We need to find a new favorite place to buy scented candles, seasonal decor and wicker furniture. Pier 1 announced today that they would be permanently closing all of their locations. In a news release the retailer stated that they were not able to find a buyer after filing for bankruptcy earlier this year. 

Robert Riesbeck, Pier 1’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer said, “We are grateful to our dedicated and hardworking associates, millions of customers and committed vendors who have collectively supported Pier 1 for decades. We deeply value our associates, customers, business partners and the communities in which we operate, and this is not the outcome we expected or hoped to achieve. This decision follows months of working to identify a buyer who would continue to operate our business going forward. Unfortunately, the challenging retail environment has been significantly compounded by the profound impact of COVID-19, hindering our ability to secure such a buyer and requiring us to wind down.”

Pier 1 is still accepting orders on its website and said it will “initiate store closing efforts and liquidation sales once store locations can reopen, in compliance with COVID-19 guidelines from local government and health officials.”

The company says it has approximately 541 U.S. stores and in the court filing says it plans to reopen some stores on or around May 22.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Mike Mozart from Funny YouTube, USA 

RELATED STORIES

Target’s New Summer-Themed Succulents Add a Tropical Vibe to Your Space

Target’s Sun Squad Line Just Got a Summer Update

Target Has All the Waterslides You Need to Survive the Summer

While we’ve been social distancing, Brookfield Zoo has welcomed some pretty exciting arrivals—two handsome 4-year-old African lions. While Chicago hasn’t been able to welcome these beauties in person just yet, read on to learn how you can be a part of their virtual welcoming committee.

The 4-year-old brothers, Brutus and Titus, were transferred to Brookfield Zoo from Hogle Zoo in Salt Lake City, UT, on March 17. With the zoo being temporarily closed, they introduced the new arrivals via a Bringing the Zoo to You Facebook Live chat.

After seeing the brothers, kids began sending drawings of the lions and welcome messages to the zoo’s Facebook page. Staff decided to line the windows of the lion’s outdoor habitat with these well-wishes, which caught the eye of Titus.

Brookfield Zoo would like to fill the entire window with artwork and is inviting kids to submit their original masterpieces to the zoo’s Facebook page. They will be printed and added to the window for the lions to enjoy.

Brookfield Zoo’s Bringing the Zoo to You Facebook Live Chats are held on weekdays at 11 a.m. Be sure to join in to visit with your zoo favorites.  If you miss one, no worries, you can go back and watch on Facebook or YouTube.

Note: As a non-profit, Brookfield Zoo relies on ticket sales, memberships, education program fees, meeting revenue and donations to operate. These temporary Covid-19-related closures have had a significant impact on the operating budget of all non-profits. Please consider making a donation, purchasing a membership or visiting the zoo in person when restrictions are lifted. 

Online: czs.org/Brookfield-ZOO

— Maria Chambers

RELATED STORIES: 

Visit Chicago’s Brightest & Best Cultural Gems. . . Virtually!

Take a Virtual Vacation with These Cool Webcams

Adorable Animal Cams You Can Watch All Day Long

What if your dishwasher could remind your kids to unload the dishes instead of you? That’s exactly the kind of magic that can happen when you use the S’moresUp app.

S’moresUp is a smart family organizer that helps you keep track of everything from appointments to allowance. The handy app has now partnered with Home Connect to roll out a brand new feature that will make your life even easier.

Working in combination with the Home Connect technology featured in Bosch’s line of smart appliances you can manage home appliances with voice control. This means you can have your appliances tell your kids when it’s time to unload the washing machine or put away the clean dishes.

When the dishwasher finishes a load it will simply assign the task to “unload the dishes” to your kids via the app and the dishwasher’s voice control feature. The new S’moresUp app feature will be compatible with appliances made by the entire BSH group appliances like Bosch, Thermador, Gaggenau and more.

“Technology advances have changed the way companies operate and people across the globe communicate. It’s time that parents benefit from emerging technology as well,” said Priya Rajendran, CEO and co-founder of S’moresUp. “We’re pleased to share that with this collaboration, technology is unlocking new ways to assist busy parents, while helping kids learn responsibility, self-reliance, and other critical life skills.”

You can learn more about the S’moresUp app and all of its features here.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

All photos: Courtesy of S’moresUp

 

RELATED STORIES

Bitsbox Is Partnering with Amazon’s “Troop Zero” to Inspire Kids to Get Creative

These Are the Winners of the 2020 Kids at Play Interactive Awards

The Ultimate List of Things Your Kids Can Ask Amazon Alexa

Add one more retailer to the list of company closings over the past year. Arts and crafts store A.C. Moore recently announced it will shutter 145 locations, mainly on the East Coast.

