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Background

On November 16th, 2012, the bakery company Hostess[1] announced that the company had filed a motion in United States Bankruptcy Court to obtain permission to cease business and sell off their assets. The news came amidst a worker's strike that had taken hold of approximately 6,600 employees in 24 of its 33 baking plants across the United States. A closure message was put up on their website[3], directing vistors to a new page[4] outlining the details of their liquidation. Online, fans of the brand reacted on social media and began selling the company's products on auction sites looking to make a profit.

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Financial History

Founded in 1930, the Interstate Bakeries Corporation launched and acquired dozens of other brands over several decades, including the 1995 acquisition of Taggart Bakeries, the original creator of Wonder Bread and Hostess snack cakes including Twinkies, Ding Dongs and Ho Hos. After recovering from its first bankruptcy that lasted over five years from 2004 to 2009, the company rebranded itself as Hostess Brands, Inc. However, just over two years later in January 2012, the company filed for a second Chapter 11 bankruptcy. After some executive changes, the company had to reevaluate their employees' wages and benefits, attempting to make large cuts in their employees' pay in order to save their pensions.[2] However, these talks did not go well and in November, approximately 6,600 employees who are members of the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers' International Union went on strike.

Notable Developments

On Twitter

As the news broke, Twitter users began tweeting in dismay, with 26,807 tweets mentioning Hostess between 9:15 AM EST and 10:15 AM EST on November 16th.[5] Tweets about Twinkies, one of the company's most well-known brands, peaked between 11:14 AM EST and 12:14 PM EST with 20,371 mentions.[6] Several internet culture blogs and news sites featured stories on the Twitter response to Hostess' shutdown including Mashable[7], The Times-Picayune[8], the Detroit Free Press[9] and the New York Times.[10] Politico[11] compiled a series of tweets from politicians and journalists, including one from Senator John McCain (shown below).


On Tumblr & Reddit

With the tags Hostess[17] and Twinkies[18], Tumblr users expressed their displeasure with the company's folding via image macros. Additionally, a single topic blog called RIP Twinkies[20] launched, sharing photos of the cream-filled sponge cake and its mascot, Twinkie the Kid. A handful of posters used content from the 2009 comedic horror film Zombieland[19], in which Woody Harrelson's character Tallahassee (shown below) spends most of the film searching for the last box of Twinkies left after a zombie apocalypse.

eBay Auctions

Buzzfeed[12] published a series of 31 Instagram images of either stock piles of Hostess goods or empty shelves in stores where they would normally be found. As some people began hoarding the snack cakes, others began selling them online via auction sites like eBay. As of 7:30 PM EST on November 16th, there were 3,044 results for "twinkies" on eBay[13], with the most expensive auction priced at $2,500,000.00. Despite many of the auctions beginning at $0.99, some price gougers sought to sell the products from anywhere from $5000[14] (shown below, left) to $200,000 (shown below, right).[15] However, a Hostess spokesperson stated that they plan on selling the brands[15], hoping they would continue to be produced by other companies.

Twinkies Return

On March 13th, 2013, CNN Money[21] reported that Twinkies would return to the United States market by summer after the snack food and other Hostess brands were purchased by the private equity firms Apollo Global Management and Metropoulos & Co. On June 13th, the site PrepareYourCakeFace was launched, featuring user-submitted Vine videos of people making faces expressing anticipation for the return of the Hostess products.


On July 15th, Twinkies officially returned to store shelves. The same day, USA Today[22] published an article reporting that the new Twinkies had 135 calories and weighed 38.5 grams, 3 grams and 15 fewer calories than the original. On the same day, PrepareYourCakeFace began forwarding to FeedYourCakeFace,[23] highlighting Vine and Instagram videos made by people who sampled the new Hostess snacks.

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