Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Obamacare Nears Major Goal With One Month To Go

More than 9.5 million people have signed up for private health insurance coverage this year using the Obamacare exchanges, the Department of Health and Human Services disclosed Tuesday, putting the program within striking distance of meeting its enrollment targets.

The deadline to choose a health insurance plan on the Affordable Care Act's exchange marketplaces like HealthCare.gov and Covered California is Feb. 15. Federal officials projected at least 10.3 million would be enrolled by that date, and that at least 9 million would have this form of health coverage by the end of the year. The new figures do not reflect how many enrollees have paid for their insurance, which is the final step to securing coverage.

With the technical failings of HealthCare.gov and several state-run health insurance exchange websites behind them, the marketplaces mostly are managing this year's sign-up period smoothly. The Department of Health and Human Services estimates that 42 percent of enrollees through mid-January -- 3 million people -- are new to the exchanges, while most others are renewing coverage. Enrollment for 2015 insurance plans began Nov. 15.

"We still have a lot of work to do before Feb. 15, but are encouraged by the strong interest we've seen so far," Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell said in a press release.

The federal government is handling enrollment in 37 states, while 13 states and the District of Columbia operate their own health insurance exchanges. More than 7.1 million of the sign-ups came from those federal exchanges, while more than 2.3 million were via state-run marketplaces. The vast majority of those signing up are eligible for financial assistance: 87 percent on the federal exchanges and 70 percent in the nine state exchanges that provided this information to the Department of Health and Human Services.

The enrollment figures from state-based health insurance exchanges undercount the total number of sign-ups. Hawaii, Maryland and Massachusetts did not report how many customers automatically re-enrolled into the policies they had in 2014. Idaho launched its own exchange for 2015, and also is not reporting what share of its residents who used a federally run exchange last time are signing up again.

The Congressional Budget Office projects greater enrollment in health insurance from the exchanges this year than the Department of Health and Human Services. According to a report issued Monday, the CBO expects an average of 12 million people to have this form of coverage over the course of 2015. The same report also estimates the Affordable Care Act will cost taxpayers about 20 percent less than projected in 2010, partly because of enrollment totals and health insurance premiums that are lower than expected.


Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Cadbury's Chocolate Will No Longer Be Imported From The U.K. And Everyone Is Depressed

Craving a Toffee Crisp? That just got a lot harder if you live in the U.S.

In settling a lawsuit with The Hershey Company, Let's Buy British Imports (LBB) -- the company responsible for sending U.K.-made Cadbury chocolate overseas -- has agreed to halt shipments to the U.S.

Hershey owns the rights to make and sell any chocolate products with the Cadbury name in the U.S., and will still do so in many cases. Cadbury eggs will still be around, for example -- but now they'll taste slightly different because British-made Cadbury chocolate is produced under a different recipe (the first ingredient in U.K. Cadbury chocolate is milk, while the first in American-made Cadbury chocolate is sugar, according to the New York Times). LBB is also halting their imports of British-made Kit Kats, but the American-made version will still be around.

Sadly, some classic British Cadbury favorites won't be made available at all, because Hershey says they're too easily confused with the company's established U.S. products. CNN reports Cadbury's Toffee Crisps are on the outs because their packaging too closely resembles that of Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, and Yorkie chocolate bars apparently sound a little too much like York Peppermint Patties.

Hershey's spokesman Jeff Beckman told The Huffington Post that the agreement was necessary, saying, "It is important for Hershey to protect its trademark rights and to prevent consumers from being confused or misled when they see a product name or product package that is confusingly similar to a Hershey name or trade dress... Given the immeasurable value of our brands, we work hard to protect these important intellectual assets and defend them against infringement."

Lovers of British-made Cadbury products are none too pleased with this new development, taking to Twitter to express their dismay:

Because the deal was struck between The Hershey Company and LBB, Cadbury declined to comment.

H/T CNN


Monday, January 26, 2015

This Is The Ultimate Routine For A Perfect Work Day

You might think the perfect workday includes a promotion or a raise, or perhaps your evil boss getting fired. Sadly, such monumental events don't happen very often.

The good news is that there are plenty of little things you can do to improve both your productivity and your happiness if you feel stuck at your desk all day.

One simple trick is to structure your time better -- which includes taking more breaks. In fact, the highest performers work for 52 minutes consecutively before taking a 17-minute break, according to a recent experiment conducted by the productivity app DeskTime.

Other helpful habits are even easier to pick up: Just going outside or taking a few minutes to watch the latest cute cat video can help make you a better worker.

Sure, you might realistically not have enough time to incorporate all these suggestions in your daily routine, but every little bit helps. That's why we've pulled together research and anecdotal evidence from a variety of sources to build the perfect workday.

Check out HuffPost's perfect workday below:


See tips on how to set up your workspace here:

Plants

How to pick the perfect plant for your office >>

What the perfect office looks like >>

Office Set-Up

Desk

How to set up your desk >>


Infographic by Alissa Scheller for The Huffington Post.


Sunday, January 25, 2015

SkyMall Is Dead. Internet Lists Of Its Crazy Tchochtkes Will Live Forever.

SkyMall, a company known mainly for trying to sell you things no one needs while you sat on an airplane, filed for bankruptcy on Thursday.

The company didn't sell much from the catalog in recent years. Instead it sold a good chunk of its products online. But it still relied on people looking at the catalog on the plane to drum up interest in its website. And, with in-flight wifi, that was happening less and less.

SkyMall built a business on boredom, and people are less bored on planes than they used to be.

The Internet was instantly nostalgic about the imminent disappearance of the SkyMall catalog and responded by listing things you could have bought from SkyMall -- but hopefully never did.

All of these lists published Friday morning.

1. 11 Of The Most Ridiculous Items Sold By SkyMall (Business Insider)

2. We found the most insane item on SkyMall (Fusion)

3. 28 Essential Things You’ll Never Be Able To Buy From SkyMall Again (BuzzFeed)

4. In memoriam of SkyMall products: A lost national treasure (Mashable)

5. 18 Fantastic Products from SkyMall, America's Final Great Bastion of Innovation (Yahoo)

6. 5 things journalists actually could have used from SkyMall (Poynter)

7. As SkyMall files for bankruptcy, the Internet memorializes its crazy products (Daily Dot)

8. Here Are 12 of SkyMall’s Weirdest Products (Time)

9. THE BEST (=WORST) OF SKYMALL (Thrillist)

10. Our 6 Favorite Health and Beauty Products From SkyMall (Health)

11. 22 ICONIC SkyMall Products to Buy Before It's Too Late (Cosmopolitan)

And of course, The Huffington Post has been doing this for years, here, here, and here.

Last year Wired went out a limb and predicted what SkyMall will look like in the year 2040.

Now we'll never know if they were right.


Saturday, January 24, 2015

Obamacare Is Close To Achieving Goal Of 9.1 Million Signups

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration is moving closer to its goal of 9.1 million people signed up for private coverage under the president's health care law.

