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        <title><![CDATA[Chuck E. Cheese wants to destroy about 7 billion prize tickets amid bankruptcy]]></title>
        <atom:link href="https://usagag.com/2020/09/16/chuck-e-cheese-wants-to-destroy-about-7-billion-prize-tickets-amid-bankruptcy/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
        <link>https://usagag.com/2020/09/16/chuck-e-cheese-wants-to-destroy-about-7-billion-prize-tickets-amid-bankruptcy/</link>
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            <media:title type="html">Chuck E. Cheese wants to destroy about 7 billion prize tickets amid bankruptcy</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The parent company of Chuck E. Cheese wants to destroy about 7 billion prize tickets that have piled up in its supply chain amid the coronavirus pandemic.</p><p>The company, CEC Entertainment, asked a Texas bankruptcy court to approve settlements allowing three of its vendors to shred the excess tickets at a cost of about $2.3 million, roughly $1 million less than the cost of circulating them.</p><p>The massive ticket stockpile could be traded in for about $9 million worth of prize merchandise — or $0.0013 per ticket — at Chuck E. Cheese arcades if they were abandoned and ended up getting into the general public, CEC said in a Monday court filing.</p><p>The company argued that destroying the paper tickets, which bear the Chuck E. Cheese trademark, is in its best interest because &#8220;Prize Tickets are redeemable by guests at significantly higher value than the cost of Prize Tickets.&#8221;</p><p>CEC said its need for tickets — which players win from arcade games and exchange for prizes — diminished as COVID-19 tanked its sales and forced it to close arcades, though many locations have since reopened.</p><p>The industry&#8217;s &#8220;rapid move toward contactless service&#8221; amid the pandemic also accelerated efforts to phase out the paper tickets, along with the &#8220;muncher&#8221; machines that count them, in favor of electronic tickets, the company said.</p><p>But CEC had placed orders for tickets based on how many it had needed before the virus hit, causing &#8220;enough tickets to fill approximately 65 40-foot cargo shipping containers&#8221; to build up in the supply chain, according to the filing.</p><p>CEC Entertainment <strong>filed for bankruptcy in June</strong>, saying it planned to restructure its debt-heavy balance sheet through talks with financial stakeholders and landlords as it plotted a recovery from the COVID-19 crisis.</p><p>The Texas-based company has more than 600 Chuck E. Cheese locations and more than 120 Peter Piper Pizza restaurants, including franchises, across 47 states and 16 foreign countries and territories.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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