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It’s a tale filled with corporate greed, union strikes and cream filling. But no matter how much it may appear that things have gone over an edge into a fiery pit below, there is one thing that we can rest of assured of: The American snack industry will always rise again.
See also: Was Hostess’ Death a Murder, Suicide or Natural Causes?
Last year Irving-based Hostess called it quits after years of messy, sometimes questionable, management. The dominoes began to fall last November when bakers in a plant in Kansas went on strike. Soon after, the last Twinkie rolled off the line.
The companies that rescued Twinkie, Apollo and Metropoulos, have kept the Hostess label name and plan to fire up the Twinkie assembly line soon; a plant in Kansas has already hired back some of the workers.
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WSJ.com reports that this new company will not use unionized labor but does plan to hire back the same workers, who are the only ones with the special skills to make Twinkie magic happen. The new Hostess will open “four bakeries in the next eight to 10 weeks, aiming to get Twinkie-deprived classic snack cake starting in July.”
Hopefully, that day will then forever be known as Twinkie Day.