Mattel is continuing to show support for essential workers on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic.  #ThankYouHeroes is part of the Company’s “Play it Forward” platform focused on leveraging Mattel brands to give back to communities in times of need. All net proceeds from this new line, including new items from Matchbox, Mega Construx and UNO, will be donated to #FirstRespondersFirst. 

The new items join the previously announced action figures and Little People Community Champions from Fisher-Price celebrating today’s frontline healthcare workers and the everyday heroes keeping communities up and running. 

 

 Mattel’s new #ThankYouHeroes products include:

 

  • Matchbox #ThankYouHeroes Frontline Heroes Vehicles Gift Set – The set features seven die-cast vehicles including an ambulance, garbage truck, grocery delivery van, news helicopter, mobile hospital, package delivery van and police car.

Mattel #ThankYouHeroes

 

  • Two Mega Construx #ThankYouHeroes Building Sets – The first set features a police cruiser, delivery cart and medical lab, along with five action figures comprised of a police officer, scientist, two EMTs and an ambulance driver. The second set features a food delivery truck and kitchen, along with three action figures comprised of a firefighter, cook and food delivery worker.

Mattel #ThankYouHeroes

 

  • UNO #ThankYouHeroes Tin – The new UNO cards include Mattel’s iconic brands and characters as frontline and everyday heroes, including He-Man as a grocery delivery worker and Barbie as a scientist. 

Mattel #ThankYouHeroes

 

The new #ThankYouHeroes items will be available for pre-order starting today through May 31, 2020, at http://MattelPlayroom.com/ThankYouHeroes. Matchbox and Mega Construx products retail for $20, with $15 from each sale donated to #FirstRespondersFirst, and the UNO product retails for $10, with $8 from each sale donated to #FirstRespondersFirst. Items are expected to ship to consumers by Dec. 31, 2020.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

All photos courtesy of Mattel

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Check Out These Learning Resources Amid Coronavirus School Closures

Going out to eat is not an option for many of us due to the spread of coronavirus. Some places like Austin, Dallas, Houston, New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles, have announced that all bars and restaurants must close down their dining rooms. Now that take-out or delivery is your only option, RetailMeNot has you covered. 

pizza delivery

Several major restaurant chains have rallied, some teaming up with Postmates, Grubhub and Seamless, to offer free delivery because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

&pizza

Fast-casual pizza chain &pizza is offering free contactless delivery indefinitely in all markets. Customers can order through the &pizza app for carryout or free delivery.

Auntie Anne’s

Mmmmm, pretzels! Find an Auntie Anne’s near you, and get a $0 delivery fee on orders $15+ with DoorDash until March 30. 

Bertucci’s

Order on the Bertucci’s website today for free delivery.

Black Angus Steakhouse

Through March 29, get free Delivery on Black Angus Steakhouse orders of $15 or more through DoorDash. 

Blaze Pizza

This pizza chain with more than 300+ locations across the country is waiving delivery fees on all orders of $10 or more via their website or the Blaze app for a limited time. You can also score free delivery on Postmates or DoorDash through March 22.

Blaze Pizza is also introducing two new online specials: one large one-topping pizza for $10, and two large one-topping pizzas for $20.

Buca di Beppo

Enjoy free delivery on Italian favorites from Buca di Beppo. Start your online delivery order.

Burger King

Burger King is offering free delivery on Grubhub for orders over $10 through March 29. Keep in mind you might still pay a service fee. Over the next month, Burger King’s other delivery-service partners, such as DoorDash and Uber Eats, will also waive delivery fees.

There are also reports that Burger King will soon offer two free kids meals per adult meal purchased.

Chipotle

On March 12, Chipotle was the first major chain to announce free delivery on orders of over $10. The complimentary service launched March 15 and will last until March 31.

The service features a tamper-evident seal and limited-contact delivery options. Chipotle is using a “Delivery Kitchen” fulfill these orders, and the company is utilizing a new delivery tracker, so you can get real-time updates on your order. 

Del Taco

Del Taco is offering free delivery on Postmates for a limited time with the code DELTACONOW. After March 20, Del Taco will continue to offer automatic free delivery on orders over $15.

Del Taco is also offering first-time customers free delivery on DoorDash.

Dickey’s Barbecue Pit

Dickey’s announced free doorstep delivery through the end of April. Check out this Dickey’s press release for details. Delivery orders will come pre-sealed upon arrival to help guard against any tampering.

El Pollo Loco

El Pollo Loco is offering free delivery via Grubhub from participating locations from March 25 to April 7.

KFC

On March 13, KFC announced free delivery from March 14 to April 26. You can place orders through KFC’s website or its delivery partners: Grubhub and Seamless. A service fee will apply and a small order fee will apply for orders less than $12 (before tax, tip, and fees).

In-store pickup is available at a specially designated area at KFC counters if you do prefer that option. 

Little Caesars

Get free delivery on orders of $10 or more placed online from Little Caesars through March 22. 

Moe’s Southwest Grill

Moe’s Southwest Grill announced on Twitter that it would offer free delivery on all app and website orders of $10 or more through April 10.

Select Moe’s locations have closed their dining rooms and implemented pickup services.

Outback Steakhouse

Outback Steakhouse has free delivery now through April 30. 

P.F. Chang’s

Get free delivery on orders of $25 or more when you order online or through the app.

Pieology

All Pieology locations are offering free delivery on orders over $35 when you order online or through the Pie Life Rewards App through the end of March. You can also get 10% off pick-up orders when you use code PICKUP10 at checkout.

Popeyes

Popeyes is offering free delivery through the Popeyes Mobile App and its website. When inputting your delivery address, you can input where you want your food dropped off: outside your door, in the lobby, etc.

Popeyes is also working with Uber Eats, DoorDash, Grubub, and Postmates to prepare for the increased demand for delivery. Note that Popeyes is also offering contactless drive-thru and pickup options.

Red Lobster

Get free delivery on online orders over $30 through March 29 and find how they are responding to the coronavirus outbreak.

Shake Shack

Head to the Shack App, website or order delivery via Grubhub, and Shake Shack will waive the delivery fees.

Taco Bell

Get free delivery on your first order over $12 through March 31 when you order through Grubhub.

Which Wich

Get free delivery on online orders through March 31, 2020.

Yogurtland

Get your sweet fix with this popular froyo chain. You can opt for drive-up pick-up service or order delivery from one of the major food delivery applications (Doordash, Grubhub, Postmates, Ubereats)!

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Pixabay via Pexels

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IKEA already delivers the fab furniture you DIY assemble with that little hexagonal wrench, but now recent reports have surfaced that cite the retailer’s expansion into the food delivery business, too!

The Spanish publication El Confidencial recently reported that IKEA is testing its food delivery service in Paris. According to the report, the delivery menu includes salads, salmon, beets and cabbage.

photo: Courtesy of IKEA

Most noticeably absent from the Parisian test delivery menu are the brand’s signature Swedish meatballs and the new veggie-based picks.

So when will delivery make it’s way stateside? As of now, there are no plans to bring this stellar service to the United States. Reportedly, if the test is successful the service will expand to Spain and then across Europe.

It looks like we’ll have to wait and see how it goes for the Swedish retailer before we can order menu items straight to our doorsteps on this side of the Atlantic.

—Erica Loop

 

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These days, there’s a buffet of meal delivery services and apps that make ordering your favorite eats and having them brought straight to your door as simple as a few swipes and clicks. From old standbys to newcomers, we picked the best services that’ll have your family saying, “Let’s order in tonight!” Read on to feast on a smörgåsbord of food delivery apps!

