Month: July 2016

Amazon closer to replacing humans with robots; Pizza Hut owners sue Korea HQ for $658K in fees; and that was a kidney — not a brain! — at an Aussie KFC

A news summary, focused on 10 big employers; updated 10:54 a.m.

Winning Amazon robot
Winning robot in an Amazon competition picked items off a shelf at a speed of about 100 per hour, much worse than the average 400 by humans.

AMAZON awarded a robotics prize to a team from the TU Delft Robotics Institute in the Netherlands and the company Delft Robotics in the retailer’s second-annual competition to find robots that will someday work alongside humans — or in place of them — in Amazon’s massive distribution centers. At the contest in Germany’s Leipzig, Delft’s robot picked items from a mock warehouse shelf at a speed of around 100 an hour with a failure rate of 16.7%. That’s slow compared to what a human can manage (around 400 items an hour), but a big improvement over last year’s winner, which managed just 30 items an hour. This was the second year for the competition (The Verge). Amazon employs 6,000 workers in the Louisville area at mammoth distribution centers in Jeffersonville, and in Bullitt County’s Shepherdsville.

PIZZA HUT: In South Korea today, another 25 franchisees filed a lawsuit seeking repayment of $657,553 the restaurant chain’s Korean national headquarters charged them for marketing and other services — fees the franchise owners said were unjustified. Their suit came a week after the Seoul Central District Court ruled in favor of 88 other owners who had asserted the came claim. The dispute dates to March 2007, when the headquarters demanded franchises remit 0.55% of their profits on grounds they’d benefited from marketing, operational, and customer-service counseling provided by the head office. In April 2012, headquarters boosted the fee again, to 0.8%, and required owners sign another contract agreeing to pay the charges. It also unilaterally nullified contracts with owners that either failed to pay the fee or delayed payment (Korea JoongAng Daily).

HAIER‘s appliances, electronics and ductless air conditioners were incorporated into one of Cocoon9’s container homes at last week’s Dwell on Design residential trade show in Los Angeles. The prefab “plug-and-play houses” contain smart technology, energy efficiencies and versatile spaces, delivered fully assembled with quality construction and high-end finishes within four months (Twice). Haier bought GE Appliances last month for $5.6 billion and its 6,000-employee Appliance Park in Louisville’s southend.

PAPA JOHN’S: In the U.K.’s Hull, Papa John’s is opening as many as four restaurants over the next year in the Kingdom’s next “City of Culture,” according to a shy franchise owner (the local newspaper says he “asked not to be named at this time”) who says the eateries could create as many as 25 jobs per location. They would be the city’s first Papa John’s (Daily Mail). All about the U.K.’s cities-of-culture program.

HUMANA is moving more than 120 employees in downtown Jacksonville, Fla., to two new separate locations as part of a broader effort to put sales and service workers in retail settings closer to members (Daily Record).

Rachel Rae
Rae

In New Zealand, a reformed “KFC queen” has gone public about her efforts to lose weight in a newspaper series the paper very awkwardly describes as being about a group “taking responsibility for their own health within a family-based, non-judgmental environment that supports all levels, sizes and ages.” Rachel Rae told the Taranaki Daily News: “I loved junk food, I loved fish and chips, and I was known as the KFC queen. I would go there about three times a week. Whatever was quick, filling and fattening — sounds gross eh?” (Daily Star).

In Japan, KFC is offering all-can-eat-in-45-minutes meals every Wednesday night between July 13 and Aug. 31, further expanding a special promotion once only offered on founder Colonel Harland Sanders‘s Sept. 9 birthday (Rocket News 24).

And in Australia’s Brisbane, KFC told diner Eden Hoffschildt that what she thought was a chicken’s brain cooked into in a recent meal was actually a kidney. “There is no health risk associated,” the fast-food chain said, in a reply to Hoffschildt’s Facebook posting about the incident. “The kidney is actually present in the thigh piece of chicken supplied by most leading Aussie chicken suppliers and can actually be found in cooked chicken bought from most leading supermarket” (Courier Mail). It was the second case in the past week of the wrong chicken part found in a Brisbane restaurant meal, and one of a series in recent years at other KFCs in Australia, the U.K., and the United States.

Australia’s nickname is Oz, which is another reason why this scene from the 1939 classic is so apropos:

In other and less gross news, tonight’s Mega Millions lottery jackpot is now an estimated $449 million. That would be the seventh biggest jackpot of all time, including the even better-known Powerball (WDRB). Blaming the Obama Administration’s energy policies, Murray Energy of Clairsville, Ohio, says it could lay off up to 4,400 coal miners by September in Kentucky, Ohio, West Virginia, Illinois, Utah and Pennsylvania (WDRB, too). In the year’s first three months, statewide coal employment plunged 18%, to 6,900 — lowest in 118 years (Herald-Leader). A 26-year-history of coal losses, county-by-county (WFPL).

