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TopPick

02/07/13 11:37 PM

#34976 RE: DryLightning #34975

I think they'd prefer to make money successfully putting out a product that people love then screwing investors over stocks go up and down this is def a real deal
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The Rainmaker

02/07/13 11:46 PM

#34978 RE: DryLightning #34975

They knew each other from the old days, he was a guy who knew how to build websites. That is still not a connection here. You said they knew each other before, he helped register a website for them. Then everything after that was just speculation of what might happen one day in the future if every bad evil thing possible all happens at one time, Just speculation not direct links between him and EEDG except to set up a website for them. New CEO is just too qualified as is Harold Kestenbaum for that theory to be likely. I dont agree that is what is happening here.I think they are building a major company here and in 6 months investors will look back and wish they seized this opportunity.
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The Rainmaker

02/07/13 11:58 PM

#34979 RE: DryLightning #34975

I used the love the soup guy on Seinfeld. The web guy you mentioned registered a website for EEDG also made a deal with The Soupman from Seinfeld a while back.I still see those Soupman restaurants in NYC. Saw their soup for sale in A&P also. Dry Fried Wings is going to become way bigger.

Soup Kitchen Enters Deal to Join Chain

By FLORENCE FABRICANT
Published: July 01, 1997
Soup Kitchen International, 259A West 55th Street, the storefront owned by Al Yeganeh and made famous, or notorious, on the television series ''Seinfeld,'' is planning to expand.

Mr. Yeganeh, who has owned his little place, known for creative soups and brusque service, for 12 years, has agreed to become a partner in Soup Man Enterprises with Jack Freedman, who has two soup kiosks in Manhattan and Hicksville, N.Y., and is the former owner of a company that runs about 30 bagel kiosks.

The new company intends to open Soup Man kiosks in the New York area and in Canada. Mr. Freedman said he was also negotiating to open kiosks in Bagel Boss stores on Long Island.

When Mr. Freedman, the chief executive of Soup Man Enterprises, opened his kiosks earlier this year, he named them Soup Man, possibly creating the impression that it involved Mr. Yeganeh, who is sometimes called ''the soup man.''

Mr. Freedman said that at first Mr. Yeganeh demanded that he change the name. ''It went from ugly to friendly pretty quickly,'' Mr. Freedman said. ''And now we have made this agreement.