Saturday, October 20, 2007

bite of las vegas

David Heilbrunn initially fought the idea of starting the trade show Coffee Fest.

His boss and father-in-law thought java-happy Seattle needed a celebration of coffee, along the lines of his company's Bite of Seattle and Taste of Tacoma food festivals. Heilbrunn figured they were too busy already.

"Fortunately for me, he didn't listen," said the humbled son-in-law.

Coffee Fest became so successful it was spun off as a separate company, LifeStyle Events, based in Bellevue and run by Heilbrunn and his wife, Marni. Her father and the originator of Coffee Fest, Alan Silverman, is the third owner of the business, whose annual revenues are less than $3 million.

Next month, Seattle will host the company's 49th Coffee Fest, a three-day event at the Washington State Convention & Trade Center. Along with the flagship event here, the company holds two other Coffee Fests each year in various cities including Chicago, Washington, D.C. and Las Vegas. Next year, it will debut an international Coffee Fest in Hong Kong.

At first, the show was open to the public. By the late 1990s, it had become a full-fledged trade show, offering courses to coffee-shop owners in dozens of topics from "Unlocking the Mysteries of Decaf" to "Wrestling the Mermaid ― Competing with the Chains."

More than 8,000 attendees are expected in Seattle this year from all over the world. Marni said some are Coffee Fest groupies who go to all the shows so they can attend more seminars.

They will be courted by some 400 vendors hawking coffee machines, coffee cups, cup sleeves, stuffed animals and apparel to be sold in coffee shops.

"If it looks like coffee, smells like coffee or goes with coffee, they're welcome," David said.

A new vendor this year sells big advertising balloons that stand 8 to 20 feet tall and can be shaped like just about anything, including a coffee cup or a Starbucks to-go cup.

Boulder Blimp, based in Boulder, Colo., has sold 20-some giant inflatable cups to Starbucks, which uses them for grand openings, said sales manager Terry Goodhart.

If he sells 15 to 20 balloons at Coffee Fest in Seattle, that will make the trip and the nearly $2,000 booth fee worthwhile.



Although Boulder Blimp has done well with big brands like Pepsi and Captain Morgan, it has yet to crack the coffee-shop market, Goodhart said.

"We never went after it aggressively before," he said, "and it's growing."

― Melissa Allison

Tidbits
Seattle-based Paper Zone , which sells paper, business supplies and crafts, has emerged from bankruptcy proceedings and now operates under a slightly different name, New Paper Zone LLC.

The company said the merchandise strategy is unchanged at its 10 stores in Washington state and Oregon. It filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection earlier this year, citing problems integrating more than a dozen scrapbooking stores it bought in 2005 from Salt Lake City-based Memories & More. ― AM

Seattle's Pacific Place says it's going green. The downtown shopping center has been working with Waste Management and Cedar Grove Organics Recycling on a new program that's expected to divert more than 1,000 tons of trash from landfills each year. Pacific Place shoppers will soon see more recycling containers for their plastic, paper and cardboard throwaways. ― AM

Nestlé plans to open as many as 40 U.S. boutiques over the next four years to sell its Nespresso coffee machines, Bloomberg News reported last week. Switzerland-based Nestlé has Nespresso boutiques all over the world, from Paris to Tel Aviv to Sydney, and opened its first U.S. boutique in Manhattan last year. ― MA

Apple's University Village store will be closed for renovations Oct. 22 to Nov. 2. The store's Web site redirects customers to other Apple locations at Alderwood mall and Bellevue Square for the 12 days.

― AM

Longtime Starbucks honchos are branching out. Maveron Capital, a venture-capital firm co-founded by Starbucks Chairman Howard Schultz, has invested $27.5 million in a Los Angeles-based dessert chain called Pinkberry. Meanwhile, former Starbucks Chief Financial Officer Michael Casey has joined the board of the Vancouver, B.C.-based athletic-apparel company Lululemon Athletica. Casey resigned as Starbucks' CFO on Sept. 30, but continues to work as a senior adviser for the coffee company. ― MA

The One Campaign , an effort to fight global disease and extreme poverty and bring fair trade and AIDS treatment to the African nation of Lesotho, has joined the fashion label EDUN for a second year to sell One.org T-shirts at Nordstrom stores.

