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DoorDash customer puts his delivery driver on blast for saying his 30% tip was NOT ENOUGH based on...![img](/img/external-link.svg)
Dr. Ethan Melillo ordered falafel over rice, with white sauce, and a Snapple lemon tea drink. His order came to $15 - and he added a $5 tip for the worker. But this wasn't enough considering how nice his house was, according to the message he received.
Marketplace is launching a podcast!; Google blocking news sites | CBC News![img](/img/external-link.svg)
Google will remove Canadian news content from its search, news and discover products. Canada Bread has agreed to pay $50 million for its role in colluding to fix the price of bread. Aspartame, used in products from Diet Coke to Mars' Extra chewing gum and some Snapple drinks, will be listed in July as "possibly carcinogenic to humans"
Sweetener found in Diet Coke will be declared as 'possibly carcinogenic to humans', report claims![img](/img/external-link.svg)
Aspartame is used in products from Coca-Cola diet sodas to Mars' Extra chewing gum and some Snapple drinks. Will be listed in July as 'possibly carcinogenic to humans' for the first time.
Artificial sweetener in Diet Coke may cause cancer, report claims![img](/img/external-link.svg)
Aspartame is a white, odourless power, and is approximately 200 times sweeter than sugar. It's found in Coca-Cola diet sodas, Mars' Extra chewing gum and some Snapple drinks.
Popular Artificial Sweetener to Be Declared Possible Cancer Risk by Chinese-Backed World "Health" Organization - Will Impact Thousands of Products Including Diet Coke and Chewing Gum | The Gateway Pundit | by Cullen Linebarger | 165![img](/img/external-link.svg)
Aspartame is used as a sweetener in thousands of products globally such as Coca-Cola diet sodas, Mars’ Extra chewing gum, some Snapple drinks, Mentos, and ice cream. The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), the WHO’s cancer research arm, will list aspartame as “possibly carcinogenic to humans” for the first time in July. A separate WHO “expert” committee on food additives, known as JECFA (the Joint WHO and Food and Agriculture Organization’'s Expert Committee on Food Additives), has consistently claimed it is safe to consume.
Thomas Lee obituary![img](/img/external-link.svg)
In 1992, Thomas H Lee Partners, acquired Snapple for $135 million. Lee sold it to Quaker Oats two years later for $1.7 billion.
Billionaire financier Thomas H. Lee dies at age 78![img](/img/external-link.svg)
Thomas H. Lee died by suicide, New York City's Office of Chief Medical Examiner said. Lee, whose fortune was pegged at $2 billion by Forbes magazine, in 2006 founded Lee Equity. The financier may be best known for his purchase and sale of Snapple.
NYC billionaire financier Thomas H. Lee, 78, found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound![img](/img/external-link.svg)
Thomas H. Lee, 78, was found dead at his office in Manhattan on Thursday. Billionaire financier died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, it was reported. Lee had a net worth of roughly $2 billion at the time of his death. The businessman may be best known for the sale of Snapple for $1.7 billion in 1994.
Billionaire New York financier found dead in Manhattan office![img](/img/external-link.svg)
American financier Thomas Lee, a pioneer in private equity, has died at the age of 78. He pioneered the use of the leveraged buyout – when one company acquires another using large amounts of borrowed money. Became known for buying beverage firm Snapple in 1992 for $135m and selling it to Quaker Oats two years later for $1.7bn.
Billionaire Thomas H. Lee leaves legacy of philanthropy after suicide![img](/img/external-link.svg)
Thomas H. Lee, 78, died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound at his Manhattan office Thursday morning. Lee built his fortune pioneering the leveraged buyout industry and used a large portion of it to support various causes. In 1996, two years after his eponymous firm made headlines with its immensely lucrative $1.7 billion sale of Snapple to Quaker Oats, he donated $22 million to Harvard.
NYC billionaire financier Thomas H. Lee, 78, found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound![img](/img/external-link.svg)
Billionaire financier died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, it was reported. The death of Thomas H. Lee, 78, was confirmed by his family in a statement released today. Lee had a net worth of roughly $2 billion at the time of his death. The businessman may be best known for the sale of Snapple for $1.7 billion in 1994.
Thomas H. Lee, pioneer of leveraged buyouts, is dead at 78![img](/img/external-link.svg)
Thomas H. Lee pioneered the use of leveraged buyouts. One of his most famous buyouts was his purchase of Snapple for $135 million in 1992. Lee sold it to a competitor, Quaker Oats, in 1994 for $1.7 billion.
Billionaire New York financier found dead in Manhattan office![img](/img/external-link.svg)
American financier Thomas Lee, a pioneer in private equity, has died at the age of 78. He pioneered the use of the leveraged buyout – when one company acquires another using large amounts of borrowed money. Became known for buying beverage firm Snapple in 1992 and selling it to Quaker Oats two years later for $1.7bn.
Billionaire Private Equity Titan Thomas Lee Dead At 78![img](/img/external-link.svg)
Thomas H. Lee was a pioneering private equity executive known for taking over Snapple in 1992 and selling it just two years later at a massive return. Spokesperson and family-friend Michael Sitrick confirmed Lee’s death in a statement that didn’t list a cause of death.
Billionaire financier Thomas H. Lee dies at age 78![img](/img/external-link.svg)
Thomas H. Lee died by suicide, New York City's Office of Chief Medical Examiner says. Lee, whose fortune was pegged at $2 billion by Forbes magazine, in 2006 founded Lee Equity. The financier may be best known for his purchase and sale of drink maker Snapple.
Share tip: Get a taste for AG Barr and its special br![img](/img/external-link.svg)
If AG Barr’s drinks cabinet was stocked purely by its reputation, it would probably include just one brand: Scotland’s celebrated Irn-Bru. But while the Cumbernauld-based AG Barr still flogs a lot of the fizzy orange stuff — launched in 1901 and today making up about 40 per cent of revenues — it now has far more on its shelves.Acquisitions include 2006’s Strathmore water, Rubicon exotic fruit juices two years later, Funkin pre-mixed cocktails in 2015, Boost energy drinks earlier this month, and, just before Christmas, the part of Moma Foods (maker of vegan oat milk and porridge) that AG Barr did not already own.Together, these deals have diversified the group, which now spans soft drinks such as Tizer and Snapple, and the high-growth