• LaGG_3 [he/him, comrade/them]
    hexbear
    19
    21 days ago

    Ulukaya said he had been “an admirer of San Francisco” but had few connections in the city and “didn’t know Anchor existed” until last August when he happened upon an article in Forbes about its closure.

    Dude has literally never been in a grocery store beer aisle lmao

  • InevitableSwing [none/use name]
    hexagon
    hexbear
    14
    21 days ago

    The billionaire behind the Chobani yogurt brand has acquired Anchor Brewing Co. with plans to modernize and reopen the historic San Francisco brand that closed last year after 127 years in operation. On Friday, Hamdi Ulukaya, Chobani founder and CEO, announced that his family office had bought all of Anchor’s assets: the iconic steam beer recipes, the 2.1-acre Potrero Hill campus and all the brewing equipment in the De Haro Street warehouses. The price was not disclosed.

    [...]

    On Thursday, he met with four longtime Anchor employees and said he plans to hire back as many of the former workers as possible. He didn’t know whether the union that formed there shortly before the brewery closed will be part of the new operations.

    [...]

    Ulukaya, who has won national awards for hiring refugees at Chobani, said he was not worried about the negativity that has dominated San Francisco’s post-pandemic narrative, although he is aware of the city’s homelessness and poverty issues because he had visited St. Anthony’s, Glide and other nonprofits recently with 80 members of the Chobani leadership team who were in town to meet and volunteer.

    Ulukaya said he witnessed “pain and suffering children without enough food, families struggling and people with mental illness.”

    “There is not success unless everyone is rising,” he said. “The business can play an enormous role in that. It has to be part of the solution. We can’t just rely on the government.”

    • @graverubber@infosec.pub
      hexbear
      3
      21 days ago

      “There is not success unless everyone is rising,” he said. “The business can play an enormous role in that. It has to be part of the solution. We can’t just rely on the government.”

      Sure seems like a good philosophy.

  • @ValenThyme@reddthat.com
    hexbear
    10
    21 days ago

    lol that brewery remains a folly for the wealthy. The last billionaire to run it was a Maytag (the washing machines) nepo who had a whim.