The Health and Human Services Department says at least 400,000 people signed up last week. That brought total enrollment in the 37 states served by HealthCare.gov to more than 7.1 million.

National figures should be significantly higher because the federal count doesn't include major states such as California and New York that are running their own markets.

Florida leads the federal marketplace states, with more than 1.2 million people enrolled. Texas has nearly 920,000.

The administration is expecting a surge near the Feb. 15 sign-up deadline.

The law offers subsidized private coverage to people who don't have health insurance on the job.


Friday, January 23, 2015

Workers Sue McDonald's For Discrimination, Opening New Front In Franchise Fight

A group of former McDonald's workers from Virginia are suing their stores for racial discrimination and sexual harassment -- and they're taking the rare step of naming the world's foremost fast-food company as a defendant in the suit.

The 10 plaintiffs -- nine of whom are African-American, and one of whom is Hispanic -- say they were wrongfully fired last year and replaced with mostly white workers because their managers believed there had been "too many black people [working] in the store." The lawsuit (viewable here) alleges that women were harassed and groped and that minorities were subjected to racist taunts. It also claims that managers referred to one restaurant as "the ghetto store."

Although it's usually just franchisees that are sued under discrimination claims, in this case the plaintiffs are arguing that McDonald's itself should be held responsible for the actions inside a franchised store. They say the fast-food giant should have to pay damages because it sets companywide policies and has the power to enforce them.

"In order to maximize its profit, McDonald's Corporate has control over nearly every aspect of its restaurants' operations," the lawsuit asserts. "Though nominally independent, franchised McDonald's restaurants are predominantly controlled by McDonald's."

The plaintiffs in the suit have received legal assistance from the NAACP and the group Fight for $15, which advocates on behalf of fast-food workers. According to the suit, the plaintiffs had a combined 50 years working at McDonald's restaurants, 25 of them accrued by a 53-year-old shift manager who lost her job in July. The rest of the workers lost their jobs in a mass termination in May.

As the South Boston (Virginia) News & Record reported at the time, a total of 17 workers were abruptly fired from three McDonald's restaurants in the area. All three locations were run by Michael Simon, owner of Soweva, the company that franchised the stores. At the time, workers told the paper they were informed they "didn't fit the profile" that the company was looking for in its restaurants.

"Most, though not all, of the terminated employees are African-American," the paper noted. "Most of the workers who remain on the job at the local McDonald’s also are black. So, too, is [Soweva owner] Simon."

In the lawsuit, the plaintiffs say that their white supervisors wanted to drop black workers from the payrolls because the stores were "too dark," in a phrase attributed to one manager.

"I had no idea what they meant by the right profile until I saw everyone else that they fired as well," Willie Betts, one of the plaintiffs, said in a statement Thursday. "They took away the only source of income I have to support my family."

Simon did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In a statement at the time of the firings, Simon denied that race was a factor, saying his company "has a strict policy of prohibiting any form of discrimination or harassment in hiring, termination or any other aspect of employment."

In the lawsuit, the workers allege that when they brought their concerns to McDonald's corporate, the company "took no actions to remedy" the firings. The workers are now seeking damages from the chain under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits employment discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion or sex.

"We asked McDonald’s corporate to help us get our jobs back, but the company told us to take our concerns to the franchisee -- the same franchisee that just fired us," Pamela Marable, another plaintiff, said in a statement this week.

“We have not seen the lawsuit, and cannot comment on its allegations, but will review the matter carefully," McDonald's said in a statement Thursday.

"McDonald’s has a long-standing history of embracing the diversity of employees, independent Franchisees, customers and suppliers, and discrimination is completely inconsistent with our values," the company's statement continued. "McDonald’s and our independent owner-operators share a commitment to the well-being and fair treatment of all people who work in McDonald’s restaurants.”

The lawsuit in Virginia is just the latest salvo in a broader fight against the franchise model. McDonald's franchises roughly 90 percent of its stores, leaving the day-to-day operations to individual franchisees like Soweva. Since the franchisees run the stores, they're the ones that tend to get sued when labor law is broken. That's a major upside of the franchise model for companies like McDonald's.

But unions and worker groups have been arguing in court and before agencies like the National Labor Relations Board that big chains such as McDonald's should be held accountable for the working conditions inside the stores that bear their names.

Until now, that generally hasn't been the case. But that could be changing on some fronts. The NLRB's general counsel, for instance, has named McDonald's as a "joint employer" alongside several of its franchisees accused of violating labor law during the fast-food strikes. If the agency were to view the workers as employed under one big umbrella -- rather than by hundreds or thousands of individual franchisees -- it would be much easier for the workers to unionize en masse. As it is, the fact that McDonald's workers are technically employed by different franchisees means they would have to be unionized store by individual store.

Several lawsuits currently seek to hold McDonald's responsible for wage theft allegedly committed by its franchisees. As with the discrimination complaint in Virginia, the plaintiffs in those suits argue that McDonald's ultimately exerts control over the operations inside individual stores, and that it should be held accountable when the law is broken.


Thursday, January 22, 2015

The Sad State Of America's Middle Class, In 6 Charts

In his State of the Union address Tuesday night, President Barack Obama is expected to propose throwing a lifeline to America's middle class. It could really use one.

His ideas -- including tax increases for the wealthy and tax cuts for the middle class -- might or might not be the right ones. The Republicans that run Congress likely won't be amenable to many of them. But there should be little doubt that the middle class is in serious trouble. Here are six charts that prove it.

1. and 2. Middle-Class Wages Are Stagnant

A lot has been written about how wage growth has been in a funk since the Great Recession. But this is mainly a problem for the non-affluent classes, and it's been going on for a lot longer than just the past six years. Here's a chart from a recent study by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), a think tank focused on labor issues:

The only boost middle- and low-income families have gotten since 1979 came during the tech boom of the 1990s. It's been a Sea of Suck otherwise. For the richest Americans, wages have done nothing but climb.

Here's another EPI chart that slices income growth even thinner and adjusts it for inflation:

See that sad light blue line at the bottom of the stack? That is middle-class wage growth, lagging every other class.

3. Inequality Is Basically Robbing The Middle Class

More income going to the wealthy could mean less going to the not-wealthy, along the lines of what French economist Thomas Piketty has warned -- in his view, wealth tends to grow more quickly than wages, vacuuming up an ever-greater share of the world's total income. The EPI recently estimated that inequality is robbing the middle class of roughly $18,000 in annual income:

4. Middle-Class Costs Are Soaring

Meanwhile, costs that affect the middle class the most are outpacing paltry wage gains -- particularly child care and education, two things the middle class really needs to help it avoid slipping further behind. Here's a chart from a recent Brookings Institution study:

5. and 6. Middle-Class Wealth Has Disappeared

The middle-class share of the U.S. wealth pie roughly doubled between the Great Depression and the early 1980s. But since then, the middle-class share has shrunk back to its lowest level since 1947, according to a study last October by Emmanuel Saez of the University of California, Berkeley, and Gabriel Zucman of the London School of Economics. Here's a chart from a blog post they wrote about the study:

You might quibble with this chart, pointing out that the "bottom 90 percent" is not quite the same as the "middle class." One response is that most of the wealth held by the bottom 90 percent has typically been held by the middle class.

