Kyle Hagee
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Yeah, one other differentiating factor is they've partnered with celebrity chefs. So they have they have menus inspired by Bobby Flay and Marcus Samuelson, Jose Andres and people like these. They've actually paid them to use their signature dishes to sell to people. And Mark Lurie wants to give customers a more elevated dining experience.
Yeah, one other differentiating factor is they've partnered with celebrity chefs. So they have they have menus inspired by Bobby Flay and Marcus Samuelson, Jose Andres and people like these. They've actually paid them to use their signature dishes to sell to people. And Mark Lurie wants to give customers a more elevated dining experience.
Yeah, one other differentiating factor is they've partnered with celebrity chefs. So they have they have menus inspired by Bobby Flay and Marcus Samuelson, Jose Andres and people like these. They've actually paid them to use their signature dishes to sell to people. And Mark Lurie wants to give customers a more elevated dining experience.
But what he does really is the goal here is a super app for mealtime. which I think super app is just a buzzy word. I don't know exactly what it means.
But what he does really is the goal here is a super app for mealtime. which I think super app is just a buzzy word. I don't know exactly what it means.
But what he does really is the goal here is a super app for mealtime. which I think super app is just a buzzy word. I don't know exactly what it means.
But now that he bought Grubhub, he wants to go from recipe development through the food preparation, through, you know, bought Grubhub's delivery drivers, through actually fulfillment to create this holistic experience for when you want food, they control everything. And he spent $60 million on IP alone. to own particular brands that they're selling out of these spaces.
But now that he bought Grubhub, he wants to go from recipe development through the food preparation, through, you know, bought Grubhub's delivery drivers, through actually fulfillment to create this holistic experience for when you want food, they control everything. And he spent $60 million on IP alone. to own particular brands that they're selling out of these spaces.
But now that he bought Grubhub, he wants to go from recipe development through the food preparation, through, you know, bought Grubhub's delivery drivers, through actually fulfillment to create this holistic experience for when you want food, they control everything. And he spent $60 million on IP alone. to own particular brands that they're selling out of these spaces.
So right now they have a few dozen locations in and around the Northeast, but he said he wants to expand to 100 locations by 2026 and then eventually IPO at a $30 billion valuation in 2027. Another interesting part of this super app is MealKits. You might have not heard this name in a while, Blue Apron. Oh, yeah.
So right now they have a few dozen locations in and around the Northeast, but he said he wants to expand to 100 locations by 2026 and then eventually IPO at a $30 billion valuation in 2027. Another interesting part of this super app is MealKits. You might have not heard this name in a while, Blue Apron. Oh, yeah.
So right now they have a few dozen locations in and around the Northeast, but he said he wants to expand to 100 locations by 2026 and then eventually IPO at a $30 billion valuation in 2027. Another interesting part of this super app is MealKits. You might have not heard this name in a while, Blue Apron. Oh, yeah.
But Wonder bought Blue Apron, again, for pennies on the dollar, just like they did Grubhub last year for $100 million. So now they do meal kits. They do these more elevated dining concepts with celebrity chefs. So it's an interesting proposition. It's hard to pin down what exactly Wonder does, but they've raised $1.7 billion. Investors clearly think that Mark Lurie is onto something again.
But Wonder bought Blue Apron, again, for pennies on the dollar, just like they did Grubhub last year for $100 million. So now they do meal kits. They do these more elevated dining concepts with celebrity chefs. So it's an interesting proposition. It's hard to pin down what exactly Wonder does, but they've raised $1.7 billion. Investors clearly think that Mark Lurie is onto something again.
But Wonder bought Blue Apron, again, for pennies on the dollar, just like they did Grubhub last year for $100 million. So now they do meal kits. They do these more elevated dining concepts with celebrity chefs. So it's an interesting proposition. It's hard to pin down what exactly Wonder does, but they've raised $1.7 billion. Investors clearly think that Mark Lurie is onto something again.
Okay, it's been a wild post-election week for Elon Musk's ex. In bad news for its business, many users appear to be leaving the platform, but in better news, more advertisers might return. Let's start with the users who appear to be leaving at rates not seen since Musk took over the company two years ago. On Wednesday, the day after the election, 115,000 U.S.
Okay, it's been a wild post-election week for Elon Musk's ex. In bad news for its business, many users appear to be leaving the platform, but in better news, more advertisers might return. Let's start with the users who appear to be leaving at rates not seen since Musk took over the company two years ago. On Wednesday, the day after the election, 115,000 U.S.
Okay, it's been a wild post-election week for Elon Musk's ex. In bad news for its business, many users appear to be leaving the platform, but in better news, more advertisers might return. Let's start with the users who appear to be leaving at rates not seen since Musk took over the company two years ago. On Wednesday, the day after the election, 115,000 U.S.
users deleted their X accounts, which was the single biggest day of web account exits since SimilarWeb began tracking the figure. Many of them appear headed to Blue Sky, the ex-rival that began as a project by Twitter founder Jack Dorsey in 2019.
users deleted their X accounts, which was the single biggest day of web account exits since SimilarWeb began tracking the figure. Many of them appear headed to Blue Sky, the ex-rival that began as a project by Twitter founder Jack Dorsey in 2019.