logo
Fuzzy's Taco Shop to Open First California Location in Barstow

Fuzzy's Taco Shop to Open First California Location in Barstow

Business Wire28-04-2025
BARSTOW, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Fuzzy's Taco Shop, the fast-casual+ restaurant brand known for serving up good vibes, is making its highly anticipated debut in California with a new location in Barstow, opening today, April 28, 2025. Located at 1523 East Main Street, Barstow, CA 92311, this marks the brand's first foray into the California market, bringing its signature tacos, memorable drinks, and laid-back vibe to the West Coast.
To celebrate the grand opening, Fuzzy's Taco Shop will give away Free Tacos for a Year* to the first 50 guests in line on opening day (April 28). Additionally, the first 50 guests will also receive a free Fuzzy's Taco Shop t-shirt.
Owned and operated by the Soleimani Group, an experienced multi-unit franchisee group with over 30 IHOP locations, the Barstow restaurant is ideally positioned on a high-traffic highway that serves as a gateway for travelers heading to Los Angeles, Las Vegas, the Grand Canyon, and beyond.
'Fuzzy's Taco Shop has built a passionate following across the country, and we're confident that Californians will embrace our bold flavors and great vibes,' said Patrick Kirk, President of Fuzzy's Taco Shop. 'As a key stop along Route 66, Barstow offers the perfect place to take a break on a road trip. It's a great first step to introduce our brand to the West Coast and marks a big milestone for Fuzzy's.'
Guests can look forward to Fuzzy's signature tacos, uniquely built with garlic aioli and feta cheese. The menu also includes a variety of delicious, fresh-made options like all-day breakfast favorites, bowls, nachos, and quesadillas. To complement the food, guests can enjoy refreshing frozen margaritas, ice-cold schooners of beer, and other craveable drinks.
'We are thrilled to introduce Fuzzy's Taco Shop to California,' said Sam Soleimani, President and CEO of Soleimani Group. 'Barstow is a dynamic market with a constant flow of travelers and a strong local community. We believe Fuzzy's fresh flavors and relaxed atmosphere will resonate here, and we look forward to growing the brand in this region.'
Guests can enjoy breakfast, lunch, and dinner seven days a week, with hours from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday-Thursday and 7 a.m. to midnight Friday-Saturday.
For more information and updates on the grand opening, visit www.fuzzystacoshop.com or follow Fuzzy's Taco Shop on social media.
Address: 1523 East Main Street, Barstow, CA 92311
Hours of Operations: 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday-Thursday and 7 a.m. to midnight Friday-Saturday.
*Winners will receive two (2) free tacos each week for 52 weeks. The two free tacos will be loaded to their Fuzzy's Taco Shop Rewards app at the beginning of each week and must be used that week or the offer will expire. All winners are required to have an active Rewards account to redeem their prizes. Entry in line constitutes acceptance of official rules. See restaurant for official rules.
About Fuzzy's Taco Shop
Founded in 2003 in Fort Worth, Texas, Fuzzy's Taco Shop® is a fast-casual plus restaurant known for fresh flavors and good vibes that take the bite out of life. Offering flavorful tacos, famous margaritas, and fun times, it's all fuzzy here. As of December 31, 2024, Fuzzy's operates 117 restaurants across 15 states, including one company-owned location in Texas. Fuzzy's Taco Shop is franchised by affiliates of Pasadena, Calif.-based Dine Brands Global, Inc. (NYSE: DIN). To find your local Fuzzy's Taco Shop, visit Fuzzystacoshop.com/locations. For franchising information, visit Franchise.fuzzystacoshop.com.
About Dine Brands Global, Inc.
Based in Pasadena, California, Dine Brands Global, Inc. (NYSE: DIN), through its subsidiaries and franchisees, supports and operates restaurants under the Applebee's Neighborhood Grill + Bar®, IHOP®, and Fuzzy's Taco Shop® brands. As of December 31, 2024, these three brands consisted of over 3,500 restaurants across 19 international markets. Dine Brands is one of the largest full-service restaurant companies in the world and in 2022 expanded into the Fast Casual segment. For more information on Dine Brands, visit the Company's website located at www.dinebrands.com.
BR-FUZZY
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AT&T, ordered to keep providing land-line service, takes fight to California legislature
AT&T, ordered to keep providing land-line service, takes fight to California legislature

