Arizona
7-Eleven plans to shutter 444 stores. Will any Arizona stores be closing?
Big Lots: Rising inflation forcing retailer to close dozens of stores
Big Lots plans to close 35-40 stores this year, highlighting economic challenges facing large retailers. The closures include four stores in Michigan.
7-Eleven is closing more than 400 stores in the United States and Canada, officials said, crediting fewer sales due to inflation and continued declines in cigarette sales.
The 444 stores to close are among 13,000 stores the convenience chain has in the United States and Canada. A list of stores to close was not released by the company, which announced the plan to shutter the stores during its most recent earnings call late last week.
7-Eleven is not the only store shuttering locations due to declining sales. Walgreens recently announced closures and a host of others to close stores or declare bankruptcy this year, including Hooters, Red Lobster, Bed Bath & Beyond and Big Lots.
Here’s what Arizona shoppers need to know about the 7-Eleven closures and locations in the state.
More Big Lots in Arizona are closing: Here’s which stores are affected and which remain
Will 7-Eleven stores in Arizona close?
The company didn’t release a list of stores and 7-Eleven did not immediately respond to the USA TODAY Network’s request for a list of locations closing.
When will 7-Eleven stores close?
The closures were expected to happen in the fourth quarter of this year, officials said.
Why is 7-Eleven closing stores?
Traffic and sales were challenged “as consumers pull back due to inflationary pressure,” according to 7-Eleven, and consumer cigarette sales continue to decline industry-wide.
To counteract its recent challenges, the company said it would grow its proprietary products, including fresh food and its proprietary beverages, accelerate digital and delivery, including continued growth in its loyalty program and grow and enhance its store network.
Seven & i Holdings, the parent company of 7-Eleven, also said it would bundle some of its “non-core assets” into a new holding company and rename itself ‘7-Eleven Corp’ to emphasize the focus on its profitable convenience stores.
After rejecting a bid in August by the operator of Circle K, Alimentation Couche-Tard, the Japanese operator of 7-Eleven stores is facing pressure to convince investors it can enhance value, saying it undervalued the company and its growth potential.
The new holding company, to be called York Holdings, is set to house 31 subsidiaries, including the group’s superstores business, general goods store Loft, baby goods store Akachan Honpo and the operating company of Denny’s restaurants in Japan.
Arizona
Arizona pair celebrates decade of friendship that started with wrong text
MESA, AZ (AZFamily) — What began as a mistaken text message has blossomed into a 10-year Thanksgiving tradition that continues to capture hearts worldwide.
Jamal Hinton and Wanda Dench are celebrating their tenth consecutive Thanksgiving together, a friendship that started in 2016 when Dench accidentally texted the then-17-year-old Hinton, thinking she was inviting her grandson to dinner.
“There are no accidents. It was meant to be,” Dench said.
The mix-up occurred when Dench sent a Thanksgiving dinner invitation to the wrong phone number. When Hinton responded asking who was texting, Dench replied it was grandma.
“I get this text back saying who is this and I said its grandma and the next message was well send me a picture,” Dench said.
Friendship grows through life’s challenges
What could have been a forgettable mistake transformed into an annual reunion. The pair have supported each other through significant life events, including the death of Dench’s husband in 2020 and her breast cancer diagnosis and treatment last year.
“We just all clicked. It was amazing. We spent hours talking. There was no generation gap. It was just fun and joyful and exciting,” Dench said.
“I love it to spend thanksgiving with so many different types of people,” Hinton said.
The friendship has provided mutual support during difficult times.
“I was able to talk with Jamal and he’s always given me encouragement and I’ve been very blessed,” Dench said.
“It feels like a best friend. She feels like someone you can talk to about anything. So when you go through anything I call her all the time. She answers her phone,” Hinton said.
Both consider each other family now.
“Jamal will always be in my inner circle of family,” Dench said.
“Family she’s family no matter what,” Hinton said.
This year’s celebration was sponsored by Green Giant.
Last year, the pair met virtually while Dench was battling cancer, making this year’s in-person reunion particularly meaningful.
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Arizona
Northern Arizona University’s Lumberjacks band marches in Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade
Talk about being in a New York State of Mind!
Northern Arizona University’s Lumberjacks Marching Band is making some State 48 history this week by becoming the first college marching band from Arizona to perform in the iconic Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City!
We caught up with the band’s director and one of the drum majors while they were in the Big Apple. They’ve been practicing quite a bit, including performing in Central Park.
“It seriously has been incredible,” says Sebastian Cisneros-Ortega, an NAU junior who is part of the school’s drum majors and is also a graduate of Paradise Valley High School.
Performing in Central Park is really just the opening act as the Lumberjacks gear up for their biggest audience yet – millions of people in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.
“It’s been absolutely wild,” says Sebastian. “I am still processing the fact that we made it. It’s truly been magical and a dream come true and I wouldn’t trade it for anything else in the world.”
And it sounds like Sebastian and his more than 250 other bandmates are getting rave reviews already.
“The crowd just grew bigger and bigger and bigger, and we were all sitting there, like, oh my gosh! They’re here to see us and what Arizona has to offer!”
It all started for NAU 18 months ago when they found out they’d be performing. The school posted a video on its YouTube page to highlight the moment students found out.
“It’s about giving our students [opportunities] that other bands across the country have and it’s putting them on the national stage and recognizing their amazing hard work,” explains band director Stephen Meyer.
Meyer made it to the iconic parade once before in 2009 as a band director for a high school in the Midwest.
Meyer says this moment is about helping his students hit high notes along the parade route – and also in life.
“Hard work pays off,” Meyer says. “And anything really is possible!”
“If we work hard enough, anything can be possible,” says Sebastian. “With our hard work, with our effort, our dedication, we can make these great things work!”
NAU will perform three songs during the parade – and before that, will take part in a special ribbon-cutting ceremony with none other than Wicked star Cynthia Erivo!
Arizona
Arizona Coordinators Discuss Heated Rivalry and Successful Season
Just two days remain between the Arizona Wildcats’ biggest game of the season, a heated rivalry match between them and the Arizona State Sun Devils that has lasted since 1899.
The Wildcats’ offense ran all over the Baylor Bears’ defense on the way to a 41-17 blowout victory in Casino Del Sol Stadium and now face the challenge of doing the same to an ASU defense that ranks second in the Big 12 when it comes to stopping the rush.
Arizona’s defense must also play at its very best when it goes up against the Sun Devils offense that ranks fifth in the conference, third in rushing and eighth in passing.
Both Gonzales and Doege had plenty to say in Tuesday’s press conference, from the emotions of playing in a fierce rivalry game to what their squads need to do to come out of Mountain America Stadium with a fifth consecutive win. Here is a collection of what they had to say.
“We stink at stopping the run. So, what are they going to do? They’re going to run it a thousand times. Sims is going to probably have 50 carries. Raleek Brown’s going to have 40. And then they’re going to isolate Jordyn Tyson one-on-one. They’ll get us to put 10-to-11 guys in the box and see if they can beat our DBs one-on-one. That’s what I would do if I was them. That’s what I keep hearing.”
“So, I think they’re a damn good football team. I think Jeff Sims, if you watch the Iowa State game he’s physical, he’s big, he’s strong, and he plays football with the right demeanor. Raleek Brown, if you watched the Colorado game on Saturday night, he is physical, twitchy, fast.”
“Jordyn Tyson was finally back and I think he’s the best 50-50 ball catcher in America. I mean, he’s he is elite when the ball’s thrown up in the air. So, our DBs are gonna have a great challenge when they throw it to them.”
“People have struggled running the football on them and it’s because they’re really stout up front. They do a good job of doing what they do well. I think the linebackers are very active and then I think they got two really, really, really dynamic corners that they’re allowed to play on an island and play man free with.”
“I think their safeties are really, really, really aggressive and very, very physical. There’s a couple times on tape and they’ll come down and smack you, smack you. They’re extremely physical and they’re good at what they do.”
“It’s passion over emotion and anything you do in life, if you make an emotional decision, it’s most of the time stupid and wrong. Then if you make a passional decision it means that you will put a commitment and made a commitment to make that choice. And so we cannot be full of emotion and there will be a ton of it all the way from the the warm-ups. That’s how it is.”
“In 2018, they had to line the Arizona State Troopers across midfield because there was a couple of interactions within the teams before the game. It doesn’t need to be that way. This is a great rivalry that the people up there don’t like the people down here.”
“We retain the quarterback and then we had to build around him when we started at the offensive line position the biggest part of that is we hit because you take five or six transfer linemen you’re hoping that you hit on two or three of them and we really hit on all of them and we hit in a big way. I mean KD (Ka’ena Decambra) is a major player for us.”
“Tristan (Bounds) ended up being a major player for us. Ty Buchanan is a major player for us. So those guys helped us turn us around pretty quickly. And then obviously some skilled guys with our receivers with (Luke) Wysong and Hut (Kris Hutson and (Tre) Spivey and all those guys. It just end up being a good group um of talent.”
Tell us your thoughts on the coordinators and how they have turned the program around from last season by commenting on our X account. Just click the link to find us and be sure to give us a follow.
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