As of now, the company hasn’t posted specific store closures and will continue to fill previous online orders. The company will no longer take new online orders.

photo: JJBers via Flickr

According to a press release, The Michaels Companies Inc. (the owner of Michaels craft stores) will take over the leases for up to 40 current A.C. Moore East Coast locations. Michaels CEO, Mark Cosby, said, “This transaction enables us to further expand our presence in strategic markets and serve even more customers both online and in store. We are looking forward to re-opening these stores under the Michaels name in 2020 and welcoming new team members.”

Of the store closings, Anthony Piperno, Chief Executive Officer of A.C. Moore, said, “For over 30 years, our stores have been servicing the creative community with a vast selection of art and craft materials, with one common focus, the customer. Unfortunately, given the headwinds facing many retailers in today’s environment, it made it very difficult for us to operate and compete on a National level. ”

Piperno added, “During this process, we will continue to provide great customer experience, while still delivering quality and value on your favorite products.  Plans for closing specific A.C. Moore locations will be shared in the upcoming weeks on our website.”

—Erica Loop

 

RELATED STORIES

Five Below Is Now Selling Items for Over 5 Dollars

Where Will the First Amazon Grocery Store Open?

Chuck E. Cheese Has Big Plans to Roll Out Changes to 600+ Locations

What better character to operate on than the creepy, crawly bug-stuffed Oogie Boogie? That’s exactly what you’ll do with this terrifyingly fun game of Nightmare Before Christmas Operation.

Designed like the original Operation game, players draw a card to determine what they need to operate on and how much it will earn them. Instead of funny bones and butterflies in the stomach, however, you’ll be working on ailments like Lock Jaw, Snake Bite and Bat Got Your Tongue on the patient known as Mister Oogie Boogie.

This special collector’s edition of the game by USAOPOLY is designed for players six years and up and will make for the perfect game night for Nightmare Before Christmas fans.

You can score the spooky version of this classic game on Amazon for $44.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

All photos: Amazon

 

RELATED STORIES

This “Nightmare Before Christmas” Zero Nighlight Will Light Up Your Life

Freshly Picked Just Dropped “Nightmare Before Christmas” Moccs & This Is Halloween!

This Epic Vans x “Nightmare Before Christmas” Collab Just Dropped & Is it Halloween Yet?

LATAM Airlines has just revealed its Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge inspired airplane and it’s the perfect way to fly to Orlando for your next Disney vacation.

The Boeing 777 passenger “Storm Trooper” plane will operate out of São Paulo/Guarulhos and will be flying passengers to Orlando, where Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge is based at Disney’s Hollywood Studios. It will also be active on routes to other destinations, including Miami and European cities such as Madrid, Frankfurt and Paris.

photo: Courtesy of LATAM Airlines

The plane, which features a stenciled Storm Trooper on its tail, was designed by Disney’s creative team in conjunction with Lucasfilm.

The new Storm Trooper plane is scheduled to arrive in São Paulo/Guarulhos for its first commercial flight in October.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

 

RELATED STORIES

Take a Journey to a Galaxy Far, Far Away Onboard This “Star Wars”-Themed Airplane

Disney World Is Celebrating Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge with These Limited Time Treats

LEGO Released “Harry Potter” and “Star Wars” Advent Calendars & Grab Them Before They’re Gone!

 

Across the country, plastic straws are becoming increasingly less popular due to the known damage they can cause wildlife, including sea turtles. Now another major retailer joins a growing list of companies saying goodbye to plastic straw: Whole Foods is eliminating plastic straws from its stores.

Whole Foods Market has just announced that it it will stop offering plastic straws in all of its locations in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom by July. Customers ordering drinks and smoothies at the store’s Allegro coffee bars will be offered recyclable, compostable paper straws instead. Customers with disabilities can still request a plastic straw.

photo: Whole Foods

“For almost 40 years, caring for the environment has been central to our mission and how we operate,” Whole Foods president A.C. Gallo said in a statement. “We recognize that single-use plastics are a concern for many of our customers, team members and suppliers. We will continue to look for additional opportunities to further reduce plastic across our stores.”

Whole Foods also announced that its rotisserie chickens will be getting a revamp. The stores will replace the hard plastic containers the chickens were previously sold in with bags, which contain 70 percent less plastic. The company will also be making its plastic produce bags smaller.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

 

RELATED STORIES

Whole Foods Amazon Prime Now Delivery Arrives in 13 More Cities Across the Country

Here Is Everywhere Whole Foods Delivers in the U.S.

Does Your School Need an Edible Garden? Whole Foods Wants to Help It Grow

“Do you guys know what you’re looking for?” the man’s scratchy voice croaked from behind the counter. His round, friendly face was peppered with a short, white beard. Like Santa after a night of vodka tonics in a black t-shirt with a five o’clock shadow.

“I have no idea what I’m doing but he does.” I nodded at my eight-year-old son. His face was serious as he scanned the stacks of Pokemon cards and comic books behind the counter. The walls that surrounded us were covered from floor to ceiling with more comics and graphic novels.

I’m a writer. I’m an author. And surrounded by the walls of endless reading materials, I’d never felt more out of my element. I never got into comics as a child and graphic novels didn’t enter my vocabulary until I was an adult. To be honest for a hot second I thought they were referring to porn. A quick google search, years ago, dispelled that misconception.

My eight-year-old, though, he confidently moved through the maze. Inspecting each section, meticulously planning what items he wanted to get, even counting up the totals in his head. How many Pokecards and comic books could he get? And at a reasonable price.

I watched him navigate this world the way I navigated the YA section of the library. Enamored with the shelves of novels that held new adventures and worlds and heartache and joy, all just for me. I’d meticulously choose my books based on the max you could check out. I was watching him operate the same way, just with a different writing medium. I was keenly aware of what I was a witness to. History repeating itself in a weird new dimension.

This boy had struggled to learn to read in kindergarten and first grade. Oh the tears he shed trying to figure it out. And the careful words I let escape my lips, trying to be encouraging and non-pressuring, while just wishing I could wave one of the wands from a story we’d read and fix this all for him. In second grade, though, things changed; something clicked. And now as the second grade was winding down, we were standing in a store filled with reading materials that shouted at him from the shelves.

My son isn’t the only boy that faced reading struggles. In 2016 Scholastic conducted a survey of 2,000 children ages 6-17, 52% of boys and 73% of girls said they liked reading books over the summer. Twenty-seven percent of boys and 37% of girls said they read books for fun five days a week. These statistics were nothing new to me. Because I’m in the writing world and reading was so crucial to my happiness, I’d been keenly aware of the reading stigma around boys. I knew when my boys were born, I’d do all I could to encourage them to love books and stories and reading. I’ve been reading to them at bedtime (and more) since they were newborns.

And after all of that foundational building, I still watched my first-born son struggle. I felt his passion for books slipping from my parenting grasp, little wisps fighting to fade away. And that was terrifying to me. Soul crushing. How could my son not love books? My son! I was the girl who climbed trees in the summer with a book in her hand and sat up there reading all by herself, enjoying nature and a good story.

As we often learn as parents, I was wrong. I was afraid for nothing. He needed to do this on his own time. Watching him operate in this neighborhood comic book store proved me wrong. It’s about the type of reading material. He needed to find his niche, the genres that make him feel the way I felt brushing my hands along the spines of shelved books in a tiny neighborhood library, the smell of paper dancing up my nostrils, carrying a calm.

As he added up the totals of his items, yet again, I cut him off. “You can get whatever you want. I’ll buy you Pokemon cards and comics, don’t worry about it. Pick out whatever you want to read.”

He did. One graphic novel and three comics. The third comic, a Hulk one, he shyly brought over to the counter as I was checking out. His shoulders were pulled up in his ears as he grinned and slowly tip-toed over. I held out my arm, and he quickly handed it over, the grin morphing into an ear-to-ear smile.

The next morning, he woke up and excitedly told me, “Hey mom. I’m already on page 20 in the Skylanders book!” My eight-year-old who struggled to learn to read proudly bragged about how he stayed up late reading 20 pages of his brand-new book. For fun. Take that, statistics and stigmas and mom-guilt! He’s a recreational male reader. Boom!

I still don’t get comic books though.

Nicole is boy mom to two small dudes that never stop moving or eating. She is a Pilates instructor and all around fitness junkie. She's a Chicagoan through and through. She loves reading, writing, philanthropy and using a good dose of aromatherapy in a hot bath to unwind.

Not one, but two new Pokémon games for the Nintendo Switch are set to launch this year—and you really gotta catch ’em both if you want to get in on all the Pokémon awesomeness!

Nintendo just announced its latest additions to the Pokémon game universe in the form of Pokémon Sword and Pokémon Shield. Like other titles in the Pokémon video game universe, the two games operate in duality, offering similar game play but differing in characters and storylines.

photo: Nintendo via YouTube

Players will be introduced to a whole new line up of yet unseen Pokémon and, like previous Pokémon iterations, players start with the option of choosing between three new starter Pokémon, including the rabbit Pokémon Scorbunny, the water lizard Pokémon Sobble and the chimp Pokémon Grookey.

The universe in Sword and Shield is known as the Galar region, which like past games, is inspired by real world geography. In this case the countrysides and snowy mountains are meant to mimic the United Kingdom.

Both games will be available in late 2019, just in time to fill those holiday wish lists.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

 

RELATED STORIES

Nintendo Switch Is Getting Its Own “Super Mario Maker” for Hours of Creative Fun

Pillsbury’s New Pokémon Sugar Cookies Are So Cute, We’ve Gotta Eat ’Em All

Ryan Reyolds’ Live-Action Pikachu Is Actually Ridiculously Adorable