Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2025-09-10 21:26:16| Fast Company

Another week, another viral sports controversy. If you havent heard of the Phillies Karen, youre either living under a rock or simply not chronically online. The saga started when Philadelphia Phillies fan Drew Feltwell attended a game last week with his wife and two children. After fielder Harrison Bader launched a home run into the stands, several fans, including Feltwell, scrambled for the ball. After successfully securing the home run ball for his young son, Feltwell suddenly found himself on the receiving end of an outburst from a woman in a Phillies jersey, demanding the ball. The brief exchange, captured on video, quickly went viral. Eventually, Feltwell relented, taking the ball from his sons mitt and passing it to the woman, whom the internet promptly dubbed Phillies Karen. View this post on Instagram A post shared by NBC Sports Philadelphia (@nbcsphilly)


Category: E-Commerce

 

LATEST NEWS

2025-09-10 21:15:00| Fast Company

A recall of frozen fruits and vegetables from a salmonella outbreak has gotten worse, as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced an expanded list of affected foods on Wednesday. A recall that began in July has expanded, and Chetak LLC Group has added dozens more frozen vegetables and fruit products under its Deep brand to the recall list. The frozen foods are linked to a salmonella outbreak that has sickened 11 people in 10 states, including the hospitalizations of four people. WHAT PRODUCTS AND BRANDS ARE AFFECTED? The latest recall affects more than 60 different Deep frozen foods that Chetak said were run on the same equipment as those products that salmonella was detected in previously. Out of an abundance of caution and given our commitment to public health and safety, Chetak has decided to expand its [voluntary] recall, the company said in a notification to customers.  In July and August, Chetak recalled multiple lots of different frozen foods and urged retailers and consumers not to eat, sell, or serve the products. In total, Chetak has recalled about 70 products in the past two months after multiple people became sick with salmonella between October 2024 and June 2025. Several of the illnesses were linked to people eating frozen sprouted mat (moth) beans and frozen sprouted moong beans. Several different lots of the dozens of products are affected and they were sold nationwide at a variety of stores and online. EXTENT OF THE OUTBREAK This salmonella outbreak has been going on for nearly a year, as illnesses were reported as early as October 2024. Illnesses have been reported by people in Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, and Washington. Four people have been hospitalized as a result of this outbreak, though no deaths have been reported. If you feel like youve been hearing a lot about salmonella lately, you have: The frozen foods recall is one of a few that have recently been linked to an outbreak.  The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced today that certain Metabolic Meals home delivery foods were linked to a salmonella outbreak that has sickened 16 people in 10 states.  Last month, the CDC announced that nearly 100 people have become ill in a salmonella outbreak thats been linked to recalled eggs. SALMONELLA SYMPTOMS Symptoms of salmonella illness include diarrhea, fever, and abdominal cramps, with illness typically occurring within 12 to 72 hours of eating contaminated food.  Salmonella infections are the most frequently reported cause of food-bourne illness in the U.S., according to the Department of Agriculture. Each year, some 1.4 million people become ill and 400 people die from salmonella infections.


Category: E-Commerce

 

2025-09-10 20:25:52| Fast Company

U.S. producer prices unexpectedly fell in August amid a compression in trade services margins and mild increase in the cost of goods, suggesting that domestic businesses were probably absorbing some of the tariffs on imports. The lack of strong producer price pressures, despite import duties, could also be signaling softening domestic demand against the backdrop of a struggling labor market. The Federal Reserve is expected to cut interest rates next Wednesday, with a quarter-percentage-point reduction fully priced in, after pausing its easing cycle in January because of uncertainty over the impact of President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs. “Inflation barely has a heartbeat at the producer level which shows the tariff effect is not boosting across-the-board price pressures yet,” said Christopher Rupkey, chief economistat FWDBONDS. “As time goes on one has to wonder if there are slow-growth reasons and weak economic demand that is keeping inflation in check. There is almost nothing to stop an interest rate cut from coming now.” The Producer Price Index for final demand dipped 0.1% last month after a downwardly revised 0.7% jump in July, the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics said on Wednesday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the PPI would advance 0.3% after a previously reported 0.9% surge in July. A 0.2% drop in the prices of services accounted for the fall in the PPI. That followed a 0.7% rebound in July. Services were last month held down by a 1.7% decline in margins for trade services, reflecting a 3.9% decrease in margins for machinery and vehicle wholesaling. But the cost of services less trade, transportation and warehousing increased 0.3% while prices for transportation and warehousing services shot up 0.9%. Portfolio management fees increased 2.0%. Airline fares rose 1.0% while the cost of hotel and motel rooms increased 0.9%. Prices for dental services accelerated 0.6%. Goods prices edged up 0.1% after increasing 0.6% in the prior month. Food prices gained 0.1%, with declines in the costs of eggs and fresh fruits partially offsetting more expensive beef and coffee because of tariffs. Wholesale beef prices surged 6.0% while those for coffee vaulted 6.9%. Energy prices fell 0.4%. Excluding the volatile food and energy components, producer goods prices rose 0.3% after climbing 0.4% in July, indicating some pass through from tariffs. In the 12 months through August, the PPI increased 2.6% after climbing 3.1% in July. Economists are expecting price pressures from tariffs to lift consumer inflation in August. U.S. stocks opened higher. The dollar eased against a basket of currencies. U.S. Treasury yields fell. Labor market weakness has raised concerns that the economy was stagnating. The government estimated on Tuesday that the economy likely created 911,000 fewer jobs in the 12 months through March than previously estimated. That data followed the release last Friday of the monthly employment report, which showed job growth almost stalled in August and the economy shed jobs in June for the first time in four and a half years. Lucia Mutikani, Reuters


Category: E-Commerce

 

Latest from this category

11.09Healthcare is at the end of its MS-DOS era
11.09GLP-1s broke the system
10.09The secret playbook for successful M&A
10.09In the AI era earned media is king, and content its queen
10.09What womens soccer fans can teach brands about building loyalty
10.09Heres how AI will reinvent nonprofits
10.09Charlie Kirk shot and killed at event at college in Utah
10.09Phillies fan tells internet to stop harassing Phillies Karen after viral clash
E-Commerce »

All news

11.09Firms will hesitate to invest in US after raid S Korea president
11.09JSW Cement shares in focus as 37 mn shares become free to trade. What lock-in expiry means for investors
11.09Airfloa Rail Technology IPO opens today with 117% GMP. Check all details before subscription
11.09'China Inside': How Chinese EV tech is reshaping global auto design
11.09Asian shares steady as US stocks climb on Fed rate cut hopes
11.09IT stocks surge as Trump signals progress in US-India trade talks
11.09Cracker Barrel suspends plans to remodel restaurants after logo blowup
11.09Will RBIs policy moves help calm Indias bond market turbulence?
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .