This is a great combo! What a great way to save money and have fun with yummy food!
KRAFT Cheese and TerraCycle, Inc. have partnered with Six Flags for a summer recycling drive at Six Flags parks across the United States. This includes: St. Louis, Chicago, San Antonio, Dallas, Los Angeles, and San Francisco!
Kraft Foods' string cheeses -- branded Polly-O on the East Coast and
Kraft elsewhere in the country -- are teaming with Six Flags
Entertainment Corp. for a multiplatform "Twisted Fun" promotion this
summer. The promotion also brings in a sustainability element, through a
partnership with the TerraCycle, Inc. "upcycling" company.
Fans of minor league baseball and Kraft Singles American cheese can double their fun this summer. The Tuesday Night Tickets promotion delivers one free ticket with the purchase of a ticket and the redemption of any Kraft Singles package wrapper at the box office. The plastic wrappers are collected by TerraCycle and made into consumer products. This is the third season of the promotion by Kraft Foods, Northfield, Ill. It said that in 2010, wrapper redemption increased 43% compared to 2009. The promotion runs through Sept. 6.
Wrappers redeemed through the Tuesday Night Tickets program will be upcycled as part of Kraft Foods' partnership with eco-innovator TerraCycle. TerraCycle works to turn donated wrappers into functional lifestyle products while furnishing a donation for each wrapper collected to charitable organizations.
For those who like cheese, and recycling, and baseball, here´s one for you.
TerraCycle Inc., the company known for transforming used consumer packaging into new products, is teaming up with Kraft Foods Inc. on a recycling program at most Minor League Baseball stadiums around the country.
Kraft is offering a buy one, get one free ticket offer for those bringing a Kraft Singles package wrapper to the box office on Tuesday nights.
Wrappers redeemed through the promotion will be "up-cycled" by Trenton, N.J.-based TerraCycle to make new products. A donation also will be made to charitable organizations for each wrapper collected, Kraft said.