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2BNTV 11-21-2012 11:42 AM

No More Twinkies?
 
There's has been a hubbub in the ttri-state area over the Hostess Company going out of business and no more twinkies will be available to the public.

Will you miss twinkies on the grocer shelf or is this a tri-state thingy?

Hostess headed for final closing - Nov. 21, 2012

Mikeod 11-21-2012 12:03 PM

There will be more Twinkies. Hostess will sell the name and recipe to another company. The names and rights to the products are their major assets.

I won't miss them. Haven't had a Twinkie for many, many years.

Figmo Bohica 11-21-2012 01:23 PM

Oh, Oh, Oh, No. No more deep fat fried twinkies.

Everyone does know that twinkies are the ultimate survival food. Shelve life of around 100 years with no refrigation required.

Mack184 11-21-2012 01:42 PM

Agree with mikeod..The brands have high asset value and they will be sold off to another major baker and they will continue in production. While I think I can honestly say that I've never once eaten a Twinkie, I do/did like the Hostess cupcakes and Wonder Bread. Remember..Captain Kangaroo told us that Wonder Bread builds strong bodies 12 ways! I always believed the Captain.

rubicon 11-21-2012 02:07 PM

Twinkies will be a thing of the past and since they are well preserved will hold up well in museums.

jblum315 11-21-2012 02:11 PM

Not only Twinkies, but all the beloved Hostess junk food - just a memory!

Patty55 11-21-2012 02:28 PM

I don't like Twinkies, but Yankee Doodles are one of my basic food groups.

2BNTV 11-21-2012 02:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rubicon (Post 583709)
Twinkies will be a thing of the past and since they are well preserved will hold up well in museums.

:1rotfl:

2BNTV 11-21-2012 02:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jblum315 (Post 583712)
Not only Twinkies, but all the beloved Hostess junk food - just a memory!

:agree:

2BNTV 11-21-2012 02:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Patty55 (Post 583716)
I don't like Twinkies, but Yankee Doodles are one of my basic food groups.

Weren't Yankee Doodles made by Drake?

Also loved Devil Dogs but they don't love me. :cryin2:

Patty55 11-21-2012 03:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 2BNTV (Post 583724)
Weren't Yankee Doodles made by Drake?

Also loved Devil Dogs but they don't love me. :cryin2:

Yes, but I think Hostess bought them out, no Devil Dogs at Publix this week.

BarryRX 11-21-2012 03:22 PM

I'm not concerned about Twinkies, but Ding Dongs were delicious!

ugotme 11-21-2012 03:35 PM

Was never a big Twinkies fan but most of the other Hostess products are DELICIOUS ! :icon_hungry:

delima2000 11-21-2012 03:40 PM

My favorites are ding dongs and hohos. My husband likes twinkles and snowballs. I was bummed when i went to Publix and the shelves were empty of all of the hostess products. Hope the new company buys the rights to all of their products.

shcisamax 11-21-2012 03:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mack184 (Post 583703)
While I think I can honestly say that I've never once eaten a Twinkie, I do/did like the Hostess cupcakes and Wonder Bread. .

How could you grow up in a America and not eat a Twinkie? The cupcakes couldn't hold a candle. As long as they don't go the way of the flavor straws I don't care if it is Hostess or another company. Just hope they don't tinker with the recipe. It is the only junk I can eat without guilt.

ugotme 11-21-2012 03:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by shcisamax (Post 583747)
How could you grow up in a America and not eat a Twinkie? The cupcakes couldn't hold a candle. As long as they don't go the way of the flavor straws I don't care if it is Hostess or another company. Just hope they don't tinker with the recipe. It is the only junk I can eat without guilt.


Flavor straws - remember them?

janmcn 11-21-2012 04:30 PM

With the girth of the nation's waistlines, this is probably not a bad thing. Sadly 15,000 people are losing their jobs right in the heart of the holiday season.

