Buffalo Wild Wings Go will offer free wings for a year when it opens next week The restaurant will offer free wings for a year to the first 100 people in line Wednesday at its new Mayfair location at 6410 Frankford Ave. The doors open at 11 a.m., at which point B-Dubs will ... 04/26/2024 - 7:35 am | View Link
Buffalo Wild Wings Blames Downtown Closure on ‘Crime and Drug Use,’ but the City Says It Hasn’t Paid Rent in Months Owners Megan Walhood and Jeremy Daniels will focus on Viking Soul Food’s Southeast Woodstock Boulevard restaurant, which opened in 2022. In March, Walhood and Daniels announced that they would sell ... 04/25/2024 - 5:44 am | View Link
Buffalo Wild Wings' new location in Grapevine has 80 televisions Buffalo Wild Wings opened its doors to a new location in Grapevine that features 80 televisions and 30 beers on tap, according to a news release. The chain sports bar serves chick ... 04/17/2024 - 2:51 am | View Link
Grand Opening Set For Buffalo Wild Wings GO In Manahawkin The first 75 guests in line at the latest entry in the Manahawkin chicken wars will win free wings for a year. 04/15/2024 - 8:28 am | View Link
'Another chain restaurant that is straight up taking advantage of us.' A woman picked up a serving of chicken wings from Buffalo Wild Wings and a local restaurant. The size difference will astound you. 04/14/2024 - 4:00 pm | View Link
"Human beings had a play-based childhood from time immemorial," says author Jonathan Haidt. What caused teen mental health decline is "between 2010 and 2015, phones, screens come sweeping in The most important thing that parents can do is delay the age at which their child gets immersed in internet culture."
Fareed hosts a spirited debate on the House bill that could lead to a US ban on TikTok, with the American Enterprise Institute's Kori Schake and Glen Gerstell, former general counsel for the National Security Agency. They discuss national-security risks the Chinese-owned app might pose given its many American users.
A new government report warns that advanced Artificial Intelligence systems could pose an "extinction-level threat" to humans, and that the US must intervene. "I think we should be mindful of it," says Ret. Admiral James Stavridis. But he adds, "there have been big inventions in the past - the printing press, electricity, the internet - all of these have been a decried for the possibility of nefarious activity."