[Fox Business] Hidden Valley Ranch launches Cheez-It-flavored dressing, ‘Cheezy Ranch’

Ranch dressing is getting a cheesy twist.

Hidden Valley Ranch has announced its collaboration with Cheez-It to create the all-new Cheezy Ranch.

The company is calling the dressing the “cheeziest ranch yet,” according to a press release.

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The cheesy creation was inspired by ranch lovers who combined ranch dressing with Cheez-It crackers, according to Hidden Valley Ranch marketing director CC Ciafone.

“Ranch fans never cease to amaze us with their creative twists on Hidden Valley Ranch,” she wrote in a statement. “We couldn’t be more thrilled to make this dream collaboration a reality.”

The rollout of the new Cheez-It-inspired ranch comes before National Ranch Day on March 10 – but it’s not a party of one.

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Hidden Valley Ranch is unveiling six additional flavors this spring, including garlic ranch, Nashville hot, creamy jalapeño, spicy hot honey, Green Goddess and Parmesan ranch.

The company encouraged consumers to try the Cheez-It ranch with dippable foods, like French fries, soft pretzels or a plate of nachos.

“Hidden Valley Ranch and Cheez-It fans share the same obsession with our delicious food, so bringing them together made perfect sense,” Cara Tragseiler, senior brand director for Cheez-It, wrote in a statement. 

“For the first time ever, our fans can drizzle the cheezy deliciousness they know and love on just about anything,” the statement said. 

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“That’s why we’re so excited to partner with Hidden Valley Ranch to bring this craveable, cheezy combo to all kinds of snacks.”

Cheezy Ranch will be available for $5.99 at nationwide Walmart stores at the end of March and at Kroger stores in April.

FOX Business reached out to Kellogg and Hidden Valley for comment.

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[Fox Business] Apple escalates Epic Games feud by blocking Fortnite app in EU

Apple escalated its feud with Epic Games on Wednesday, blocking the Fortnite video-game maker from launching its own online marketplace on iPhones and iPads in Europe.

The two companies have been in a legal battle since 2020, when the gaming firm alleged that Apple’s practice of charging up to 30% commissions on in-app payments on its iPhone Operating System (iOS) devices violated U.S. antitrust rules.

The latest challenge from Epic comes as Apple struggles with concerns about tepid demand for its iPhones in China, and its stock has tumbled 12% so far this year, underperforming its big tech peers in the U.S. Its shares were largely unchanged on Wednesday.

Attempts by regulators and competitors such as Epic to pave the way for rival marketplaces on Apple’s devices are a major threat to the Silicon Valley heavyweight’s profits and control of its own ecosystem.

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European lawmakers are forcing Apple to allow those third-party marketplaces with a law called the Digital Markets Act (DMA) that takes effect this week.

Separately, Brussels antitrust regulators on Monday fined Apple 1.84 billion euros ($2 billion) for thwarting competition from music streaming rivals via restrictions on its App Store, Apple’s first ever penalty for breaching EU rules.

Epic was working to take advantage of the DMA, but Apple blocked those efforts on Wednesday, citing Epic’s past breaches of contract in the long-running legal dispute.

Apple terminated a new developer account that Epic had created in Sweden. Epic had created the account in an effort to put Fornite and other games back on iPhones in Europe by running its own game store on Apple’s devices. Apple must allow third-party stores on its devices, under the new European law.

The developer accounts are important because software creators cannot distribute apps to iPhones and iPads without one. Apple had previously terminated some of Epic’s developer accounts in 2020, after Epic purposely broke Apple’s in-app payment rules, using its violation of the rules and subsequent banishment from the App Store as the core of public relations and legal campaign against Apple.

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Apple said on Wednesday the court rulings have made clear that it has “sole discretion” to terminate any Epic Games developer account in light of its “egregious” breaches of the company’s developer agreements.

“In light of Epic’s past and ongoing behavior, Apple chose to exercise that right” to terminate Epic Games’ account, Apple said.

Epic alleged that by terminating its account, Apple was removing one of the largest potential competitors to the Apple App Store.

“This is a serious violation of the DMA and shows Apple has no intention of allowing true competition on iOS devices,” Epic Games said.

The European Commission, the executive body of the EU, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Apple in January proposed certain changes ahead of a March 7 deadline to comply with certain conditions of the DMA, a legislation meant to make it easier for European users to move between competing services.

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The company said it would allow alternative app stores on iPhones and an opt-out from using the in-app payments system, but set a “core technology fee” of 50 euro cents per user account per year for developers who sign up for the new regime.

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