2 Oldcrabs 11-21-2012 04:50 PM

Job losses are a shame. But my glucose level is happy.:icon_hungry:

shcisamax 11-21-2012 04:52 PM

I think they discovered flavor straws were actually very bad for your health

shcisamax 11-21-2012 04:52 PM

Remember the wax bottles with liquid inside? Wonder what that sweet liquid was. It sure was good.

ugotme 11-21-2012 06:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by shcisamax (Post 583787)
Remember the wax bottles with liquid inside? Wonder what that sweet liquid was. It sure was good.

OH yeah then used to chew on the wax. LOL.

Don't know if you remember blackjack gum, sen-sen, chiclets and so many more.

Mack184 11-21-2012 07:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by shcisamax (Post 583747)
How could you grow up in a America and not eat a Twinkie? The cupcakes couldn't hold a candle. As long as they don't go the way of the flavor straws I don't care if it is Hostess or another company. Just hope they don't tinker with the recipe. It is the only junk I can eat without guilt.

I have no guilt about anything food-wise. I eat or drink whatever I want. My mother instilled lots of guilt into me about food & eating, but something made me change when I was 26. When I was 26 my father died of a massive heart attack. At 60 years old he got up every morning of his life and did 100 push-ups & 100 sit-ups. He watched everything he ate. At 60 he could still fit into his WW-2 pilot's uniform. He did not smoke or drink. At 60 years old he was in better physical shape than I have ever been in my whole life, and at 60 years old he dropped dead of a heart attack while taking a walk. This guy's habits would have had my doctor doing cartwheels. His family had a penchant for long, long lives. And then after following all "the rules" he just dropped over dead.

When that happened it changed the way I think about food and how I eat. This doesn't mean I go home at night and suck on a stick of butter, but if I want it, I eat it. Playing by the rules didn't do much for my dad.

As far as how could I not eat a Twinkie? Don't know. Just never had one. I also don't eat candy. Can't stand it. Between the two it probably classifies me as a "commie". LOL.

Shimpy 11-21-2012 07:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by janmcn (Post 583768)
Sadly 15,000 people are losing their jobs right in the heart of the holiday season.

According to the news the reason Hostess is going out of business is because the union is on strike and refuses to go back to work. In todays economy and jobless situation it is unbelievable to me that someone would be on strike when they should be thanking their lucky stars that they even have a job. Now those employees who could have been working won't be and I have no sympathy for them. I do have symphony for those that belong to the union and disagree with striking but wouldn't dare say so or could be physically harmed.

mgjim 11-21-2012 07:37 PM

Twinkies
 
I haven't had a Twinkie since my kids were in pre-school, but Twinkies figured prominently in one of my all time favorite movies. Also, my favorite baseball team has pretty much played like Twinkies for the past couple of years.

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V13CZnUCOaQ]That's a Big Twinkie... - YouTube[/ame]

Wi11iam 11-21-2012 07:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 2BNTV (Post 583672)
There's has been a hubbub in the ttri-state area over the Hostess Company going out of business and no more twinkies will be available to the public.

Will you miss twinkies on the grocer shelf or is this a tri-state thingy?

Hostess headed for final closing - Nov. 21, 2012

I liked hostess cup cakes better....you remember it was the only time you would drink your milk...lol..

LndLocked 11-21-2012 08:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Shimpy (Post 583869)
According to the news the reason Hostess is going out of business is because the union is on strike and refuses to go back to work. In todays economy and jobless situation it is unbelievable to me that someone would be on strike when they should be thanking their lucky stars that they even have a job. Now those employees who could have been working won't be and I have no sympathy for them. I do have symphony for those that belong to the union and disagree with striking but wouldn't dare say so or could be physically harmed.