But to help bolster the case, here's a shorter-term chart, from a June 2014 study by Fabian Pfeffer, Sheldon Danziger and Robert Schoeni of the Russell Sage Foundation, with income groups sliced more narrowly, to help make the case:

Median wealth -- a proxy for the wealth of the middle class -- has fallen 20 percent since 1984.


Wednesday, January 21, 2015

SpaceX Gets $1 Billion From Google And Fidelity

HAWTHORNE, Calif. (AP) — SpaceX has raised $1 billion from Google and Fidelity in a deal that values the spaceship manufacturer at about $10 billion.

The infusion announced Tuesday will give Google Inc. and Fidelity Investments a nearly 10 percent stake in SpaceX, a Hawthorne, California, company that employs more than 3,000 people.

Although privately held SpaceX didn't reveal any concrete plans, the money could help founder Elon Musk realize his hopes to fly people to Mars within the next 12 years and eventually build a city on the planet.

Musk, 43, also has publicly talked about using satellites to provide Internet access to remote parts of the Earth, a mission that Google also has embraced in a separate project that relies on high-altitude balloons. As the owner of the largest Internet search engine and digital ad network, Google stands to make more money if more people can get online.

"Space-based applications, like imaging satellites, can help people more easily access important information, so we're excited to support SpaceX's growth as it develops new launch technologies," Google said in a statement.

Donald Harrison, who oversees Google's corporate development team, will be joining SpaceX's board of directors as part of the company's investment.

SpaceX, which stands for Space Exploration Technologies, has previously raised money from the Founders Fund, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Valor Equity Partners and Capricorn since its 2002 inception. The Founders Fund was started by Peter Thiel, who teamed up with Musk in the late 1990s to create the online payment service PayPal.

Musk also is CEO of electric car maker Tesla Motors and has made headlines for his vision of a high-speed transportation system that would shoot passengers through elevated tubes from San Francisco to Los Angeles.

SpaceX's spacecraft has been used to deliver goods to the International Space Station.


Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Wet Seal Is Bankrupt

NEW YORK (AP) — The Wet Seal Inc. has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in an effort to keep its remaining teen clothing stores open.

The announcement Friday comes a little over a week after the chain said that it was closing 338 stores, or about two-thirds of its total.

Fellow teen clothing retailers Delia's Inc. and Deb Stores filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in December, further evidence of trouble in a business being hurt by tough competition and changing tastes among teenagers.

Wet Seal had warned last month that it might need to file for bankruptcy protection if it did not resolve its cash issues after reporting another quarter of losses.

Wet Seal and other chains are being hurt by stores like H&M and Forever 21 that are wooing young people with fast-changing selections of low-priced fashion. Teens are also more interested in outfitting themselves with the latest tech gadgets than new jeans.

The retailer began in 1962 as a bikini shack in Newport Beach, California. It was acquired by Canadian retailer Suzy Shier in 1984. The company, which today sells clothing, shoes and accessories aimed at teenage girls, went public in 1990.

Wet Seal expanded with additions such as Contempo Casuals, Arden B. and Zutopia. Wet Seal acquired Contempo in 1995, adding 200 Contempo Casuals stores. All of those stores were converted to the Wet Seal name by 2001.

Wet Seal has dealt with a long-running series of problems. The company restructured in 2013, closing stores, cutting jobs and changing management.

The executive shuffle included hiring retail-industry veteran John Goodman in January 2013 to help refocus the company after it fired former CEO Susan McGalla in July 2012 amid falling sales. Goodman resigned in September 2014, and Wet Seal brought back Ed Thomas, a former president and CEO, to lead the company.

In addition, Wet Seal dealt with a proxy battle in 2012 with an investment group that wasn't happy with its financial performance. And in 2013 the retailer agreed to pay $7.5 million to settle a federal racial discrimination lawsuit filed by three former employees.

Last year, year Wet Seal decided to shut down its Arden B chain, closing some stores and converting some to the Wet Seal name.

"Wet Seal failed for two reasons: a company that failed to stay in tune with their customers and new rivals like H&M that were able to get cooler merchandise to the stores quicker and with slightly better quality than Wet Seal," Brian Sozzi, CEO and chief equities strategist at Belus Capital Advisors, said.

Bigger retailers like J.C. Penney Co. and Kohl's Corp. also "upped their games" in teen girls clothing, Sozzi said.

Wet Seal hopes to keep operating during bankruptcy. The Foothill Ranch, California-based company was running 173 stores in 42 states and Puerto Rico as of Thursday.

The retailer said that it has arranged a $20 million term loan facility through B. Riley Financial Inc. to help it keep paying its vendors and landlords. That funding still needs to be approved by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.

The agreement would make B. Riley the majority stockholder of Wet Seal once the retailer exits bankruptcy.

Wet Seal estimates its assets to be between $10 million and $50 million, according to its bankruptcy filing. Liabilities are estimated between $100 million and $500 million. The company's largest creditor is Hudson Bay Master Fund Ltd. Other big creditors are primarily its shopping-mall landlords.

Shares of the company tumbled about 3 cents, or 40 percent, to 5 cents in Friday afternoon trading. Companies' common stock often becomes worthless in a bankruptcy reorganization.


Monday, January 19, 2015

Obama's Free College Plan Is A Great Way To Give America A Raise

Putting Obama's free community college plan into action could cost $60 billion over the next decade. But the economic boost it provides could be even greater.

If enacted, the proposal will offer two tuition-free years of community college to students who maintain a C+ grade-point average and attend classes at least half-time. The federal government would cover 75 percent of the cost, with participating states covering the rest.

Studies find that community college investments pay themselves back to the government many times over and vastly raise students' earning potential. Nationwide, community colleges are already a major part of the U.S. economy, contributing an estimated $809 billion in 2012, according to a study by the Economic Modeling Specialists Intl. On the local level, community colleges mean better jobs, higher wages and more spending power for graduates, as well as a larger skilled workforce for local employers.

"Rising levels of education yield a more skilled workforce, which is a crucial driver of economic growth," Shai Reshef, founder and president of University of the People, a nonprofit online university, said in a recent interview with The Washington Post. "I think Obama’s proposal is an effort to revive education as one of the drivers of economic growth, and this is a good thing."

California, home to the largest community college system in the country, exemplifies the kinds of economic gains Obama's plan could bring.

