California, Lynsi Snyder and In-N-Out
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In-N-Out CEO Lynsi Snyder announced she will be moving to Tennessee and bashed California on a recent podcast appearance.
Southern Californians, we have not been betrayed. In-N-Out Burger is not moving its headquarters out of state, despite panic and outrage over comments by the chain’s owner Lynsi Snyder.
Lynsi Snyder, the billionaire owner and president of In-N-Out Burger, clarified that while she may be leaving California, the chain restaurant’s headquarters isn’t going anywhere.
Snyder emphasized her deep ties to California and the brand’s heritage, but cited cost-of-living challenges as a reason for offering employees new opportunities to raise families and buy homes in more affordable states like Tennessee.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — As California’s much-loved hamburger chain In-N-Out Burger expands across the country into Tennessee, billionaire owner and CEO Lynsi Snyder has announced she and her family are going with it and heading east, too.
LOS ANGELES (KGO) -- In-N-Out's president says she is moving out of California saying, "doing business is not easy here." Lynsi Snyder announced last week on the "Relatable" podcast, hosted by conservative commentator Allie Beth Stuckey, she is planning on taking her family to Tennessee.
In-N-Out CEO Lynsi Snyder has responded to online criticism following her controversial appearance on the “Relatable” podcast, where she discussed her decision to move to Tennessee. Here’s what she had to say.
In-N-Out previously refused to comply with California's vaccine card mandates during the pandemic, which led to temporary closures.
Despite the move, Snyder remains committed to In-N-Out's California heritage. She plans to fulfill her late father's vision by consolidating the company's Irvine and Baldwin Park offices at the latter location (the site of In-N-Out's first restaurant in 1948) within the next five years.