Looking for a way to end your relationship before Valentine's Day? Pizza Hut may be able to help.
The pizza chain has launched Goodbye Pies, a new Valentine’s Day offering that gives customers in three U.S. cities the chance to “ditch that awkward break-up convo and send a pizza instead.”
Starting Tuesday, the free Goodbye Pies will be sent in a custom box that leaves space for the person ending the relationship to sign their name. The pizza inside will be a new menu item, the “sweet yet spicy" Hot Honey pizza.
“With the launch of Goodbye Pies, we are bringing that perfect blend of sweet and heat experience to real life, delivering spicy news in the sweetest way for Valentine’s Day,” Lindsay Morgan, chief marketing officer at Pizza Hut, wrote in a news release.
The Goodbye Pies will only available at three Pizza Hut locations through Valentine's Day. And the supply will be quite limited.
Here’s how to get a chance to send a free Goodbye Pie to your future ex.
Goodbye Pies will be available through Feb. 14 in three cities that Pizza Hut has identified as “notorious for heartbreaks": New York, Chicago and Miami.
Here are the locations of the participating Pizza Hut locations:
A Pizza Hut spokesperson told USA TODAY on Monday that only 11 Goodbye Pies will be available at each location each day of the promotion.
For a chance to send a free Goodbye Pie, visit the Goodbye Pies website. Additional rules, limits and restrictions will be detailed on the website.
If you can't snag a free Goodbye Pie, you can try to use the website to get a break-up text drafted and a gift card sent to your future ex from Pizza Hut.
The gift card will give them the opportunity to redeem a free Hot Honey pizza. Only 55 gift cards will be made available per day at participating Pizza Hut locations nationwide.
2024-12-26 11:261363 view
2024-12-26 11:082540 view
2024-12-26 10:28857 view
2024-12-26 09:431268 view
2024-12-26 09:211473 view
2024-12-26 09:18205 view
California judges make a good living. They earn at least $240,000 and can count on a raise just abou
A court in South Africa on Thursday struck down a controversial permit for oil and gas exploration i
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday handed a victory to business interests in a labor dispute, but th