Review: At Texas Roadhouse in Florida, ‘the atmosphere is intended to be festive, but this was over the top’

An occasional look at reviews given to restaurants owned by Papa John’s, Texas Roadhouse, and Yum.

The location: 7973 W. Irio Bronson Memorial Drive in Kissimmee, Fla. The headline: “Loud, cramped, and overcooked steak.” Number of stars: two out of five. The customer: TripAdvisor user Nmmickeymom of Santa Fe yesterday.

Anton Ego
Critic Anton Ego.

The review: This dinner was one of the loudest meals I have experienced in a long time. I understand the atmosphere is intended to be festive, but this was over the top. The music for their little dance routine was blasting so loudly, everyone simply stopped talking. We were seven seated at a booth for six with a chair on the end — which is simply not enough room for an adult to eat comfortably. This appears to be their regular practice, as there were multiple tables seated this way. Our server tried her best, but it is very difficult to place food and fill drinks when you cannot reach half of your guests. Probably the most disappointing was the number of our meals that were not cooked properly. One would hope that a steakhouse would understand how to prepare a proper steak.

Aetna to sell Medicare Advantage assets to appease trustbusters in Humana takeover; and UPS adding 300 customer pickup lockers

A news summary, focused on 10 big employers; updated 4:12 a.m.

HUMANA: Aetna has launched an auction to sell about $1 billion worth of Medicare Advantage assets as it seeks antitrust approval for its planned $37 billion acquisition of Humana. The Hartford insurer will accept bids as soon as next week, according to Reuters, which cited sources it didn’t identify. Wall Street has been less concerned about Aetna making it past antitrust regulators; on Thursday, Leerink Partners analyst Ana Gupte said she believed there was an 80%  chance of Aetna closing on its acquisition (Reuters).

UPS is installing another 300 lockers nationwide to make it easier for people to pick up packages. “UPS Access Point” lockers are usually outside of convenience stores and accessible 24 hours a day. The lockers, which began a staggered rollout last month, will initially be in Washington, Illinois, New York, Pennsylvania and Virginia (Seattle Times). AMAZON has had a similar locker program since 2011, where customers can select any location as their delivery address, and retrieve orders by entering a unique pick-up code on the Locker touch screen (Wikipedia).

KFC: In Corpus Christi, Texas, two KFC employees were hospitalized with second-degree burns after a fryer malfunctioned and hot oil spilled out and burned them from the waist up (KRIS). French news media company STP Productions is working on a story about KFC to be aired in September. Reporter Clementine Mazoyer and a cameraman recently visited founder Harland Sanders’ first restaurant at Corbin, Ky., then traveled to Kingston, N.Y., to interview franchise owner Darlene Pfeiffer, who says she personally new Sanders (Kingston Times).

HAIER: China’s largest home appliances maker will continue to be the company where different cultures thrive and innovate, an approach it will use at its newly bought GE Appliances business. Instead of sending employees to manage acquired foreign firms, Chairman Zhang Ruimin said Haier relies on local staff and focuses on how to effectively motivate them. Over the past decade, Haier has downsized by eliminating more than 10,000 middle-level manager jobs, aiming to transform itself into an incubator of innovators. “So far, we have 3,000 small teams that are working on innovative projects, and about 200 of them have raised funds from venture capital firms,” Zhang told the 2016 Tianjin Summer Davos meeting last week. Haier completed its $5.6 billion purchase of GE last month (China Post).

Bubba's 33 logoTEXAS ROADHOUSE is building one of its next Bubba’s 33 chicken and burger restaurants at the Midland Park Mall in Texas. The Louisville company had seven of the restaurants at the end of last year and plans as many as five more this year (Reporter-Telegram and Nation’s Restaurant News).

Man accused of hacking theft of Lawrence’s nude photos agrees to plead guilty

Jennifer LawrenceBoulevard reviews the latest media coverage of the Oscar-winning Louisville native in our exclusive Jennifer Lawrence Diary™. Today’s news, rated on a scale of 1-5 stars:

Five starsAn Illinois man accused of breaking into the Apple iCloud and Gmail accounts of Jennifer Lawrence and other celebrities to steal their private photos and videos has agreed to plead guilty to a felony computer hacking charge, prosecutors said Friday.

Edward Majerczyk, 28, facing up to five years in prison in the September 2014 crime, is the second man charged in a federal investigation into the leaks of nude photos of several Hollywood actresses, according to The Himalayan Times.

Vanity Fair cover
October 2014 issue.

In an interview with Vanity Fair at the time, Lawrence called the incident a “sex crime.”

“Just because I’m a public figure, just because I’m an actress, does not mean that I asked for this,” she told the magazine. “It does not mean that it comes with the territory. It’s my body, and it should be my choice, and the fact that it is not my choice is absolutely disgusting. I can’t believe that we even live in that kind of world. ”