Amazon Restaurants

Ever since Amazon launched its Prime service in 2005, online shoppers have come to expect super-fast delivery of everything from electronics to diapers. With the purchase of Whole Foods last year, Amazon signaled that it’s getting serious about food, too. Using the Amazon Prime Now app, hungry Amazon Prime members can order meal delivery via Amazon Restaurants, with orders arriving in an hour or less. Available in more than a dozen cities and with an always growing number of restaurant partners, Prime members also can use Alexa’s voice-shopping function on their Amazon Echo or Echo Dot to re-order previously ordered meals by saying a restaurant name or cuisine type. Best of all, delivery is free to Prime members.

Available for iOS, Android, and Amazon Fire.

Caviar

Caviar is an easy way to order meals from popular, high-end local restaurants across the U.S. With options to order home delivery or at-restaurant pickup, Caviar serves up some of the best food in your city—from Asian takeout to Sicilian pizza. Restaurant partners include Momofuku, Blue Smoke, Eataly and The Meatball Shop, among others. Caviar’s free food ordering app is currently available in nearly two dozen cities and markets, including Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, San Diego, San Francisco Bay Area, Seattle, and Washington, D.C.

Available for iOS and Android.

Delivery.com

More than just a food-delivery app, Delivery.com aspires to be the one-stop shop for busy parents to order home delivery of local food, groceries and other household needs. In addition to browsing thousands of menus and ordering food from local restaurants, the app lets users order liquor, groceries and even schedule pickup and drop-off of laundry and dry cleaning—all delivered to your door. There are plenty of exclusive app-only discounts, and new users get a 15% off coupon for their first order over $15 as well as $7 for referring a friend. With more than one million active users and 10,000-plus local business partners, Delivery.com currently is available in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston, Washington D.C., Philadelphia and hundreds of other U.S. cities.

Available for iOS and Android.

DoorDash

If you’re stuck at home and your family has a hankering for a meal from a restaurant that usually doesn’t provide delivery service, DoorDash comes to the rescue by providing access to home delivery that other food-ordering apps typically don’t offer. Currently serving more than 600 cities in North America—including smaller cities and towns that often aren’t served by bigger food-ordering app services—DoorDash utilizes a courier model (think Uber for food delivery), which means you can order food from eateries that range from McDonald’s to P.F. Chang’s, and get it delivered to your home. Handy features on the app include advance ordering, real-time delivery tracker, and no order minimums.

Available for iOS and Android.

Eat24 Food Delivery & Takeout

Originally created by Yelp and recently acquired by GrubHub, Eat24 claims free pickup and delivery from 40,000 restaurants in more than 1,500 cities, including Atlanta, Austin, Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Denver, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, Phoenix, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington D.C. New features include location search, a fun Tweet My Meal function, and payment options that include PayPal and Apple Pay.

Available for iOS and Android.

Eat Purely

Chicago-based Eat Purely defies the usual expectation of greasy-spoon takeout fare by offering healthy, seasonal, chef-crafted meals that are delivered to your door on demand. With a menu that changes daily, Eat Purely’s options are fresh and healthy meals that arrive in about 30 minutes or less. As added bonuses, deliveries can be scheduled up to a week in advance, and there are plenty of choices for eaters with food restrictions or are on special diets such as gluten-free or paleo.

Available iOS and Android.

GrubHub

Still the Mack Daddy of food-ordering apps, GrubHub features ordering options from more than 55,000 restaurant partners in over 1,200 cities across the U.S., Japan, and the U.K. Like its sister food-ordering app Seamless, GrubHub’s nicely designed app lets hungry diners quickly search nearby restaurants, scroll through ratings and reviews, and order (and re-order) their favorite dishes in just a few clicks. Bonus: Payments can be made via Android Pay, Apple Pay, PayPal or good-old-fashioned cash or credit cards, so you won’t miss a beat to get your grub on.

Available for iOS and Android.

Minibar

When the kids are at grandma and grandpa’s house or they’ve already gone to bed, sometimes the best home-delivered meal is a liquid one. Minibar makes ordering wine, beer and liquor delivered to your door in as little as 30 to 60 minutes as easy as the touch of a button. Simply enter your delivery address, add your favorite items to your cart and checkout with your credit card. Minibar currently serves select markets, including Arizona, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Chicago, California, Colorado, Texas, Florida, Phoenix, Minnesota, Washington D.C., Nashville, and more. New locations coming soon! $5 off first order.

