Cheeseburger in Paradise (restaurant)

Cheeseburger in Paradise was a casual dining restaurant chain in the United States but is now a single restaurant in Secaucus, New Jersey.[3] The first restaurant opened on August 19, 2002, in the Southport area[4] of Indianapolis, Indiana.[5] It is a theme restaurant named for the song "Cheeseburger in Paradise" by American pop music singer Jimmy Buffett. The chain was a partnership of Buffett's company, the Orlando, Florida-based Margaritaville Holdings LLC, and OSI Restaurant Partners, with Buffett licensing the name and Outback Steakhouse operating the franchising of restaurants. It is currently a subsidiary of Luby's.

Cheeseburger in Paradise
Subsidiary
IndustryRestaurant
Founded2002 (2002) in Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.
Headquarters
Houston, Texas
,
United States
Number of locations
23 (total throughout its history)[1] 1 (currently)
Area served
New Jersey[2]
Key people
President: Steve Overholt
ParentLuby's
Websitecheeseburgerinparadise.com
Cheeseburger in Paradise
Inside of Cheeseburger in Paradise
A Cheeseburger in Paradise from Jimmy Buffett's Margaritaville

In September 2009, Cheeseburger in Paradise was sold to Paradise Restaurant Group, LLC. Jimmy Buffett was only a Royalty Partner receiving 2% of profits until selling Paradise Restaurant Group the rights to the song "Cheeseburger in Paradise". In December 2012, Luby's purchased Paradise Restaurant Group for $11 million, thereby acquiring all of the restaurants and ending Jimmy Buffett's association with the chain. At the time of the sale, the company had 23 locations in 14 states.[6]

In August 2018, all restaurants except for the Omaha, Nebraska, and Secaucus, New Jersey, locations were closed, including the original restaurant in Indianapolis.[7][8]

The Omaha location closed in early October 2018.[9] The only remaining Cheeseburger in Paradise location left open is in Secaucus.[10]

Closings

After acquisition by Luby's, a number of the chain's locations were closed. In August 2014, Luby's announced to management and employees that half of the chain's remaining restaurants would close, either immediately or in the following few weeks. Affected restaurants included those Fort Myers, Florida; Fishers, Indiana; Terre Haute, Indiana; Evansville, Indiana; Kansas City, Kansas; Middleton, Wisconsin; Sterling Heights, Michigan; and Pasadena, Maryland. Many of these locations were to be rebranded Fuddruckers Deluxe Bar and Grill, another concept owned by Luby's and a full-service version of their Fuddrucker's chain. Ultimately not all of them were, including the one in Fishers, Indiana[11] and California, Maryland.

As of August 21, 2018, only the Omaha, NE, and Secaucus, NJ, locations remained open.

As of September 28, 2018, the Secaucus, NJ restaurant is the only one still open.

Lahaina, Hawaii

A chain named Cheeseburger Restaurants based in Portola, California has one of their restaurants located in oceanfront Lahaina, Hawaii also named "Cheeseburger in Paradise". This chain, which began in 1989, has no relation to Jimmy Buffett's business. Buffett sued the owners in 1997. After a four-year legal battle, a settlement was reached that allowed Laren Gartner and Edna Bayliff to keep the name at their existing restaurants in Lahaina and Waikiki but prevented them from using it at any additional locations.[12]

gollark: Row ID? I forget.
gollark: The number the uninstaller prints?
gollark: The incident report system does actually work, by the way. All incidents are logged in SPUDNET. The only ones I know of are the test ones I triggered to test the system and various incident triggers. Incidents are reported when:- one known sandbox escape is detected- banned programs (Webicity) are executed- potatOS is uninstalled- invalid disk signing key
gollark: You can't make a program to fully autonomously uninstall potatOS from within it - ignoring sandbox escapes - because while sandboxed processes can use queueEvent to fake keypresses they cannot read the output of the uninstaller. The best they can do is, I don't know, guess what the random seed was when it was generating two primes, figure out what the primes were, and queue the key/char events accordingly.
gollark: <@184468521042968577> `is_valid_lua` isn't deliberately bad, but it's also IIRC not actually used anywhere.Also, that person was bundling potatOS with some other project but wanted people to be able to remove it even more easily if they don't like it. This feature does actually work but must be enabled before installation. Weirdly enough factorizing small semiprimes is beyond many users.

See also

References

  1. "Saturday Last Day for Cheeseburger in Paradise". Downers Grove, IL Patch. April 26, 2014. Retrieved January 21, 2020.
  2. Cheeseburger in Paradise locations
  3. King, Rebecca (December 28, 2018). "Cheeseburger in Paradise, a once-thriving chain, down to one location in New Jersey". USA Today. Retrieved January 23, 2019.
  4. Hunsinger Benbow, Dana (August 26, 2014). "Hello, Fuddruckers! Cheeseburger in Paradise closes". Indy Star. The only remaining Indiana Cheeseburger in Paradise, 4670 Southport Crossings Drive in Indianapolis, remains open, for now. That was the chain's original restaurant launched in 2002.
  5. "Indianapolis, IN – Cheeseburger in Paradise". BuffettWorld. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  6. "Jimmy Buffett Sells 'Cheeseburger in Paradise' Restaurants". HuffPost. November 28, 2012.
  7. King, Mason (August 21, 2018). "Southport location of Cheeseburger in Paradise goes on permanent vacation". Indianapolis Business Journal.
  8. Fleming, Tyler (August 27, 2018). "Cheeseburgers in afterlife? Doors close at Jimmy Buffett-themed spot in Myrtle Beach". The Sun News. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
  9. Hansen, Sarah Baker (October 5, 2018). "Cheeseburger in Paradise, in Omaha's Village Pointe, is closed". Omaha World-Herald.
  10. King, Rebecca (December 23, 2018). "Secaucus Cheeseburger in Paradise the last of the once-thriving chain". North Jersey Record.
  11. Erdody, Lindsey (September 28, 2017). "Popular Mexican restaurant in Fishers plans second location". Indianapolis Business Journal.
  12. Song, Jaymes (August 1, 2004). "Grilling up success with a cheeseburger". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Associated Press.
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