A recent analysis found that a 2 percent increase in people with an associate’s degree and a 1 percent increase in people with a bachelor’s degree would result in $20 billion in additional economic input, $1.2 billion in additional state and local tax revenues every year and 174,000 new jobs.

For every dollar spent on economic and workforce development programs at community colleges, there is a $12 increase in California’s business income and employee wages, according to the Foundation for California Community Colleges. Furthermore, the state receives a $4.5 net return for every dollar it invests to get students through college.

Community colleges have come to serve as an affordable stepping stone for California students who go on to pursue bachelor’s degrees. More than half of California State University graduates started at community colleges, as did nearly a third of University of California graduates. The state’s community colleges are major training centers for some of the most in-demand careers. Over 70 percent of the state’s nurses graduated from the system. It also provides credentials to 80 percent of the state’s firefighters, law enforcement officers and EMTs.

Though the state's community colleges are the cheapest in the nation, severe budget cuts limited access to these opportunities and brought enrollment to an all-time low in 2013. Meanwhile, students have flocked to for-profit colleges, which offer less competition to get into courses and ply students with false promises about their graduates’ success rates. Nationally, the rate of default on student loans is higher at for-profit colleges than it is at public and private nonprofit institutions. The free community college plan could funnel students away from predatory institutions.

Maxwell Strachan contributed to this report.


Sunday, January 18, 2015

10 Most Hated Companies In America

This story was originally published by 24/7 Wall St.

To be truly hated, a company must alienate a large number of people. It may irritate consumers with bad customer service, upset employees by paying low wages, and disappoint Wall Street with underwhelming returns. For a small number of companies, such failures are intertwined. These companies managed to antagonize more than just one group and have become widely disliked.

The most hated companies have millions of customers. With such a large customer base, it is critical to keep employees happy in order to promote high-quality customer service. Poor job satisfaction among employees can lead to unsatisfied customers. McDonald’s and Walmart have risked alienating workers, and therefore also customers, by not adequately addressing protests against their employees’ low wages. While pay may be low enough to put some workers below the poverty line, executives at these companies often make millions. The total compensation of McDonald’s CEO Donald Thompson, for example, was nearly $9.5 million in 2013 and nearly $13.8 million in 2012.

Layoffs, or even the prospect of layoffs, can also contribute to low employee morale. Sprint announced it would cut 2,000 jobs late last year. Workers at Comcast can reasonably expect layoffs should its planned merger with Time Warner Cable receives government approval.

Many of the most hated companies angered the public because of quality issues with their products.. Comcast has long been one of the worst companies in America in terms of customer service and satisfaction. Another example is the General Motors recall scandal. GM announced a recall in early 2014 due to faulty ignition switches in a number of its cars, now believed to have cost 42 people their lives. The company’s problems were compounded by the realization that it had known about the defect for over a decade.

Nothing harms the long-term reputation of a company in the eyes of investors more than a steep drop in its share price. In the past 12 months, shares of Sprint have fallen by more than 50%, as hopes for a tie-up with rival T-Mobile were dashed while the company had little success in retaining customers.

It is worth noting that some of the companies on the list may have performed very poorly by some measures but relatively well by others. A few of the most hated companies have had good stock performances. Others have relatively satisfied customers. All of these factors were taken into account in compiling the final list.

Click here to see America’s most hated companies

Several companies from last year list have improved their public perceptions enough to be removed from this year’s list. For example, J.C. Penney is in the midst of a modest turnaround. Abercrombie & Fitch’s controversial long-time CEO Michael Jeffries resigned last December. However, the retailer still has problems attracting teenage customers.

To identify the most hated companies in America, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed a variety of metrics on customer service, employee satisfaction, and share price performance. We considered consumer surveys from a number of sources, including the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) and Zogby Analytics. We also included employee satisfaction based on worker opinion scores recorded by Glassdoor.com. Finally, we reviewed management decisions and company policies that hurt a company’s public perception.

These are America’s most hated companies.


Saturday, January 17, 2015

Here Is The Most Disproportionately Popular Cuisine In Each State

When most people think American cuisine, they think pizza, hot dogs and hamburgers.

While these are indeed staples across the country, every state has its own sense of flavor. Now, thanks to a collaboration between The Huffington Post and Yelp, we can see exactly what types of cuisine are most likely to appear in each state.

You may not be surprised to learn that Maine is crazy about seafood. But would you have guessed that Utah has a hankering for Hawaiian?

Yelp figured out which cuisines were most common in each state by examining restaurant listings on its site. The review service uses information pulled by third-party data providers from public records and other sources in order to create its online restaurant listings, according to its website.

To get the data for the map, Yelp first calculated the percentage of total restaurants each cuisine represented in a given state. Then, it compared each percentage with the cuisine's representation in restaurants nationwide. The resulting map, made by HuffPost, shows the cuisines with a disproportionate level of representation in each state.

Restaurants on Yelp can be placed into as many as three categories, so some restaurants may have been counted more than once. For instance, a Kosher vegetarian Chinese restaurant would count as three cuisines.

Check out the map below by HuffPost's Alissa Scheller, using data provided by Yelp, to find out which cuisines are most popular in each state. Below the map is a list of the top five cuisines in each state:

Alabama
  1. Southern -- 256 percent higher than national average.
  2. BBQ -- 145 percent higher than national average.
  3. Cajun -- 96 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 89 percent higher than national average.
  5. Soul food -- 87 percent higher than national average.
Alaska
  1. Filipino -- 208 percent higher than national average.
  2. Fish and chips -- 200 percent higher than national average.
  3. Thai -- 158 percent higher than national average.
  4. Seafood -- 158 percent higher than national average.
  5. Hawaiian -- 90 percent higher than national average.
Arizona
  1. Mexican -- 73 percent higher than national average.
  2. Greek -- 63 percent higher than national average.
  3. Gluten-free -- 57 percent higher than national average.
  4. Buffets -- 54 percent higher than national average.
  5. Mediterranean -- 40 percent higher than national average.
Arkansas
  1. Southern -- 142 percent higher than national average.
  2. BBQ -- 91 percent higher than national average.
  3. Tex-Mex -- 64 percent higher than national average.
  4. Cajun -- 64 percent higher than national average.
  5. Steak -- 53 percent higher than national average.
California
  1. Taiwanese -- 264 percent higher than national average.
  2. Filipino -- 226 percent higher than national average.
  3. Vietnamese -- 143 percent higher than national average.
  4. Korean -- 143 percent higher than national average.
  5. Hawaiian -- 125 percent higher than national average.
Colorado
  1. Gluten-free -- 149 percent higher than national average.
  2. Vietnamese -- 65 percent higher than national average.
  3. Mexican -- 55 percent higher than national average.
  4. Soup -- 40 percent higher than national average.
  5. Breakfast/brunch -- 36 percent higher than national average.
Connecticut
  1. Spanish -- 168 percent higher than national average.
  2. Deli -- 95 percent higher than national average.
  3. Italian -- 89 percent higher than national average.
  4. Irish -- 69 percent higher than national average.
  5. Caribbean -- 56 percent higher than national average.
Delaware
  1. Irish -- 166 percent higher than national average.
  2. Cheesesteaks -- 123 percent higher than national average.
  3. Caribbean -- 122 percent higher than national average.
  4. Seafood -- 101 percent higher than national average.
  5. Gastropub -- 87 percent higher than national average.
District of Columbia
  1. Belgian -- 1,711 percent higher than national average.
  2. Ethiopian -- 1,560 percent higher than national average.
  3. African -- 555 percent higher than national average.
  4. Food stands -- 332 percent higher than national average.
  5. French -- 250 percent higher than national average.
Florida
  1. Cuban -- 757 percent higher than national average.
  2. Caribbean -- 286 percent higher than national average.
  3. Peruvian -- 264 percent higher than national average.
  4. Latin -- 217 percent higher than national average.
  5. Spanish -- 159 percent higher than national average.
Georgia
  1. Southern -- 304 percent higher than national average.
  2. Soul food -- 155 percent higher than national average.
  3. Caribbean -- 113 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 103 percent higher than national average.
  5. BBQ -- 57 percent higher than national average.
Hawaii
  1. Hawaiian -- 5028 percent higher than national average.
  2. Ramen -- 1443 percent higher than national average.
  3. Filipino -- 809 percent higher than national average.
  4. Korean -- 465 percent higher than national average.
  5. Food stands -- 380 percent higher than national average.
Idaho
  1. Gastropubs -- 52 percent higher than national average.
  2. Cafes -- 31 percent higher than national average.
  3. Mexican -- 26 percent higher than national average.
  4. Steak -- 25 percent higher than national average.
  5. Traditional American -- 25 percent higher than national average.
Illinois
  1. Pakistani -- 80 percent higher than national average.
  2. Hot dogs -- 76 percent higher than national average.
  3. Middle Eastern -- 34 percent higher than national average.
  4. Greek -- 25 percent higher than national average.
  5. Indian-Pakistani -- 23 percent higher than national average.
Indiana
  1. Pizza -- 43 percent higher than national average.
  2. Tex-Mex -- 38 percent higher than national average.
  3. Fast food -- 37 percent higher than national average.
  4. Steak -- 30 percent higher than national average.
  5. Burgers -- 29 percent higher than national average.
Iowa
  1. Buffets -- 127 percent higher than national average.
  2. Pizza -- 64 percent higher than national average.
  3. Steak -- 21 percent higher than national average.
  4. Traditional American -- 7 percent higher than national average.
  5. Fast food -- 5 percent higher than national average.
Kansas
  1. BBQ -- 48 percent higher than national average.
  2. Chicken wings -- 38 percent higher than national average.
  3. Tex-Mex -- 35 percent higher than national average.
  4. Mexican -- 33 percent higher than national average.
  5. Fast food -- 31 percent higher than national average.
Kentucky
  1. Southern -- 111 percent higher than national average.
  2. Fast food -- 66 percent higher than national average.
  3. Tex-Mex -- 56 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 52 percent higher than national average.
  5. Burgers -- 50 percent higher than national average.
Louisiana
  1. Cajun -- 1,540 percent higher than national average.
  2. Southern -- 219 percent higher than national average.
  3. Soul food -- 198 percent higher than national average.
  4. Seafood -- 158 percent higher than national average.
  5. Chicken wings -- 75 percent higher than national average.
Maine
  1. Seafood -- 321 percent higher than national average.
  2. Irish -- 135 percent higher than national average.
  3. Gastropubs -- 102 percent higher than national average.
  4. Gluten-free -- 78 percent higher than national average.
  5. Diners -- 77 percent higher than national average.
  1. Maryland
  2. Peruvian -- 200 percent higher than national average.
  3. Cheesesteaks -- 121 percent higher than national average.
  4. Caribbean -- 103 percent higher than national average.
  5. Latin -- 102 percent higher than national average.
  6. Pakistani -- 97 percent higher than national average.
Massachusetts
  1. Portuguese -- 716 percent higher than national average.
  2. Brazilian -- 361 percent higher than national average.
  3. Irish -- 179 percent higher than national average.
  4. Seafood -- 90 percent higher than national average.
  5. Middle Eastern -- 82 percent higher than national average.
Michigan
  1. Middle Eastern -- 184 percent higher than national average.
  2. Diners -- 47 percent higher than national average.
  3. Hot dogs -- 43 percent higher than national average.
  4. Pizza -- 43 percent higher than national average.
  5. Soup -- 40 percent higher than national average.
Minnesota
  1. Buffets -- 53 percent higher than national average.
  2. Traditional American -- 35 percent higher than national average.
  3. Pizza -- 31 percent higher than national average.
  4. New American -- 21 percent higher than national average.
  5. Gluten-free -- 18 percent higher than national average.
Mississippi
  1. Southern -- 371 percent higher than national average.
  2. Cajun -- 189 percent higher than national average.
  3. Buffets -- 135 percent higher than national average.
  4. Soul food -- 106 percent higher than national average.
  5. Chicken wings -- 103 percent higher than national average.
Missouri
  1. BBQ -- 65 percent higher than national average.
  2. Soup -- 46 percent higher than national average.
