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  2. Restaurant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restaurant

    The restaurant industry in the United States is large and quickly growing, with 10 million workers. 1 in every 12 U.S. residents work in the business, and during the 2008 recession, the industry was an anomaly in that it continued to grow. Restaurants are known for having low wages, which they claim are due to thin profit margins of 4-5%.

  3. National Restaurant Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Restaurant...

    The National Restaurant Association is a powerful lobbying force in Washington, DC and in state capitals, where it is widely referred to as "the other NRA" to distinguish itself from National Rifle Association of America, which shares the initialism. The association advocates to suppress the minimum wage in the United States as well as opposing ...

  4. United States restaurant industry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_restaurant...

    The United States restaurant industry was projected at $899 billion in sales for 2020 by the National Restaurant Association, the main trade association for the industry in the United States. An estimated 99% of companies in the industry are family-owned small businesses with fewer than 50 employees.

  5. Hospitality industry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospitality_industry

    In 2015 the United Kingdom hospitality industry employed around 2.9m people – around 9% of the UK workforce. [12] By employment, it is the UK's fourth-largest industry. The most jobs in the industry are found in London (around 500,000) and South East England (around 400,000); 18% of workers in the UK industry are in London. There are around 1 ...

  6. The Food That Built America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Food_That_Built_America

    August 11, 2019. (2019-08-11) –. present. The Food That Built America is an American nonfiction docudrama series for the History Channel, that premiered on August 11, 2019. Each episode outlines the development of a popular type of food or restaurant in the United States, typically focusing on the rise of two major companies that become rivals.

  7. Three ways Covid changed the restaurant industry - AOL

    www.aol.com/three-ways-covid-changed-restaurant...

    In March 2020, many US restaurants had to shut their doors during the early days of the Covid pandemic in accordance with local restrictions. Now, over three years later, the restaurant industry ...

  8. Denny's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denny's

    Denny's was founded by Harold Butler and Richard Jezak in 1953, who opened Danny's Donuts in Lakewood, California, in 1954. [4] In 1956, a year after Jezak departed from the six-store chain, Butler changed the concept, shifting it from a donut shop to a coffee shop with store No. 8. Danny's Donuts was renamed Danny's Coffee Shops and changed ...

  9. History of catering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_catering

    History of catering. The history of catering involves the development and evolution of the service industry that provides food, beverage, and other event services. The word catering comes from the Latin word cater, which means to provide. The business of providing food for parties, meetings, and other gatherings has been around for millennia ...