That is far from the truth:

"In order to “save” the firm, the operators of the company turned to the unions, which had already surrendered huge concessions just a few years back to turn the company around, and demanded an across the board slash, an additional 31%, along with eliminating the retirement and benefits entirely. It was a bridge too far. The union went on strike, and now the company has declared it will be liquidated.

in the end the union members would have lost more if they had capitulated to the vulture capitalists demands. By this move, they can hope to salvage the retirement plan, while if they’d given in they would have lost it all. $2 billion is a lot of money to just “give away” in negotiations. Of course the unions were expected to surrender despite the fact that the management company was asking the bankruptcy court to give their outgoing CEO up to $5.5 million. All of this was in addition to the 80% raises the executives were being treated to"

Mack184 11-21-2012 08:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Shimpy (Post 583869)
According to the news the reason Hostess is going out of business is because the union is on strike and refuses to go back to work. In todays economy and jobless situation it is unbelievable to me that someone would be on strike when they should be thanking their lucky stars that they even have a job. Now those employees who could have been working won't be and I have no sympathy for them. I do have symphony for those that belong to the union and disagree with striking but wouldn't dare say so or could be physically harmed.

I don't understand the union leaderships sort of thinking at all. It makes no sense. If I understand the story correctly, the Teamsters had agreed to whatever deal had been offered, but the Baker's union was the group that dug in their heels. It's not like Hostess was making loads of money, they were bankrupt for pete's sake! We're not talking about downtrodden people slaving in coal mines in the 1800's here. Their give-backs would still have allowed them to do better than many people are doing. What a strange & sad outcome.

The bad part of this is that the vast bulk of the workers will have very little luck in getting the kind of jobs at the pay they were used to. While I'm certain that Hostess will sell off it's brand names to other baking companies, while those companies might add a few jobs to their roster, it won't even come close to hiring the number of people who now have no job.

army one 11-22-2012 09:37 AM

I don't understand why so many especially on this forum are so opposed to unions. So many on this forum seem to think that workers can work for whatever is offered by business and business continues to say they can't afford to pay workers but out of the other side of their mouths pay outlandish salaries and benes to execs. It seems to me that many here feel that the workers shouldn't be allowed to make a living wage. Why is that? Most on this forum seem to think it's ok for pro athletes to bargain with team owners thru their agents and players unions but the working person should just shut up and take whatever the business owners think is fair. This, in a perfect world would work fine but corporate GREED gets in the way.

Lark7 11-22-2012 09:58 AM

Greed
 
Maybe, just maybe, greed was prevalent on both the employee and the corporate side. Having said that, the corporation will be liquidated on paper and the employees will be without jobs. Who really lost?

jblum315 11-22-2012 10:01 AM

I suspect they were only paid minimum wage. 15,000 jobs.

bdabob 11-22-2012 10:36 AM

The real tragedy is that in the same month they legalized pot in Washington and Colorado, they closed the Twinkie production!

Patty55 11-22-2012 11:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jblum315 (Post 584023)
I suspect they were only paid minimum wage. 15,000 jobs.

Not if they are Teamsters and Bakers Union.

Patty55 11-22-2012 12:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bdabob (Post 584038)
The real tragedy is that in the same month they legalized pot in Washington and Colorado, they closed the Twinkie production!

They still make Velveeta and Boone's Farm, it's all good.

Serenoa 11-23-2012 11:31 AM

The chocolate Hostess Cupcakes, or Sno-Balls were always my favorite, more so than Twinkies.

When I was a kid any one of them cost a whoppin 12 cents!

Mack184 11-23-2012 01:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bdabob (Post 584038)
The real tragedy is that in the same month they legalized pot in Washington and Colorado, they closed the Twinkie production!

Good. Maybe the druggies will starve.

Villages PL 11-23-2012 01:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mack184 (Post 583858)
I have no guilt about anything food-wise. I eat or drink whatever I want. My mother instilled lots of guilt into me about food & eating, but something made me change when I was 26. When I was 26 my father died of a massive heart attack. At 60 years old he got up every morning of his life and did 100 push-ups & 100 sit-ups. He watched everything he ate. At 60 he could still fit into his WW-2 pilot's uniform. He did not smoke or drink. At 60 years old he was in better physical shape than I have ever been in my whole life, and at 60 years old he dropped dead of a heart attack while taking a walk. This guy's habits would have had my doctor doing cartwheels. His family had a penchant for long, long lives. And then after following all "the rules" he just dropped over dead.

