Current:Home > ScamsBuc-ee's fan? This website wants to pay you $1,000 to try their snacks. Here's how to apply -消息
Buc-ee's fan? This website wants to pay you $1,000 to try their snacks. Here's how to apply
View
Date:2025-04-12 20:02:16
Buc-ee's fans, this one is for you.
Financial advice website FinanceBuzz announced Thursday they looking for someone to try 25 popular foods from Buc-ee's, the iconic rest stop with locations populating Texas and six other states based around the South.
FinanceBuzz says they will pay the selected taste tester $1,000, plus an additional $250 to cover the cost of buying the snacks and any Buc-ee's merchandise.
In order to be eligible to become a taste tester, you must either live near or be willing to travel to one of Buc-ee's more than 50 locations, and be willing to try almost any snack the giant store offers. These are just some of the items FinanceBuzz wants taste testers to sample:
- Buc-ee’s Beaver Nuggets
- Sweet and savory kolaches
- Hippo tacos
- Barbecue sandwiches
- Buc-ee’s Lemon Crisps
- Homemade fudge
- Buc-ee’s Gummi Bears
- Banana pudding
- Biscuits and gravy
They will also provide a shopping list and are expecting taste testers to document their experience at Buc-ee's through written product reviews and photographs, which will be the basis for an upcoming story.
More:Subway offered free subs for life if you changed your name to 'Subway'. 10,000 people volunteered.
Food news:Eggo, Sugarlands Distilling Co. team up to launch Eggo Brunch in a Jar Sippin' Cream
How to apply to be a Buc-ee's taste tester
If you're interested in becoming a Buc-ee's taste tester, fill out the online application on FinanceBuzz's website. Applications must be based in the U.S. and be at least 18 years old. You must also live near, or be willing to travel, to a Buc-ee's location.
Applications are due Sept. 11 by 11:59 p.m. ET, and the selected taste tester will be chosen Sept. 18 and contacted by email. They will then have two weeks to complete their taste test.
veryGood! (1995)
Related
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Tony Romo once again jumps the gun on Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce's relationship
- 70% of kids drop out of youth sports by age 13. Here’s why and how to fix it, per AAP
- Churches, temples and monasteries regularly hit by airstrikes in Myanmar, activists say
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Trinidad government inquiry into divers’ deaths suggests manslaughter charges against company
- What to know about abortion rulings, bills and campaigns as the US marks Roe anniversary
- Wall Street pushes deeper into record terrain, fueled by hopes for interest rate cuts
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Burton Wilde: My Insights on Value Investing
Ranking
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- The Excerpt podcast: Grand jury to consider charging police in Uvalde school shooting
- After stalling in 2023, a bill to define antisemitism in state law is advancing in Georgia
- Memphis residents are on day 4 of a boil water notice while ice hits Arkansas and Missouri
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Against a backdrop of rebel attacks and border closures, Rwanda and Burundi trade accusations
- ‘League of Legends’ developer Riot Games announces layoffs of 530 staff
- Google warns users Chrome's incognito mode still tracks data, reports say. What to know.
Recommendation
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Burton Wilde: FinTech & AI Turbo Tells You When to Place Heavy Bets in Investments.
Burton Wilde: Lane Club Guides You on Purchasing Cryptocurrencies.
Avril Lavigne announces The Greatest Hits Tour with Simple Plan, All Time Low
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
Store clerk fatally shot in 'tragic' altercation over stolen chips; two people arrested
US targets Iraqi airline Fly Baghdad, its CEO and Hamas cryptocurrency financiers for sanctions
Man charged with killing his wife in 1991 in Virginia brought back to US to face charges