  3. Chicken wings -- 33 percent higher than national average.
  4. Steak -- 30 percent higher than national average.
  5. Tex-Mex -- 29 percent higher than national average.
Montana
  1. Steak -- 141 percent higher than national average.
  2. Cafes -- 80 percent higher than national average.
  3. Traditional American -- 70 percent higher than national average.
  4. Diners -- 52 percent higher than national average.
  5. Breakfast/brunch -- 34 percent higher than national averag.e
Nebraska
  1. Steak -- 60 percent higher than national average.
  2. Buffets -- 36 percent higher than national average.
  3. Chicken wings -- 35 percent higher than national average.
  4. Comfort food -- 34 percent higher than national average.
  5. Burgers -- 30 percent higher than national average.
Nevada
  1. Filipino - 277 percent higher than national average.
  2. Hawaiian -- 238 percent higher than national average.
  3. Buffets -- 156 percent higher than national average.
  4. Steak -- 84 percent higher than national average.
  5. Vegan -- 66 percent higher than national average.
New Hampshire
  1. Breakfast/brunch -- 95 percent higher than national average.
  2. Irish -- 95 percent higher than national average.
  3. Gluten-free -- 72 percent higher than national average.
  4. Traditional American -- 67 percent higher than national average.
  5. Diners -- 66 percent higher than national average.
New Jersey
  1. Portuguese -- 880 percent higher than national average.
  2. Spanish -- 266 percent higher than national average.
  3. Kosher -- 218 percent higher than national average.
  4. Peruvian -- 211 percent higher than national average.
  5. Delis -- 156 percent higher than national average.
New Mexico
  1. Mexican -- 124 percent higher than national average.
  2. Steak -- 60 percent higher than national average.
  3. French -- 58 percent higher than national average.
  4. Cafes -- 51 percent higher than national average.
  5. Vegetarian -- 45 percent higher than national average.
New York
  1. Kosher -- 414 percent higher than national average.
  2. Halal -- 233 percent higher than national average.
  3. Spanish -- 206 percent higher than national average.
  4. Caribbean -- 158 percent higher than national average.
  5. Delis -- 117 percent higher than national average.
North Carolina
  1. Southern -- 229 percent higher than national average.
  2. Cheesesteaks -- 207 percent higher than national average.
  3. Hot dogs -- 80 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 47 percent higher than national average.
  5. Soul food -- 39 percent higher than national average.
North Dakota
  1. German -- 187 percent higher than national average.
  2. Steak -- 101 percent higher than national average.
  3. Soup -- 68 percent higher than national average.
  4. Buffets -- 62 percent higher than national average.
  5. Salad -- 41 percent higher than national average.
Ohio
  1. Soup -- 57 percent higher than national average.
  2. Pizza -- 57 percent higher than national average.
  3. Fast food -- 40 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 34 percent higher than national average.
  5. Burgers -- 32 percent higher than national average.
Oklahoma
  1. Tex-Mex -- 93 percent higher than national average.
  2. BBQ -- 88 percent higher than national average.
  3. Steak -- 58 percent higher than national average.
  4. Buffets -- 51 percent higher than national average.
  5. Fast food -- 51 percent higher than national average.
Oregon
  1. Food stands -- 404 percent higher than national average.
  2. Gluten-free -- 170 percent higher than national average.
  3. Vegan -- 153 percent higher than national average.
  4. Hawaiian -- 145 percent higher than national average.
  5. Thai -- 127 percent higher than national average.
Pennsylvania
  1. Cheesesteaks -- 260 percent higher than national average.
  2. Pizza -- 60 percent higher than national average.
  3. Italian -- 49 percent higher than national average.
  4. Diners -- 46 percent higher than national average.
  5. Delis -- 45 percent higher than national average.
Rhode Island
  1. Portuguese -- 1,187 percent higher than national average.
  2. Fish and chips -- 193 percent higher than national average.
  3. Irish -- 141 percent higher than national average.
  4. Spanish -- 124 percent higher than national average.
  5. Seafood -- 95 percent higher than national average.
South Carolina
  1. Southern -- 327 percent higher than national average.
  2. Seafood -- 76 percent higher than national average.
  3. Soul food -- 65 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 57 percent higher than national average.
  5. BBQ -- 49 percent higher than national average.
South Dakota
  1. Steak -- 143 percent higher than national average.
  2. Buffets -- 71 percent higher than national average.
  3. Traditional American -- 37 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 30 percent higher than national average.
  5. Pizza -- 27 percent higher than national average.
Tennessee
  1. Southern -- 335 percent higher than national average.
  2. Soul food -- 105 percent higher than national average.
  3. BBQ -- 100 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 59 percent higher than national average.
  5. Tex-Mex -- 49 percent higher than national average.
Texas
  1. Tex-Mex -- 174 percent higher than national average.
  2. Cajun -- 171 percent higher than national average.
  3. BBQ -- 89 percent higher than national average.
  4. Mexican -- 85 percent higher than national average.
  5. Chicken wings -- 64 percent higher than national average.
Utah
  1. Hawaiian -- 241 percent higher than national average.
  2. Hot dogs -- 54 percent higher than national average.
  3. Mexican -- 50 percent higher than national average.
  4. Comfort food -- 41 percent higher than national average.
  5. Burgers -- 38 percent higher than national average.
Vermont
  1. Gastropubs -- 220 percent higher than national average.
  2. Diners -- 130 percent higher than national average.
  3. Comfort food -- 113 percent higher than national average.
  4. Vegan -- 92 percent higher than national average.
  5. Delis -- 91 percent higher than national average.
Virginia
  1. Peruvian -- 162 percent higher than national average.
  2. Southern -- 104 percent higher than national average.
  3. Latin -- 68 percent higher than national average.
  4. Middle Eastern -- 68 percent higher than national average.
  5. Pakistani -- 67 percent higher than national average.
Washington
  1. Vietnamese -- 181 percent higher than national average.
  2. Fish and chips -- 175 percent higher than national average.
  3. Thai -- 125 percent higher than national average.
  4. Korean -- 103 percent higher than national average.
  5. Japanese -- 88 percent higher than national average.
West Virginia
  1. Hot dogs -- 146 percent higher than national average.
  2. Pizza -- 75 percent higher than national average.
  3. Buffets -- 55 percent higher than national average.
  4. Fast food -- 54 percent higher than national average.
  5. Chicken wings -- 47 percent higher than national average.
Wisconsin
  1. Traditional American -- 52 percent higher than national average.
  2. Soup -- 34 percent higher than national average.
  3. New American -- 25 percent higher than national average.
  4. Sandwiches -- 21 percent higher than national average.
  5. Pizza -- 20 percent higher than national average.
Wyoming
  1. Steak -- 182 percent higher than national average.
  2. Comfort food -- 106 percent higher than national average.
  3. Traditional American -- 50 percent higher than national average.
  4. New American -- 39 percent higher than national average.
  5. Diners -- 28 percent higher than national average.