Available for iOS and Android.

Order Healthy

For parents who are worried about less-than-healthy fast-food takeout, Order Healthy connects users with local restaurants and groups food options based on what’s healthy and what’s not. The app provides access to more than 10,000 restaurants in more than a dozen markets and uses a color-coded system to indicate which menu items are not only delicious but also good for you and your family.

Available for iOS (Android coming soon).

Postmates

Whether you’re craving an iced latte from Starbucks, a burrito bowl from Chipotle or even bag of chips from the neighborhood CVS, Postmates gives you easy, on-demand access to local restaurants and stores with just a few clicks. With a fleet of delivery people, the app instantly assigns the best possible Postmate to ensure the fastest possible delivery, either at a one-time flat-rate fee or through an unlimited subscription. Real-time tracking lets you keep tabs on your delivery progress via a live map, and deliveries can be made virtually anywhere—at home, at work or at the playground. Postmates is available in 50 U.S. cities, including most major metro areas, as well as Mexico City

Available for iOS and Android.

Seamless

Launched in 1999, Seamless started as a web-based system for companies to order food from restaurants and caterers for corporate events. A few years later, Seamless transitioned from exclusively serving business eaters to opening its service to individual users. Today, Seamless is available in a dozen cities, including Austin, Boston, Chicago, Houston, London, Los Angeles, Miami, New York City, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Seattle and Washington D.C., and boasts more than 25,000 restaurant partners in the U.S. and the U.K. (thanks to its merger with GrubHub in 2013). With its easy search function (did someone say Taco Tuesdays?), one-click re-order option, and no additional fees, Seamless is the go-to app for food delivery or takeout for many urban foodies.

Available for iOS and Android.

Uber Eats

With so many food delivery apps adopting a courier-service model, it’s no wonder that ride-sharing app Uber would want to get in on the food business. Uber Eats lets users browse local restaurants and fast food favorites, place orders from the app, then track delivery time. Using their Uber accounts, eaters simply tap to seamlessly pay with their existing Uber accounts, or add a credit card. Uber Eats is currently available in dozens of cities and metro areas worldwide, with more added frequently.

Available for iOS and Android.

What are your favorite food-ordering apps? Tell us in the comments below!

—Kipp Jarecke-Cheng

 

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I didn’t expect parenthood would rekindle my relationship with —of all things—my phone. But there I was, with a tiny human attached to me for countless hours a day, my mind swirling with tasks to be done and questions about how to ensure my baby’s safety and health.

I needed to talk to my mom, I needed to chat with my friends, I needed advice from an expert, I needed to buy more diapers! My phone allowed me to do all these things (mostly) in silence, one-handed, at all hours of the day and night. Before you say anything, yes, I spent tons of time tech-free, just breathing in that baby smell. But I also embraced the wealth of sanity-saving, stress-reducing resources that make parenting a little bit easier. Hopefully they’ll help you, too.

Keep track of all the details.

  • Sprout Baby + ($4.99). Are you a baby-data geek (or just a typically sleep-deprived new parent who needs lots of help remembering things)? This app lets you log diaper changes, naps, feedings, doctor appointments, milestones and more. A sharing function allows multiple users to see information on the same kid.
  • WorkFlowy. There’s so much to think about and remember when caring for an infant, it’s common for new parents to become a little forgetful. This tool lets you make and manage lists that sync across all your devices. Jot notes about baby’s firsts, make grocery lists and check off your to-dos.
  • BabyStats. If you have a Google Home or Amazon Alexa home assistant, you can log everything by voice command while leaving your hands free to take care of baby. You can play back the day’s activities, which is especially helpful when you’re tracking medicine dosages or other times when you need precise information.

Find reliable breastfeeding advice and manage pumping, nursing and mealtimes.

