state Hawaii: Latest News

All news where state Hawaii is mentioned

The top-selling Valentine’s Day candy by state revealed - fox29.com - state Illinois - Los Angeles - state California - state Florida - state New York - state Nevada - state Minnesota - state Tennessee - area District Of Columbia - state Pennsylvania - state New Jersey - state Ohio - state Washington - state Massachusets - state Connecticut - state Delaware - state Arizona - state North Carolina - state Vermont - city Washington - state Texas - Washington, area District Of Columbia - state Missouri - state Virginia - state Louisiana - state Maryland - state Mississippi - state Oregon - state South Carolina - state Arkansas - state Alaska - state Indiana - state Iowa - state New Hampshire - Georgia - state Hawaii - state Kansas - state Michigan - state Oklahoma - state Wisconsin - state Colorado - state New Mexico - state North Dakota - state South Dakota - state Idaho
fox29.com
56%
527
The top-selling Valentine’s Day candy by state revealed
Los Angeles - From a traditional box of chocolates to the resurgence of conversation hearts, CandyStore.com has compiled data to determine this year’s most popular Valentine’s Day candy by state — and some of the results are cloyingly surprising.The national candy company used sales data from its online bulk candy stores and industry partners to determine the outcome.Cue the results (and we won’t sugar-coat it).Valentine’s Day candy is a personal choice, but there are two types of candy that seemed to shine in 2022: conversation hearts and heart-shaped boxes of chocolates.This year, CandyStore.com said conversation hearts have claimed the top spot as Valentine's Day's top-selling candy.Percentage of total Valentine's Day candy sales (Credit: CandyStore.com) However, the candy retailer also broke down the state-by-state data, which showed slightly different results. Yes, 12 states favored conversation hearts this year (Alaska, California, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Hawaii, Louisiana, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Virginia and Wisconsin).However, a whopping 16 states, along with Washington, D.C., still preferred a heart-shaped box of chocolates (Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Indiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, Washington and Washington D.C.).In addition, M&M’s continue to gain traction.
Gary Kelly - Southwest Airlines may serve alcohol on board in spring - fox29.com - state Hawaii
fox29.com
55%
122
Southwest Airlines may serve alcohol on board in spring
Southwest Airlines is considering bringing back booze on flights this spring after scrapping the service early on in the pandemic.During an earnings call Thursday, CEO Gary Kelly said the carrier is looking to bring back the service either "late in the first quarter, maybe early in the second quarter."Kelly noted that the company had intended to bring back service in the middle of February but delayed plans due to the uptick in coronavirus cases driven by the omicron variant.It wasn't the first time the carrier delayed its plans. In the spring of 2021, Southwest decided against bringing it back after an increase in incidents of unruly passengers.The airline was planning to resume selling alcohol in June on Hawaii flights and in July on other flights, a move that was questioned by the president of the union representing Southwest flight attendants. "Given the recent uptick in industry-wide incidents of passenger disruptions inflight, we have made the decision to pause the previously announced re-start of alcohol service," Southwest spokesman Chris Mainz said, adding that the decision was "in the interest of the safety and comfort of all customers and crew onboard."In fact, the Federal Aviation Administration said the biggest single proposed fine, topping $40,000, involves a passenger who brought alcohol on the plane and drank it, smoked marijuana in the lavatory, and sexually assaulted a flight attendant on a Southwest Airlines jet in April.In August, FAA Administrator Steve Dickson even issued a warning letter to airports saying there was a correlation between the uptick in unruly passengers and alcohol. Southwest Airlines CEO Gary Kelly told a U.S.
DMCA