In recent years, California has been no stranger to those extra charges tacked onto restaurant bills: from “wellness fees” to “kitchen love,” consumers have been griping over the hidden charges often jammed between the tax and total on the tab, and described as fees to help restaurants manage rising health care and payroll costs.
Scrolling Facebook — deemed a time-sucking addictive for many people — could be a thing of the past if one could just “unfollow everything.” Oh, life could be a dream without that endless stream of posts, photos and videos that keep us scrolling.
An expensive typo highlights the Top 10 Off Beats for April.
Workplace injuries can happen for a lot of reasons, and Pie Insurance just unveiled how crazy it can get.
A Mexican doctor just got the deal of a lifetime from Cartier: $13 U.S. dollars for a $13,000 pair of earrings after the company made a typo on its website, missing three zeros – “$237” pesos instead of “$237,000”— that spurred Mexico’s federal consumer protection agency’s involvement.
Arizona agriculture officials are fighting a lawsuit filed by a Tucson restaurateur over a new mandate that will require eggs sold in stores to come from cage-free hens starting in 2025 and would raise the cost of doing business, according to the Arizona Daily Star.
With the high monthly premiums, copays, coinsurances and deductibles common in health insurance packages, finally trying to find an in-network specialist is nothing to sing about.
The former English soccer star David Beckham got bad vibrations when F45, a popular global fitness brand co-owned by the actor and entrepreneur Mark Wahlberg, allegedly didn’t pay up in their part of a contractual deal on helping to develop the brand, according to The New York Times.
A car dealership in Huntington Beach, California, loaned an SUV to a high school athletic trainer, lost the paperwork and then reported the vehicle stolen.
In an interesting twist on a couple’s quarrel involving an angry spouse who may have switched out an engagement ring’s 3.57-carat diamond after an argument, an Illinois appeals court panel on Monday upheld a ruling requiring a Chubb Ltd. unit to pay $176,356.58 to the wife as an “innocent insured” who filed the claim.