  • KellyMom. If you have questions about breastfeeding (and what breastfeeding mom doesn’t?), this is the go-to resource for reliable information on nursing.
  • Baby Nursing — Breastfeeding Tracker (iOS, free) or Milk Maid (iOS, $2.99). To log nursing sessions or keep track of how much you’ve pumped, these apps are my favorites. Google Play also has a lot of options for android phones as well.
  • Weelicious.com. When baby is ready to transition to solid foods, Weelicious is a great destination for feeding tips and recipes like quinoa banana mash.

Get the low-down on what you do and don’t want to find in baby’s diaper.

  • The BabyCenter Poop Guide. This full-color guide isn’t for the squeamish. But if you’re fretting about baby’s ever-changing output, you’ll find that the Poop Guide is a reassuring reference tool.

Buy groceries and eat well when you have no time or energy.

  • Instacart. Partner/spouse out of town? Fridge empty? With a growing team of personal shoppers working in 27 states across the U.S., Instacart lets you shop your local grocery store online and it delivers the same day.
  • Hello Fresh and Blue Apron (nationwide) offer menu planning and deliver pre-prepped ingredients right to your door.
  • And there’s always Eat24GrubHub or Seamless (available in most U.S. cities) for food delivery from your favorite restaurant.

Regain your sanity, get reassurance, have a laugh.

  • Mom and Dad Are Fighting, Slate’s parenting podcast. Hear different views on hot topics in parenting and get tips for common parenting hurdles. Hosts Rebecca Lavoie, Gabriel Roth and Carvell Wallace are lighthearted and frank about their own challenges as parents.
  • The Longest Shortest Time: The Parenting Show for Everyone. From childbirth recovery to talking “birds and bees” with an 8-year-old, topics span a variety of parenting issues. Host Hillary Frank offers a compassionate, thoughtful perspective.

Find out what’s going on with baby while you’re at work.

  • Baby Connect (iOSAndroid, $4.99). Leaving baby with a caregiver is never easy. Thankfully, an app such as Baby Connect can ease the transition back to work. Caregivers log information about feedings, naps, diapers and more and parents receive push notifications on their phones.

Connect with other parents for advice, recipes and face-to-face meet-ups.

  • Facebook mom groups and Google Groups for parents. The support of family and friends is huge when you’re a new parent. But sometimes you just need to hang with other parents who can relate to what you’re going through. Maybe you’re a parent of twins or have an adopted kid; online groups can remind you you’re not alone.

Talk to family members who live across the country.

Get that kid to go to sleep (so you can, too).

  • White Noise (iOSAndroid, $1.99) or White Noise Free (iOS/Android). Pretty much since his birth, we’ve relied on the White Noise app’s “shower” setting to lull our son to sleep. Great for traveling or for sleepovers at Grandma’s.
  • Soundscapes Relaxation Sleep Mix. Check out the Soundscapes audio tracks on YouTube for ambient music that will put both you and baby in a sleepy mood. and since the tracks are 10 hours long, there’s no worry about a sudden silence waking up your little one.

Share kids’ photos privately.

  • Flickr. With 1 TB (that’s 1,000 GB!) of free storage on Flickr, you’ll never have to worry about running out of space. You can create albums and set viewing permissions to friends and family only, so there’s little worry about oversharing or your kids’ bathtub pics going public.
  • iCloud Photo Library. Do you text a zillion photos to your partner or mom? When you add a photo to a shared album in the iCloud, everyone with access gets a notification on his or her iOS device. You get 5 GB free and plans range from 50 GB for $0.99 a month to 1 TB for $9.99 a month.

—Written by Erin Wilkey Oh for Common Sense Media

This post originally appeared on Common Sense Media.
Common Sense Media
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

Common Sense Media is an independent nonprofit organization offering unbiased ratings and trusted advice to help families make smart media and technology choices. Check out our ratings and recommendations at www.commonsense.org.