The shirts cost $40, of which $10 goes to the Apparel Lesotho Alliance for Africa fund, which provides antiretroviral drugs to factory workers and their families in Lesotho, one of the world's poorest developing countries. Nordstrom will match the $10 donation for every T-shirt sold in the United States, up to $100,000. ― AM

B.R. Guest Restaurants plans to open Ocean, its first West Coast restaurant, in Seattle in 2009 inside the 1 Hotel and Residences downtown. Begun in 1987, B.R. Guest Restaurants' properties include Dos Caminos Soho in New York, Blue Water Grill in Chicago and Fiamma Trattoria in the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. ― MA

The NikeTown store in downtown Seattle will collect used athletic shoes through mid-February as part of Nike's Let Me Play initiative, which seeks to get young people involved with sports. The used shoes will be recycled into new sport and play surfaces for hurricane-ravaged New Orleans. ― AM

The Seattle area is the fourth-fastest city in the country for wait times at a variety of restaurants, stores and banks, according to a study by the Mystery Shopping Providers Association.

With wait times averaging 3 minutes, 40 seconds, the Seattle area trails only St. Louis, Sacramento and Indianapolis. Wait times in New York City average nearly 5 minutes and in Houston are more than 8 minutes. ― MA

Washington's fastest grocery bagger is 66-year-old Harvey Unruh, who works for Brown and Cole in Bellingham. On Thursday, he beat out eight other baggers in a state championship sponsored by the Washington Food Industry Association. Unruh won $500 and a trip to Las Vegas in February to compete in a national "bag-off" sponsored by the National Grocers Association. ― MA
Magician David Copperfield is being investigated by the FBI.

Authorities won't comment about the investigation, but did confirm that agents raided Copperfield's personal belongings Wednesday night. We're told agents searched a warehouse in Las Vegas where Copperfield stores items for his show.

The raid reportedly stems from an ongoing case in Seattle. TMZ spoke to an FBI spokesperson who refused to comment, saying only that there was an ongoing investigation.

Eyewitness News in Vegas is reporting that 12 agents "stormed the warehouse," seizing a computer hard drive, a digital camera system and nearly $2 million in cash.

David Chesnoff, Copperfield's lawyer, told TMZ, "We understand there is an investigation, we are in touch with the investigators, and are respecting the confidentiality of the investigation." Chesnoff would not comment on the nature of the probe.
JK Rowling says wizard Dumbledore is gay


TOOLBOX
Resize Text
Save/Share + DiggNewsvinedel.icio.usStumble It!RedditFacebook Print This E-mail This
COMMENT
No comments have been posted about this item.

Comments are closed for this article.
Discussion PolicyDiscussion Policy CLOSEComments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

Who's Blogging?
? Links to this article
NEW YORK (Reuters) - J.K. Rowling has outed one of the main characters of her best-selling Harry Potter series, telling fans in New York that the wizard Albus Dumbledore, head of Hogwarts school, is gay. Speaking at Carnegie Hall on Friday night in her first U.S. tour in seven years, Rowling confirmed what some fans had always suspected -- that she "always thought Dumbledore was gay," reported entertainment Web site E! Online.


T.I. pleads not guilty to weapons charges

ATLANTA (Reuters) - Grammy Award-winning rapper T.I. pleaded not guilty to a trio of illegal weapons charges on Friday and a judge ordered him detained for another week. Federal agents from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives arrested the rapper in Atlanta on Saturday, the day he was due to have starred at the BET hip hop awards. He had been nominated for nine awards, more than any other artist, and won two.


FBI raids magician David Copperfield in Vegas

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The FBI has raided magician David Copperfield's warehouse and a theater where he performs in Las Vegas following sexual misconduct accusations by an unidentified woman, authorities and his lawyers said on Friday. The FBI would not disclose the nature of its investigation of Copperfield, saying only that federal agents had raided the Las Vegas warehouse as part of a criminal probe based in Seattle.


Actress Hunter Tylo's son drowns in Las Vegas pool

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The teenage son of actress Hunter Tylo, who once won a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against the late TV mogul Aaron Spelling after she was fired for being pregnant, has drowned in his mother's swimming pool. The body of Michael Tylo Jr., 19, was found fully clothed on Wednesday night in the pool behind his mother's Las Vegas-area house, her manager, Marv Dauer, told Reuters on Thursday.