Miami Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

AT&T, ordered to keep providing land-line service, takes fight to California legislature

Telecommunications giant AT&T, stymied last year by regulators in its bid to drop land-line service to California customers, is taking its battle to the state Legislature. And so far, the reception is much improved. Assembly Bill 470 would allow the company, which provides the vast majority of the state's landline service, to drop most of those customers, including nearly all of the hundreds of thousands in the Bay Area and millions around the state. It easily passed a floor vote in the Assembly in late June, and is now before the state Senate's appropriations committee. Berkeley hills resident Cynthia Larson, 63, an author who does not own a cell phone, is worried. "To me the landline is irreplaceable," she said. Even if Larson started using a cell phone, a fire or other natural disaster could disrupt internet and cell service, leaving her cut off from vital information. "Do I need to evacuate the house right now? Is the fire coming here right now? The landline is the standard for reliable communications. How many people is it OK to kill through this lunacy?" she asked. Because of its earlier monopoly status and state law requiring voice communications for all who want them, AT&T is for much of California the "carrier of last resort" or COLR - the utility required to provide phone service to anyone wanting it in its service area, unless another provider takes over the legal obligation. The bill aims to replace aging copper-wire landlines with phone service from cellular and cable providers. It would also force AT&T to significantly expand California fiber-based internet and phone service - with half the expansion in areas with poor internet and phone service - in exchange for breaking free of its obligations as a carrier of last resort under state law. "Right now we have 5% of Californians still using their copper lines," said Southern California Assembly Member Tina McKinnor, the bill's author. "Most of that is an older population. When we no longer have them with us, like my parents, we probably won't be 5%. We have to build up our infrastructure. There's no mandate making any other company build the fiber." Last year, the California Public Utilities Commission unanimously shot down a massively unpopular proposal by AT&T to scrap landline service for most of the Bay Area and much of California. Critics charged the pullback would have stripped many older people and rural residents of a communications lifeline in power outages and disasters such as fires and floods. Now, the utility, which reported $12.3 billion in profit last year, even though it says its carrier-of-last-resort status costs it $1 billion a year, is banking on AB 470. "It most definitely is an end run around the PUC," said Regina Costa, telecom policy director at The Utility Reform Network, a San Francisco-based consumer advocacy group opposed to the bill. AT&T's president for California Susan Santana pledged in a statement last week that "no customer will be left without access to voice or 911 service." If AB 470 passes, the company will work with state leaders and residents "on policies that create a thoughtful transition to bring more reliable, modern communications to all Californians," Santana said. AT&T would move away from landlines in a "phased, multi-year approach, and "current copper services will be maintained until new technologies are available that are equally or more reliable," the company said. AT&T has found support for AB 470 among business and community groups and public officials, including San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan. His office did not respond to questions about his support for the bill, listed in the most recent legislative analysis of the proposed law. The bill would let AT&T end landline coverage in areas deemed "well served" because they have three alternatives for basic voice phone service, including a provider of wire-based service such as cable, and a provider that offers the Lifeline discount service for low-income households. In most areas, two of the alternatives would likely be cell phone services. McKinnor, whose campaign for the 2026 election received a $5,500 donation from AT&T according to state records, introduced the bill in February. A spokesperson for McKinnor said campaign donations "have no impact on legislation that Assemblymember McKinnor either authors or takes a position on." McKinnor said the bill would "create the largest union-built private investment in advanced fiber optic networks in state history and will ensure that all California households will continue to be able to make affordable, reliable telephone calls and connect with emergency services when they need it." McKinnor noted that during fires, landline customers cannot receive evacuation notices via text message. A dozen Bay Area assembly members voted for the bill. South Bay Assembly Member Patrick Ahrens said the bill "contains protections ensuring that no one will go without access to telephone service and improves public safety by making significant investments in public infrastructure." Assembly Member Gail Pellerin, whose district includes forested areas of Santa Clara and Santa Cruz counties where many residents rely on landlines, declined to vote on the bill. Pellerin said in a statement she is focused on ensuring her constituents, "especially those in areas where internet service is not reliable, are not left without access to a landline should we remove COLR obligations." Pellerin said that at the time of the votes she "felt there was a discrepancy between the intent of the bill and the actual real-life applicability." If AB 470 passes, the California Public Utilities Commission would have to adopt a map designating well-served areas by Dec. 15, 2026. But TURN's Costa argues federal government maps to be used in creating the commission's map show areas where cable and wireless broadband are present, but millions of Californians there lack broadband and reliable cell service. Companies will not be required to provide service to every home, Costa said. A requirement for backup power for cellular or cable-based phone services applies only to fire-risk areas, despite California's history with floods and earthquakes, and loopholes mean many locations could still lose phone service during power outages, Costa said. Customers losing landlines could face higher costs from purveyors of alternative services, according to a report last month to the state Senate's committee on energy, utilities and communications. "Nothing limits these providers from raising their rates after a telephone corporation relinquishes its COLR duties," the report said. For customers in purportedly well-served areas who lose landlines and can't secure an alternative, the Public Utilities Commission would have to confirm the absence of options. "There is no way that people will understand what's going on," Costa said, "and there's no way that the commission has the resources to go out and verify throughout the entire state where there are verified alternative services." Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

