subway

Subway To Sell Personal Pan Pizza By June

Subway To Sell Personal Pan Pizza By June

An employee at a test store located in the East Village section of New York City said they only sold two pizzas the first day of the test in late March, but are now are up about 25 a day. The biggest problem: patrons don’t know about the product despite a prominent sign on the menu board, he said.

The pizzas will start at $2.99. Meat toppings such as pepperoni or sausage will cost an extra dollar. Veggies and cheese are free. According to Brandweek, “After you eat this you won’t go back to Pizza Hut,” the Subway employee in New York boasted. We haven’t been back to PIzza Hut since they stopped giving us free pizza for reading books. —MEGHANN MARCO

The Really Big Guide To Secret Menu Items

The Really Big Guide To Secret Menu Items

UPDATE: We’re looking to update this list. Click here to help! [More]

NYC RFID Subway Turnstiles Spread

NYC RFID Subway Turnstiles Spread

Subway Sub Fingerlickin’

It’s been too long since we reported on a severed human finger found in fast food. Such stories are just so exciting! Yes, invariably they are scams. But for a brief moment, your soul heaves in exhilaration, and you begin weaving wonderful fantasies about that poor, shriveling digit. Was it a back kitchen knife fight? Does the manager require Yakuza-like atonement from his wayward staff?

Funeral Directors Want Londoners To Kill Themselves

Funeral Directors Want Londoners To Kill Themselves

Subway Outnumbers Subways

Subway Outnumbers Subways

Sony to Customers: Kill Yourselves

Sony to Customers: Kill Yourselves

Sony might want to start rethinking their subversive ad strategy. First, they came under fire for paying street hooligans to spray paint their logos on private property. And now, in London, they are posting advertisements openly encouraging their customers to kill themselves.

Agency Sells Ads Inside Game Without Creator’s Permission

Agency Sells Ads Inside Game Without Creator’s Permission

Ars Technica reports on a fascinating Subway ad campaign that took place inside the popular online game Counter-Strike. Apparently the ads for a $2.49 sandwich were injected into the game world with a special bit of ‘mod’ software distributed by an ad agency to certain operators of the server computers on which games of Counter-Strike are hosted. The ad agency paid the server operators to run the mod to give ad impressions in game.