Hollywood writers authorize union to call strike

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hollywood edged closer to possible labor unrest on Friday after film and TV writers overwhelmingly authorized their union to call a strike if no contract deal is reached with the studios by month's end. Over 90 percent of the Writers Guild of America members taking part in the authorization vote backed the union's request for advance approval to declare a walkout should negotiators fail to conclude a settlement once the current contract expires.


Eagles and Dixie Chicks a well-matched double bill

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - There was an audible grumble traveling through the Nokia Theatre about 15 minutes into the venue's inaugural headlining set Thursday. The Eagles had just played their fourth consecutive new song to open the show. "They'd better stick to the old ones," an unsmiling woman groused.


Folk artist Yusuf Islam to sing about deportation

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - British folk singer Yusuf Islam hopes to return to the United States in December to record a song inspired by his deportation three years ago, he said on Friday. Islam, who changed his name from Cat Stevens after he became a Muslim in 1978, was denied entry to the United States "on national security grounds" in September 2004. His inbound flight was diverted to Maine and he and his daughter were taken off the plane. Islam had been planning to record in Nashville with country artists, including Dolly Parton.


Microsoft offers Latin market a Zune of their own

MIAMI (Billboard) - Wisin & Yandel, the reggaeton duo with an uncanny knack for delivering hit singles, will become the first act to get its own customized Zune player, Billboard has learned. The limited-edition Wisin & Yandel Zune device will hit Wal-Mart stores nationwide October 29, before the release of the duo's new album, "Los Extraterrestres," November 6.


Detroit awards show spotlights soul up-and-comers

LOS ANGELES (Billboard) - Between the Grammy Awards, the BET Awards, the American Music Awards and the MTV Video Music Awards, the last thing anyone needs is another music awards show -- unless you're an independent soul artist. With its Readers' Choice Awards, soul music Web site SoulTracks.com has been giving under-the-radar talents a chance to vogue in the spotlight. The site's third annual awards event will make the leap from the virtual to the physical world, a change indicative of the indie soul scene's growing popularity.


Peanuts creator Schulz led secret life of misery

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Good Grief, Charles Schulz. The creator of the beloved Peanuts comic strip was a shy, lonely man who used his child-like drawings to depict a life of deep melancholy, according to a controversial new biography. The book is based on six years of research, unlimited access to family papers, more than 200 interviews and a close reading the 17,897 strips Schulz wrote and drew. It portrays Schulz as a man who felt unseen and unloved even if his readers numbered in the hundreds of millions.


Man, I should have written this a couple weeks ago when it started. We've finally kissed the oppressive heat of summer goodbye and now we have a small window of perfect weather before winter comes in and has its way with us.

That's the thing about the weather in Las Vegas. Ask anybody and the first thing they'll say is that it gets too hot in the summer. Hell, this is a desert; you can't really expect much else.

Most people complain about it, some people get used to it and some people just plain like the heat. Can't say I'd enjoy such intense heat all year round, but it's certainly not without its charms. Summer nights in Las Vegas are some of the best you'll ever have.

But no matter what you think of the heat, you can't complain about those several weeks of perfect weather that bookend our summers. And it is perfect, through and through.

I'm talking open window weather. May not be as refreshing as some fancy air conditioner, but there's nothing like a cool breeze on your face.

The days and afternoons are beautiful and have just the right amount of sun. At night, the air is cool, crisp and has the slightest chilled bite to it that lasts until morning.

Get outside and enjoy it now because it won't be here for long. Vegas is only lucky enough to have such tremendous weather for a few weeks at a time. Yeah, I know California has copious amounts of luxurious weather, but the fleeting nature of our own meteorological fortune makes its sweet arrival all the more meaningful.

You know what they say about absence and the heart. Look, it would be nice to have weather like this all the time, but having such a small time frame ought to make us appreciate it more. Way I see it, the intense unpleasantness of the harsh summers and winters makes the weather we're enjoying much more beautiful.

Take a Sunday afternoon and hike Red Rock or eat outdoors somewhere. Or take a page out of old Kevin Chomintra's book and while away the early afternoon reading with a tall glass of ice coffee.

My favorite spot is this Starbucks with a nice, little courtyard in front. It has just the right amount sun, shade and quiet. May not be the most productive thing in the world, but, brother, weather like this is made for doing nothing.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home