Hey Snackers,
To the 10% to 12% of Snackers who live life lefty — Happy Left-Handers Day. The world wasn’t made for ya (looking at you, notebooks), but today’s newsletter is.
Stocks barely budged Thursday, but more good jobs data helped inch the S&P 500 up to another record high.
The force is strong… Disney shares surged 5% on word its theme parks division enjoyed their first profitable quarter since the pandemic started. Disney World, Disneyland, etc. powered Mickey’s $17B in quarterly revenue, beating expectations. But Disney also runs a media business, which it’s treating like a lab.
Netflix only releases movies on Netflix... But Disney distributes their movies all over, from streaming to theaters to cable. And over the last three months, Disney’s been experimenting:
All this confusion could lead us back to the bundle… It can be annoying to toggle between Disney+, Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu, and Peacock – and the slew of debut strategies can leave viewers feeling like guinea pigs as Disney and others experiment for profits. Another company, FuboTV, said this week they think your mounting pile of streamer accounts and bills could leave you craving a bundle. As the streaming world gets more complex, a cord – or a single service for your streaming needs – may not seem so bad.
Thinking outside of the bun… Your Crunchwrap Supreme may soon be airborne. Taco Bell just unveiled plans for “Defy,” its new four-lane drive-thru model that delivers food via vertical chutes down to your car. Taco Bell plans to activate its first QR scanner-powered Defy in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota next summer. It’s faster than OG drive thrus – and even more pandemic-friendly – it eliminates human-to-human burrito handoffs.
We’re in a drive-thru renaissance… and Taco Bell just built the Sistine Chapel. Drive-thrus were big pre-pandemic, but lockdown made them huge. Drive-thru orders grew 26% in the spring quarter of 2020 year-over-year, as dining rooms limited their capacity or full-stop closed. But as in-person dining returned, drive-thru lines didn’t shrink — they got even longer. Taco Bell wasn’t the only chain that noticed. Since the pandemic started:
Sometimes the queue matters just as much as the product… By re-imagining its drive-thrus, Taco Bell recognized that customers care about more than just taste — they also care about convenience and safety. Some states have revived mask mandates and other restrictions as the Delta spreads, and people start to scale back on dining IRL. But Taco Bell’s burrito chutes could help keep sales flowing.
Authors own shares of Disney, Netflix, Amazon, Moderna, Google. Some authors own Bitcoin.
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