Start the presses! New York Post will expand to LA with launch of The California Post
Start the presses! New York Post will expand to LA with launch of The California Post

New York Post

time7 hours ago

  • New York Post

Start the presses! New York Post will expand to LA with launch of The California Post

The New York Post is going Hollywood. The nation's most popular tabloid will launch The California Post early next year – delivering its brand of fearless, common-sense journalism and legendary headlines at a critical juncture for the Golden State. 'Los Angeles and California surely need a daily dose of The Post as an antidote to the jaundiced, jaded journalism that has sadly proliferated,' said Robert Thomson, CEO of The Post's parent company News Corp. Advertisement 'We are at a pivotal moment for the city and the state, and there is no doubt that The Post will play a crucial role in engaging and enlightening readers, who are starved of serious reporting and puckish wit.' The new publication will be headquartered in Los Angeles and feature a robust staff of editors, reporters and photographers dedicated to covering news, entertainment, politics, culture, sports and business – all with a distinctly California perspective. The California Post will tackle local and political issues as only it can, with this cover showcasing how the California Post would have covered motorcycle riots. Advertisement The California Post will be supported by the team in New York providing national and international news. The content will appear in both a daily print edition and will have its own dedicated homepage for Californians with stories being published across multiple other platforms, including video, audio and social media. Veteran journalist Nick Papps will take the reins as editor in chief, bringing nearly two decades of experience. He has helped drive editorial and commercial success at multiple publications, including as News Corp Australia's West Coast Correspondent for nearly three years when Papps was based in LA. The new venture from The New York Post Media Group – home to The Post, Page Six and Decider – will also expand the oversight of New York Post Editor in Chief Keith Poole. Advertisement 'He will now be responsible for covering not just New York, but California, the US, the world and perhaps, Mars,' Thomson quipped. Poole has made The Post, founded by Alexander Hamilton, a must-read not just in the Big Apple but across the country – and even in the halls of the White House, where President Trump keeps a framed copy of the newspaper's front page outside the Oval Office. The cover, or 'wood' in Post parlance, features Trump's infamous mugshot taken after he was booked into Georgia's Fulton County Jail in Georgia 2023. This mockup of a California Post cover brings to life how The Post is set to bring its bold style of sports coverage to the West Coast. 'This is the next manifestation of our national brand,' Poole said. 'California is the most populous state in the country, and is the epicenter of entertainment, the AI revolution and advanced manufacturing — not to mention a sports powerhouse. Yet many stories are not being told, and many viewpoints are not being represented.' Advertisement The launch is timed to coincide with a high profile period for the Bay Area and LA. Not only are there elections being held in 2026, including for California Governor, but the state will host matches during next year's World Cup, and LA will welcome the Summer Olympics in 2028. The Los Angeles area, recently ravaged by wildfires and facing critical rebuilding issues, has a population of 13 million. The Post will also tackle cultural issues, with this cover revealing how the California Post would have reported on the Sydney Sweeney controversy. It is home to the second largest concentration of Post readers, with 3.5 million monthly unique visitors to its web properties — and 7.3 million across the state. 'With The California Post, we will bring a common-sense, issue-based approach to metropolitan journalism,' Poole said. 'We'll tell the stories that our readers care about the most, but others overlook, and we'll do so with clarity and our trademark conviction.' The Post brand, influence and reach with The Post Digital Network, which includes and attracted 90 million unique visitors in June. About 90% of Post digital readers already live outside of the New York media market. 'Our content is read everywhere from the corner store to the corner office,' said Sean Giancola, CEO of New York Post Media Group. 'We are trusted by millions for our direct and plain-spoken approach to news, and The New York Post has been the voice of the people in New York for 200 years. California is a vibrant, dynamic market where our unique journalistic ethos will resonate and engage audiences in meaningful ways.'

