An Applebee's franchise executive was fired after suggesting runaway inflation and increasing gas prices are good for business



An Applebee’s franchise executive who suggested via email that high gas prices could force employees to work longer hours for less pay has been fired.

In an email chain titled “Why gas increase is good for hiring,” Wayne Pankratz told his colleagues that: “As inflation continues to climb and gas prices continue to go up, that means more hours employees will need to work to maintain their current level of living.”

Pankratz is an executive with American Franchise Capital, an investment firm that owns and manages Taco Bell and Applebee’s restaurants in nine states. The company’s annual sales are over $200 million, the New York Post reported.

Pankratz explained to his colleagues that due to the federal government no longer providing stimulus checks to the public and small business having immense difficulty offering workers competitive wages, Applebees has “more potential employees” in the “hiring pool.”

His email stated, “Other competitors (especially mom and pop companies or smaller businesses),” will have to either raise prices, cut employee hours, or pay employees less hourly to lift their profit margins. Some businesses will not be able to hold on. This is going to drive more potential employees into the hiring pool.”

He said that current labor market conditions give the company a chance to hire employees “at a lower wage.”

In his correspondence, Pankratz said, “Most of our employee base ad potential employee base live paycheck to paycheck. Any increase in gas cuts into their disposable income. As inflation continues to climb and gas prices continue to go up, that means more hours employees will need to work to maintain their current level of living.”

“We are no longer competing with the government when it comes to hiring,” he continued. “Stimulus money is no more, supplemental unemployment is no more. This benefits us as prices rise, people who [were] relying on unemployment money, simply will have less money to spend. It will force people back into the work force.”

On Saturday, the New York Post reported that the statements Pankratz made were leaked to the manager of a Missouri-based Applebee’s franchise owned and operated by American Franchise Capital.

Jake Holocomb, the manager in question, printed out copies of Pankratz’s emails for servers to find and gave everyone that came into the restaurant that same day free meals.

He said, “I gave everyone in the restaurant their food for free and we just left; we didn’t even close the store,” the Associated Press reported.

Applebee’s Chief Operations Officer Kevin Carrol said that the views expressed by Pankratz were his and his alone.

He said Pankratz shared “the opinion of an individual not Applebee’s.”

CNN torpedoed after cuing ill-timed Applebee's commercial alongside wailing air raid sirens in Ukraine



CNN took heavy criticism on Thursday morning after airing a poppy, upbeat Applebee's commercial alongside footage of air raid sirens blaring across Kyiv, Ukraine, amid the Russian invasion.

What are the details?

CNN bizarrely aired an Applebee's commercial on Thursday morning while myriad air raid sirens rang out across the smoky streets of Kyiv.

The upbeat commercial featured the Zac Brown Band's "Chicken Fried" and showed off a man dancing in skin-tight jeans to lyrics such as: "A little bit of chicken fried/ Cold beer on a Friday night/ A pair of jeans that fit just right/ And the radio up."

Air raid sirens could be heard on the newscast before the network superimposed the commercial over the dystopian footage in split screen fashion.

This missile attack is brought to you by Applebees!! \n\nTHIS is CNN...pic.twitter.com/JIUIhrQBHh
— ForAmerica (@ForAmerica) 1645719976

What was the response?

Much of social media could not fathom why CNN would air such devastating footage juxtaposed with a lighthearted commercial celebrating fried chicken and beer at a mid-range casual dining restaurant franchise.

Journalist Arash Markazi wrote, "A friend once yelled the opening lyrics of Smash Mouth's 'All Star' in a movie theater during a silent moment in a dramatic movie as a dare. This is worse than that moment."

A friend once yelled the opening lyrics of Smash Mouth's "All Star" in a movie theater during a silent moment in a dramatic movie as a dare. \n\nThis is worse than that moment.pic.twitter.com/d5ltiYAp01
— Arash Markazi (@Arash Markazi) 1645720522

Broadcaster Keith Olbermann added, "Death from the skies...sponsored by @applebees[.]"

Death from the skies...sponsored by @applebeeshttps://twitter.com/barstoolwsd/status/1496872249600581635\u00a0\u2026
— Keith Olbermann (@Keith Olbermann) 1645720061

Research director Scott Whitlock wrote, "Really, CNN? There's this thing called tone and tact. Look it up. Because your blending of commercials and all hell breaking out in Europe isn't working."

Really, CNN? There's this thing called tone and tact. Look it up. Because your blending of commercials and all hell breaking out in Europe isn't working.pic.twitter.com/yhnag26JQ5
— Scott Whitlock (@Scott Whitlock) 1645719465

Another user added, "Cutting away from air raid sirens in Kyiv for an Applebee’s commercial with a guy in jeans shaking his ass is certainly a choice, @CNN. What sort of dystopian hell is this?"

"Applebees couldn’t get a Super Bowl commercial, so they took the WW3 CNN slot. Savage," another user wrote.

Yet another chimed in, "Nothing like sliding on a pair of jeans that fit right while preparing for ww3."

Another user quipped, "Why is there Ukraine content in the middle of CNN's Applebees coverage?"

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