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Happy Joe’s Pizza launches patriotic menu, sweepstakes for America 250

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Happy Joe's Pizza launches patriotic menu, sweepstakes for America 250

Happy Joe’s Pizza & Ice Cream is turning America’s 250th birthday into a summer-long celebration.

The Davenport, Iowa-based restaurant chain — which has three company-owned restaurants, 35 domestic franchised locations and nine international locations in Egypt — is rolling out patriotic menu items, family block parties and sweepstakes tied to the nation’s semiquincentennial.

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Tom Sacco, Happy Joe’s CEO, president and “chief happiness officer,” said the campaign fits the brand’s roots.

“Who’s better in this country to throw a birthday party for just regular old American folks than Happy Joe’s?” Sacco told FOX Business. “Because that’s who we are.”

From May 15 through Aug. 15, guests who buy a specialty pizza and a Mountain Dew at participating locations can enter the “Freedom Flyaway Sweepstakes” for a chance to win one of three $3,000 trips to Washington, D.C. 

BELOVED IOWA PIZZA FRANCHISE SERVES UP ‘MORE THAN PIZZA’ FOR ITS CUSTOMERS

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Happy Joe’s CEO Tom Sacco discussed the pizza chain’s AMERICA250 campaign

Tom Sacco, Happy Joe’s CEO, president and “chief happiness officer,” said the campaign fits the brand’s roots. (FOX Business / Happy Joe’s)

The sweepstakes was initially solely tied to a Washington, D.C., trip, but Sacco said winners can also take the cash and use it however it best helps their families.

“If celebrating to them is giving… them freedom financially to not be burdened by some of the expensive things that have happened in the last four or five years … If that’s what makes you happy, because mom doesn’t have to stress about how to pay for daycare during the summer or something like that, then that’s a huge win,” Sacco said.

The promotion also includes weekly Mountain Dew prize packs with pickleball paddles, lawn chairs, blankets, Happy Joe’s apparel and gift cards.

Happy Joe’s is also hosting AMERICA250 Block Party events on June 29 from 4 to 8 p.m. with games, trivia, music, giveaways and free slices of its red, white and blue birthday cake pizza.

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Happy Joe's patriotic menu items America 250

Through Aug. 15, guests who buy a specialty pizza and a Mountain Dew at participating locations can enter the “Freedom Flyaway Sweepstakes” for a chance to win one of three $3,000 trips to Washington, D.C.  (Happy Joe’s)

Sacco said some locations will have activities such as bounce houses, face painting, balloon makers and patriotic trivia tied to both U.S. history and Happy Joe’s history.

“We’re going to just do some fun stuff like that,” Sacco said. “… We can play the game and make it patriotic, but make it tied to Happy Joe’s kind of stuff.”

The limited-time menu includes a BBQ Brisket Pizza with Texas-smoked brisket, pickles, onions and barbecue sauce, a BBQ Chicken Pizza and an AMERICA250 Birthday Cake topped with red, white and blue frosting and sprinkles.

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Sacco said Happy Joe’s is leaning into what it has long been known for: birthdays, families and memorable dining experiences.

MCDONALD’S BRINGING BACK FRIED APPLE PIE TO CELEBRATE AMERICA’S 250TH BIRTHDAY

Happy Joe's patriotic pizza America 250

The brand is also hosting AMERICA250 Block Party events on June 29 from 4 to 8 p.m. with games, trivia, music, giveaways and free slices of its red, white and blue birthday cake pizza. (Happy Joe’s)

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“We don’t compete on price. We don’t compete on discounting. We compete on experience,” Sacco said. “Pizza gets you in the door. When you leave, we’ve created a memory. And that’s how we go about the business.”

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He added that the campaign gives the brand a chance to celebrate the country’s milestone birthday with families across its markets.

“The 250, for me, is like the biggest national celebration I can ever be a part in,” Sacco said. “I have the opportunity, because of Happy Joe’s, to share it with hundreds of thousands of our guests and their families around the country.”

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Oil prices moved higher on Monday as shipping activity through the Strait of Hormuz slowed and early talks between U.S. and Iranian officials under an interim peace agreement got off to a difficult start.

Reuters reported that shipping data showed a sharp decline in the number of vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz on Sunday after Iran announced it had once again closed the waterway, accusing Israel and the United States of violating the interim peace agreement.

Crude oil price on June 22

Brent crude futures rose 54 cents, or 0.67%, to $81.11 a barrel, after briefly touching $82.30 at the start of trading. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures gained $2.02, or 2.64%, to $78.62 a barrel ahead of the contract’s expiry later on Monday. The more actively traded August contract advanced $1.43 to $77.28 a barrel. U.S. markets were closed on Friday due to a holiday, resulting in no settlement.
Adding to market uncertainty, U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to resume attacks on Iran, even as U.S. Vice President JD Vance met Iranian officials on Sunday for the first discussions under the interim deal. Tehran, meanwhile, said Washington had failed to honour its commitment to halt fighting in Lebanon.

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Despite Monday’s gains, oil prices had fallen more than 8% last week amid expectations that cargoes stranded inside the Gulf would be released and that U.S. sanctions on Iranian oil could eventually be lifted under a U.S.-Iran agreement.

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Despite the recent slide in oil prices, a complete reopening of Hormuz is expected to be a complex process. It will require careful coordination of vessel movements, the restart of oil wells, repairs to infrastructure and agreement on de-mining operations. Some shipowners also remain wary of operating conditions in the strait and the wider Persian Gulf.
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