Vegas tourism is down as California, international tourists make themselves scarce, data suggest
Vegas tourism is down as California, international tourists make themselves scarce, data suggest

Los Angeles Times

time12 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Vegas tourism is down as California, international tourists make themselves scarce, data suggest

Sin City is facing a summer swoon, and Californians — by far the largest tourist contingent, data show — are partially to blame. Visits to Las Vegas were down 11.3% in June 2025 versus a year earlier, according to data from the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority. Traffic on Interstate 15 at the California-Nevada border was down 4.3% over the same period, suggesting fewer visitors from the Golden State heading for Vegas casinos. The number of air travelers into Las Vegas overall declined 6.3% over the previous June. In 2024, Californians made up more than a fifth of air travelers into Vegas, with nearly half of those coming from the Los Angeles metro area. A demographic report from the visitors authority estimated that Southern California provided 30% of all visitors to Las Vegas in 2024. Add it all up, and Californians could be responsible for a significant portion of the decline in Vegas tourism. Tourism within the U.S. is only part of the picture, though, as experts previously predicted slumps in international tourism across the country. The convention and visitors authority estimates that 12% of the city's visitors are international. A report from the World Travel and Tourism Council projected that the U.S. would lose $12.5 billion in international travel spending in 2025. 'While other nations are rolling out the welcome mat, the U.S. government is putting up the 'closed' sign,' Julia Simpson, the council's president, said in a statement. The report cited air-travel booking data from March that showed a 15% to 20% drop in expected travel from major tourism sources including the United Kingdom, Germany and Canada. Visitors from Canada and Mexico made up more than half of international tourists to Las Vegas in 2024, according to data from the visitors authority. But President Trump's talk of making Canada the 51st state and his decision to hit Canada with tariffs have not endeared him to Canadian travelers. Meanwhile, media overseas have been bombarded with stories of capricious denials and detentions at U.S. border crossings. Las Vegas is not alone in its travel woes. In May, Gov. Gavin Newsom predicted a 'Trump Slump' in international travel to California brought on in part by the president's tariff regime. 'Las Vegas thrives on tourism,' Rep. Steven Horsford wrote last week on X, 'but under the Trump slump, the numbers are tanking.' Horsford, a Democrat represents Nevada's 4th Congressional District, which includes a portion of Las Vegas. By many metrics — including visitor totals, convention attendance and room occupancy rates — Las Vegas has yet to recover fully since the onset of the pandemic. In dollar terms, however, Sin City continues to profit even as visitor numbers drop: Clark County collected $1.16 billion in gambling revenue in June 2025, up 3.5% from a year earlier. In the end, the house always wins.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store