Yes. Mechanically feasible? Not really. Cosmo's character was inspired by Skip, the similarly bigheaded hero of Simon Stalenhag's graphic novel. A cult hit when it was first published in 2018, the book 'The Electric State' is set in an alternate 1990s universe after a mysterious war has ravaged the California landscape, leaving the husks of enormous drones and robots in its wake. 'Simon Stalenhag's work is what attracted me to this movie to begin with,' said Matthew E. Butler, the film's visual effects supervisor. 'But his designs are often aesthetically cool and engineeringly impossible.' In the film, Cosmo and his young companion, Michelle, played by Millie Bobby Brown, embark on a journey across the American West to find Michelle's brother. Along the way, they meet up with scores of other robots, many just as improbably designed as Cosmo. Of course, Cosmo doesn't really need to make mechanical sense in either the graphic novel or the feature film, given the flights of physics fancy regularly found in both mediums. But Anthony and Joe Russo, the film's directors, wanted to ground their movie in reality, even more so given the story's 1990s setting (think Orange Julius and MTV News with sci-fi enhancements), and the film's fanciful robots, which include a midcentury postal carrier (voiced by Jenny Slate) and an urbane Mr. Peanut (Woody Harrelson). Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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