Business Brief
New Lawsuit Claims Red Lobster’s $20 Endless Shrimp Deal Was a Deliberate ‘Car Crash’ Scheme
A Manhattan Business Club business brief based on a video from Inc.: New Lawsuit Claims Red Lobster’s $20 Endless Shrimp Deal Was a Deliberate ‘Car Crash’ Scheme. The focus is practical business value for entrepreneurs, executives, investors, sponsors,…
Video
What happened
This video covers: New Lawsuit Claims Red Lobster’s $20 Endless Shrimp Deal Was a Deliberate ‘Car Crash’ Scheme. Manhattan Business Club presents it as a short business brief for readers who follow entrepreneurship, leadership, markets, events, sponsorships and growth opportunities.
Why it matters for business owners
- It may point to a useful business, leadership, market, technology, branding or consumer trend.
- It can help entrepreneurs think about strategy, risk, pricing, positioning, operations or growth.
- The practical question is what business owners, executives, investors, sponsors or exhibitors can learn from it.
Business relevance for Manhattan Business Club readers
For Manhattan Business Club readers, the useful angle is practical: what this story suggests for entrepreneurs, executives, investors, sponsors, exhibitors, business travelers and companies looking for growth opportunities.
Business lesson
The key takeaway should be read through a business lens: strategy, leadership, market timing, customer behavior, operational risk or growth opportunity.
Video published: June 26, 2026
Video source: Inc.