Friday, January 16, 2015

Here Is The Most Disproportionately Popular Cuisine In Each State

When most people think American cuisine, they think pizza, hot dogs and hamburgers.

While these are indeed staples across the country, every state has its own sense of flavor. Now, thanks to a collaboration between The Huffington Post and Yelp, we can see exactly what types of cuisine are most likely to appear in each state.

You may not be surprised to learn that Maine is crazy about seafood. But would you have guessed that Utah has a hankering for Hawaiian?

Yelp figured out which cuisines were most common in each state by examining restaurant listings on its site. The review service uses information pulled by third-party data providers from public records and other sources in order to create its online restaurant listings, according to its website.

To get the data for the map, Yelp first calculated the percentage of total restaurants each cuisine represented in a given state. Then, it compared each percentage with the cuisine's representation in restaurants nationwide. The resulting map, made by HuffPost, shows the cuisines with a disproportionate level of representation in each state.

Restaurants on Yelp can be placed into as many as three categories, so some restaurants may have been counted more than once. For instance, a Kosher vegetarian Chinese restaurant would count as three cuisines.

Check out the map below by HuffPost's Alissa Scheller, using data provided by Yelp, to find out which cuisines are most popular in each state. Below the map is a list of the top five cuisines in each state:

Alabama
  1. Southern -- 256 percent higher than national average.
  2. BBQ -- 145 percent higher than national average.
  3. Cajun -- 96 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 89 percent higher than national average.
  5. Soul food -- 87 percent higher than national average.
Alaska
  1. Filipino -- 208 percent higher than national average.
  2. Fish and chips -- 200 percent higher than national average.
  3. Thai -- 158 percent higher than national average.
  4. Seafood -- 158 percent higher than national average.
  5. Hawaiian -- 90 percent higher than national average.
Arizona
  1. Mexican -- 73 percent higher than national average.
  2. Greek -- 63 percent higher than national average.
  3. Gluten-free -- 57 percent higher than national average.
  4. Buffets -- 54 percent higher than national average.
  5. Mediterranean -- 40 percent higher than national average.
Arkansas
  1. Southern -- 142 percent higher than national average.
  2. BBQ -- 91 percent higher than national average.
  3. Tex-Mex -- 64 percent higher than national average.
  4. Cajun -- 64 percent higher than national average.
  5. Steak -- 53 percent higher than national average.
California
  1. Taiwanese -- 264 percent higher than national average.
  2. Filipino -- 226 percent higher than national average.
  3. Vietnamese -- 143 percent higher than national average.
  4. Korean -- 143 percent higher than national average.
  5. Hawaiian -- 125 percent higher than national average.
Colorado
  1. Gluten-free -- 149 percent higher than national average.
  2. Vietnamese -- 65 percent higher than national average.
  3. Mexican -- 55 percent higher than national average.
  4. Soup -- 40 percent higher than national average.
  5. Breakfast/brunch -- 36 percent higher than national average.
Connecticut
  1. Spanish -- 168 percent higher than national average.
  2. Deli -- 95 percent higher than national average.
  3. Italian -- 89 percent higher than national average.
  4. Irish -- 69 percent higher than national average.
  5. Caribbean -- 56 percent higher than national average.
Delaware
  1. Irish -- 166 percent higher than national average.
  2. Cheesesteaks -- 123 percent higher than national average.
  3. Caribbean -- 122 percent higher than national average.
  4. Seafood -- 101 percent higher than national average.
  5. Gastropub -- 87 percent higher than national average.
District of Columbia
  1. Belgian -- 1,711 percent higher than national average.
  2. Ethiopian -- 1,560 percent higher than national average.
  3. African -- 555 percent higher than national average.
  4. Food stands -- 332 percent higher than national average.
  5. French -- 250 percent higher than national average.
Florida
  1. Cuban -- 757 percent higher than national average.
  2. Caribbean -- 286 percent higher than national average.
  3. Peruvian -- 264 percent higher than national average.
  4. Latin -- 217 percent higher than national average.
  5. Spanish -- 159 percent higher than national average.
Georgia
  1. Southern -- 304 percent higher than national average.
  2. Soul food -- 155 percent higher than national average.
  3. Caribbean -- 113 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 103 percent higher than national average.
  5. BBQ -- 57 percent higher than national average.
Hawaii
  1. Hawaiian -- 5028 percent higher than national average.
  2. Ramen -- 1443 percent higher than national average.
  3. Filipino -- 809 percent higher than national average.
  4. Korean -- 465 percent higher than national average.
  5. Food stands -- 380 percent higher than national average.
Idaho
  1. Gastropubs -- 52 percent higher than national average.
  2. Cafes -- 31 percent higher than national average.
  3. Mexican -- 26 percent higher than national average.
  4. Steak -- 25 percent higher than national average.
  5. Traditional American -- 25 percent higher than national average.
Illinois
  1. Pakistani -- 80 percent higher than national average.
  2. Hot dogs -- 76 percent higher than national average.
  3. Middle Eastern -- 34 percent higher than national average.
  4. Greek -- 25 percent higher than national average.
  5. Indian-Pakistani -- 23 percent higher than national average.
Indiana
  1. Pizza -- 43 percent higher than national average.
  2. Tex-Mex -- 38 percent higher than national average.
  3. Fast food -- 37 percent higher than national average.
  4. Steak -- 30 percent higher than national average.
  5. Burgers -- 29 percent higher than national average.
Iowa
  1. Buffets -- 127 percent higher than national average.
  2. Pizza -- 64 percent higher than national average.
  3. Steak -- 21 percent higher than national average.
  4. Traditional American -- 7 percent higher than national average.
  5. Fast food -- 5 percent higher than national average.
Kansas
  1. BBQ -- 48 percent higher than national average.
  2. Chicken wings -- 38 percent higher than national average.
  3. Tex-Mex -- 35 percent higher than national average.
  4. Mexican -- 33 percent higher than national average.
  5. Fast food -- 31 percent higher than national average.
Kentucky
  1. Southern -- 111 percent higher than national average.
  2. Fast food -- 66 percent higher than national average.
  3. Tex-Mex -- 56 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 52 percent higher than national average.
  5. Burgers -- 50 percent higher than national average.
Louisiana
  1. Cajun -- 1,540 percent higher than national average.
  2. Southern -- 219 percent higher than national average.
  3. Soul food -- 198 percent higher than national average.
  4. Seafood -- 158 percent higher than national average.
  5. Chicken wings -- 75 percent higher than national average.
Maine
  1. Seafood -- 321 percent higher than national average.
  2. Irish -- 135 percent higher than national average.
  3. Gastropubs -- 102 percent higher than national average.
  4. Gluten-free -- 78 percent higher than national average.
  5. Diners -- 77 percent higher than national average.
  1. Maryland
  2. Peruvian -- 200 percent higher than national average.
  3. Cheesesteaks -- 121 percent higher than national average.
  4. Caribbean -- 103 percent higher than national average.
  5. Latin -- 102 percent higher than national average.
  6. Pakistani -- 97 percent higher than national average.
Massachusetts
  1. Portuguese -- 716 percent higher than national average.
  2. Brazilian -- 361 percent higher than national average.
  3. Irish -- 179 percent higher than national average.
  4. Seafood -- 90 percent higher than national average.
  5. Middle Eastern -- 82 percent higher than national average.
Michigan
  1. Middle Eastern -- 184 percent higher than national average.
  2. Diners -- 47 percent higher than national average.
  3. Hot dogs -- 43 percent higher than national average.
  4. Pizza -- 43 percent higher than national average.