No tent? No camp stove? No car? No problem. Every little urbanite should get a chance to sleep under the stars, and the one and only campsite located in San Francisco offers camping with all the convenience one has come to expect from the city that coined the phrase “there’s an app for that.” So whether you are an expert outdoorsman or green to the camp scene, everyone should experience this one-of-a-kind camp experience. Here’s how.

Nowhere Prettier than the Presidio
For starters, visitors to Rob Hill Campground get to pitch a tent in the stunning 1,500-acre national park that is the Presidio. The campground is just across the road from one of the more breathtaking Bay views—Immigrant Point Overlook—and a walking trail can take you right down to Baker Beach. The sites themselves are as special as you would expect considering the locale. There are four group sites, each sleeping up to 30 campers. Each site has a collection of picnic tables, a fire pit, a bbq grill, lockers to keep food away from critters (and critters away from you) and access to shockingly nice bathrooms (sinks and toilets, but no showers). And while camping within proximity of 90 other people (mostly school groups) sounds like it could be everything BUT serene, the sites are situated in such a way that we barely heard or saw the other campers. Each site comes with 4 parking permits, and the walk from car to site is about 100 easy feet. The cost is $125 per night.

No Gear? No Problem
It’s as simple as click and camp. Nearby Sports Basement rents everything novice campers could need for a night out in the woods. Tents, sleeping bags, air mats, and camp stoves …just click, pick up and pitch your tent (although we are sure, if you really feel like a clueless camper, there’s a Task Rabbit out there who will fit those pesky tent poles together for you). But as for what you should be sure to pack in: we suggest fire wood (scavenging for wood/kindling in the Presidio is a no no), drinking water and plenty of ingredients for s’mores!

  

The Perks of City Camping
If you grew up eating camp meals of hotdogs cooked over the fire on a stick, be prepared for a major upgrade. For the group that doesn’t feel like packing in dinner for 30, there are countless options for scoring gourmet grub. If you are camping on Thursday evenings, simply head down to the Main Parade Ground at 5 p.m. for Off the Grid Presidio Twilight, where cabanas, fire pits and nearly a dozen food trucks await. Our crew enjoyed everything from bacon burritos to lobster rolls to garlic noodles. And to fend off the fog rolling in (the large open field gets CHILLY) there was plenty of hot mulled wine to warm up our bones. 

Photo: Smitten 

If you are camping any other night, consider stopping into the Presidio Social Club or Traci des Jardin’s Arguello. If you would rather keep it wild, and dine at the site, any of the dozens of local food delivery apps will delver right to the camp ground. We rang up Smitten Ice Cream and had then drop off their new sundae picnics—insulated bags filled with absolutely everything you need for an ice cream sundae bar, from ice cream and toppings to spoons and bowls—even the ice cream scoopers!

But it was the next morning when we were really praising our iPhones: Postmates delivered piping hot coffee for 30 from Peet’s Coffee. We could camp here every night!

So Much Cool Stuff for Kids
But beyond the perks, the coolest thing about camping in the Presidio is all the incredible stuff there to absolutely blow your kids minds. From a visit to the Officers Club where history, plant and animal activities and art converge inside a stunning centuries-old building (and all for FREE!), to hikes to fit every ability to, well, just nature at its most stunning. We took a meandering 45-minute hike from the Officers Club to El Polin Springs that included countless birds, whimsical “fairy huts” contracted from sticks, two bees getting busy, a traditional Ohlone chant and so much more. It was an experience our troop will never forget—and it happened practically in their own backyard.

Rob Hill Campground
1475 Central Magazine Rd.
San Francisco, Ca
Online: presidio.gov

Good to know: The camping season runs April 1–October 31.  Reservations are filled on a first-come, first-served basis and are confirmed via email. As of press time, all Friday and Saturday dates are booked through July, 2016.  There are a few Sunday through Thursday dates available in August, September, and October.  For questions, call 415-561-4200. 

Have you camped in the Presidio? Tell us about it in the comments below! 

–Erin Feher

All images by the author unless otherwise noted.