With all due respect for you and your father, I think the above explanation is a bit simplistic. I knew a man like your father; he was my high school math teacher. He was a retired Army Coronel and at age 56 he was in fantastic shape. But he was what they call "type A personality." These are people who create stress in everything they do and, for some, stress can be a killer. For example, what is the purpose of doing 100 push-ups and 100 sit-ups?

It was almost as if my teacher thought he was still in the army. He was lean and muscular and straight as a board. I could see his stress in every movement he made, it was quite noticeable. And he died of a heart attack at age 58.

Sometimes no amount of healthy food can make up for out-of-control stress.

So the lesson to be learned is not that eating healthy doesn't do any good. The lesson to be learned is: In addition to eating healthy, we need to learn how to control stress.

Mack184 11-23-2012 02:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Villages PL (Post 584361)
With all due respect for you and your father, I think the above explanation is a bit simplistic. I knew a man like your father; he was my high school math teacher. He was a retired Army Coronel and at age 56 he was in fantastic shape. But he was what they call "type A personality." These are people who create stress in everything they do and, for some, stress can be a killer. For example, what is the purpose of doing 100 push-ups and 100 sit-ups?

It was almost as if my teacher thought he was still in the army. He was lean and muscular and straight as a board. I could see his stress in every movement he made, it was quite noticeable. And he died at age 58.

Sometimes no amount of healthy food can make up for out-of-control stress.

So the lesson to be learned is not that eating healthy doesn't do any good. The lesson to be learned is: In addition to eating healthy, we need to learn how to control stress.

Your lesson is not my lesson. My father was NOT stressed out. My father was NOT a type-A. He was a very patient, talented, kind, decent man who took time to enjoy life. He was an amazing artist. He wrote poetry. He turned down several opportunities after WW-2 to fly commercially because it was far more important to him to stay at home with his family. Why do the push-ups & sit-ups? He was staying in shape. He had great disipline. He always tried to do the right thing. But he was NOT stressed out. I wish I could be much more like him, and less like me.

Villages PL 11-23-2012 02:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mack184 (Post 584364)
Your lesson is not my lesson. My father was NOT stressed out. My father was NOT a type-A. He was a very patient, talented, kind, decent man who took time to enjoy life. He was an amazing artist. He wrote poetry. He turned down several opportunities after WW-2 to fly commercially because it was far more important to him to stay at home with his family. Why do the push-ups & sit-ups? He was staying in shape. He had great disipline. He always tried to do the right thing. But he was NOT stressed out. I wish I could be much more like him, and less like me.

Maybe I'm wrong but it sounded like you were making a case against healthy eating. No one ever died because they ate healthy and stayed in shape (unless the healthy eating wasn't all that healthy). Everyone has a different opinion of what healthy eating consists of.

Mack184 11-23-2012 04:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Villages PL (Post 584365)
Maybe I'm wrong but it sounded like you were making a case against healthy eating. No one ever died because they ate healthy and stayed in shape (unless the healthy eating wasn't all that healthy). Everyone has a different opinion of what healthy eating consists of.

I was. For ME. Life-long so-called "healthy eating" habits didn't help my father one single bit. So for ME I now eat what I want when I want it. As I said earlier that doesn't mean I go home at night and suck on a stick of butter, but what it does mean is that I don't care what the Food Police and the other nannies have to say about it. Others can make whatever choices they want for THEIR lives. I've made my own choice.

ugotme 11-23-2012 04:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mack184 (Post 584396)
I was. For ME. Life-long so-called "healthy eating" habits didn't help my father one single bit. So for ME I now eat what I want when I want it. As I said earlier that doesn't mean I go home at night and suck on a stick of butter, but what it does mean is that I don't care what the Food Police and the other nannies have to say about it. Others can make whatever choices they want for THEIR lives. I've made my own choice.

When push comes to shove all that matters is that you feel good!
Almost ANYTHING in excess is not good for you. But, as you said, you have to make your own choices.

Personally, I basically do what you do - eat whatever I want. Now I grant you I am not in the best of shape (on the heavy side) however at 62 I am lucky that, so far, I have never been in a hospital, take no pills and feel great. Who knows, when the man upstairs comes to get you then. . . it's your time!


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