  5. Soup -- 40 percent higher than national average.
Minnesota
  1. Buffets -- 53 percent higher than national average.
  2. Traditional American -- 35 percent higher than national average.
  3. Pizza -- 31 percent higher than national average.
  4. New American -- 21 percent higher than national average.
  5. Gluten-free -- 18 percent higher than national average.
Mississippi
  1. Southern -- 371 percent higher than national average.
  2. Cajun -- 189 percent higher than national average.
  3. Buffets -- 135 percent higher than national average.
  4. Soul food -- 106 percent higher than national average.
  5. Chicken wings -- 103 percent higher than national average.
Missouri
  1. BBQ -- 65 percent higher than national average.
  2. Soup -- 46 percent higher than national average.
  3. Chicken wings -- 33 percent higher than national average.
  4. Steak -- 30 percent higher than national average.
  5. Tex-Mex -- 29 percent higher than national average.
Montana
  1. Steak -- 141 percent higher than national average.
  2. Cafes -- 80 percent higher than national average.
  3. Traditional American -- 70 percent higher than national average.
  4. Diners -- 52 percent higher than national average.
  5. Breakfast/brunch -- 34 percent higher than national averag.e
Nebraska
  1. Steak -- 60 percent higher than national average.
  2. Buffets -- 36 percent higher than national average.
  3. Chicken wings -- 35 percent higher than national average.
  4. Comfort food -- 34 percent higher than national average.
  5. Burgers -- 30 percent higher than national average.
Nevada
  1. Filipino - 277 percent higher than national average.
  2. Hawaiian -- 238 percent higher than national average.
  3. Buffets -- 156 percent higher than national average.
  4. Steak -- 84 percent higher than national average.
  5. Vegan -- 66 percent higher than national average.
New Hampshire
  1. Breakfast/brunch -- 95 percent higher than national average.
  2. Irish -- 95 percent higher than national average.
  3. Gluten-free -- 72 percent higher than national average.
  4. Traditional American -- 67 percent higher than national average.
  5. Diners -- 66 percent higher than national average.
New Jersey
  1. Portuguese -- 880 percent higher than national average.
  2. Spanish -- 266 percent higher than national average.
  3. Kosher -- 218 percent higher than national average.
  4. Peruvian -- 211 percent higher than national average.
  5. Delis -- 156 percent higher than national average.
New Mexico
  1. Mexican -- 124 percent higher than national average.
  2. Steak -- 60 percent higher than national average.
  3. French -- 58 percent higher than national average.
  4. Cafes -- 51 percent higher than national average.
  5. Vegetarian -- 45 percent higher than national average.
New York
  1. Kosher -- 414 percent higher than national average.
  2. Halal -- 233 percent higher than national average.
  3. Spanish -- 206 percent higher than national average.
  4. Caribbean -- 158 percent higher than national average.
  5. Delis -- 117 percent higher than national average.
North Carolina
  1. Southern -- 229 percent higher than national average.
  2. Cheesesteaks -- 207 percent higher than national average.
  3. Hot dogs -- 80 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 47 percent higher than national average.
  5. Soul food -- 39 percent higher than national average.
North Dakota
  1. German -- 187 percent higher than national average.
  2. Steak -- 101 percent higher than national average.
  3. Soup -- 68 percent higher than national average.
  4. Buffets -- 62 percent higher than national average.
  5. Salad -- 41 percent higher than national average.
Ohio
  1. Soup -- 57 percent higher than national average.
  2. Pizza -- 57 percent higher than national average.
  3. Fast food -- 40 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 34 percent higher than national average.
  5. Burgers -- 32 percent higher than national average.
Oklahoma
  1. Tex-Mex -- 93 percent higher than national average.
  2. BBQ -- 88 percent higher than national average.
  3. Steak -- 58 percent higher than national average.
  4. Buffets -- 51 percent higher than national average.
  5. Fast food -- 51 percent higher than national average.
Oregon
  1. Food stands -- 404 percent higher than national average.
  2. Gluten-free -- 170 percent higher than national average.
  3. Vegan -- 153 percent higher than national average.
  4. Hawaiian -- 145 percent higher than national average.
  5. Thai -- 127 percent higher than national average.
Pennsylvania
  1. Cheesesteaks -- 260 percent higher than national average.
  2. Pizza -- 60 percent higher than national average.
  3. Italian -- 49 percent higher than national average.
  4. Diners -- 46 percent higher than national average.
  5. Delis -- 45 percent higher than national average.
Rhode Island
  1. Portuguese -- 1,187 percent higher than national average.
  2. Fish and chips -- 193 percent higher than national average.
  3. Irish -- 141 percent higher than national average.
  4. Spanish -- 124 percent higher than national average.
  5. Seafood -- 95 percent higher than national average.
South Carolina
  1. Southern -- 327 percent higher than national average.
  2. Seafood -- 76 percent higher than national average.
  3. Soul food -- 65 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 57 percent higher than national average.
  5. BBQ -- 49 percent higher than national average.
South Dakota
  1. Steak -- 143 percent higher than national average.
  2. Buffets -- 71 percent higher than national average.
  3. Traditional American -- 37 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 30 percent higher than national average.
  5. Pizza -- 27 percent higher than national average.
Tennessee
  1. Southern -- 335 percent higher than national average.
  2. Soul food -- 105 percent higher than national average.
  3. BBQ -- 100 percent higher than national average.
  4. Chicken wings -- 59 percent higher than national average.
  5. Tex-Mex -- 49 percent higher than national average.
Texas
  1. Tex-Mex -- 174 percent higher than national average.
  2. Cajun -- 171 percent higher than national average.
  3. BBQ -- 89 percent higher than national average.
  4. Mexican -- 85 percent higher than national average.
  5. Chicken wings -- 64 percent higher than national average.
Utah
  1. Hawaiian -- 241 percent higher than national average.
  2. Hot dogs -- 54 percent higher than national average.
  3. Mexican -- 50 percent higher than national average.
  4. Comfort food -- 41 percent higher than national average.
  5. Burgers -- 38 percent higher than national average.
Vermont
  1. Gastropubs -- 220 percent higher than national average.
  2. Diners -- 130 percent higher than national average.
  3. Comfort food -- 113 percent higher than national average.
  4. Vegan -- 92 percent higher than national average.
  5. Delis -- 91 percent higher than national average.
Virginia
  1. Peruvian -- 162 percent higher than national average.
  2. Southern -- 104 percent higher than national average.
  3. Latin -- 68 percent higher than national average.
  4. Middle Eastern -- 68 percent higher than national average.
  5. Pakistani -- 67 percent higher than national average.
Washington
  1. Vietnamese -- 181 percent higher than national average.
  2. Fish and chips -- 175 percent higher than national average.
  3. Thai -- 125 percent higher than national average.
  4. Korean -- 103 percent higher than national average.
  5. Japanese -- 88 percent higher than national average.
West Virginia
  1. Hot dogs -- 146 percent higher than national average.
  2. Pizza -- 75 percent higher than national average.
  3. Buffets -- 55 percent higher than national average.
  4. Fast food -- 54 percent higher than national average.
  5. Chicken wings -- 47 percent higher than national average.
Wisconsin
  1. Traditional American -- 52 percent higher than national average.
  2. Soup -- 34 percent higher than national average.
  3. New American -- 25 percent higher than national average.
  4. Sandwiches -- 21 percent higher than national average.
  5. Pizza -- 20 percent higher than national average.
Wyoming
  1. Steak -- 182 percent higher than national average.
  2. Comfort food -- 106 percent higher than national average.
  3. Traditional American -- 50 percent higher than national average.
  4. New American -- 39 percent higher than national average.
  5. Diners -- 28 percent higher than national average.