DoorDash DoorDash: Pre-Order Heinz Game Day Dogs + No Service or Delivery Fees (GTA Only) Pre-Order Heinz Hot Dogs to Support Jays Care!
get this dealBring the ballpark home and support a good cause with DoorDash, because you can pre-order Heinz Game Day Dogs to celebrate the Toronto Blue Jays' Opening Day!
This offer is only available in the Greater Toronto Area starting Wednesday, July 22 -- simply open the DoorDash app (Android, iOS) or visit the Heinz Game Day Dogs page to pre-order your hot dogs.
There are two menu options available and all orders will be delivered on Friday, July 24 -- the Game Day Dogs will include authentic stadium hot dog condiments including ketchup, mustard and onions.
- Two Heinz Game Day Dogs - $12.00
- Four Heinz Game Day Dogs - $24.00
Heinz will be covering all service and delivery fees with every order and 100% of proceeds will be donated to the Jays Care Foundation to provide meals for families living in Toronto Community Housing.
This deal is available from July 22 to 24 only in the Greater Toronto Area, so order your Game Day Dogs and enjoy the Blue Jays opener!
Showing 40 Most Recent Comments
View allI'd be curious to see how much the as you said not at arms length charity actually gets at the end of the day.
Exactly.
If you want hot dogs, that's one thing. But if it's a charitable thing I'd rather give money directly. They're getting far more of it at the end of the day.
Same concept with food banks. If you're going to use money to buy specifically for the food bank, it makes more sense to give them money directly so they can buy what they need to support their community better intsead of getting the same generic can of beans and flat of ramen.
Doesn't sound like a good use of my time if you ask me. But for someone like you that values proper spending of money - be my guest
"Sometimes this forum is just a reinforcement circle of negative thoughts."
Or maybe its a place that values the proper spending of money, and don't really think a 12 dollar donation should be whittled away into a 2 dollar donation at the end of the day.
It's the Jays season opener. It's a delivered hot dog for CHARITY. It's no secret that you can get a 36 pack of these at No Frills for $2.99. But it's for CHARITY.
Sometimes this forum is just a reinforcement circle of negative thoughts... something we don't need especially in a time like this.
Edit: I like fact checking.. found an article which explains it pretty well..
Right.... here...
If anyone wants to help 100% Canadian and get a good deal this week, FreshCo has this on sale:
Which is why Tim's is inside the dome
3G also own ABinBev, which is why Skydome is filled with their beers and drinks
Lastly, worth mentioning that Heinz doesn't technically exist anymore. Now it's KHC, which stands for Kraft Heinz Company
3G owns a lot. And they're a disaster to deal with
Frequently, these corporations will also create or partner up with not-arms-length charities which will pour money back into the corps which fund them. Ronald McDonald house, for example, is essentially free advertising for McDonalds, which you see plastered over billboards and newspapers. Your donations? They are paying for those expensive ad campaigns instead of going to an actual good cause. The Walmart Charity buying near date food stock from Walmart, and shipping it off as disaster relief is a perfect example of these "donations" flowing back into the parent corporation.
Corporations have a fiduciary responsibility to make money above all other matters. If donations are not somehow benefiting a corporation monetarily, those campaigns would not exist.
Take this hotdog campaign for example. It claims that "With every purchase, 100 per cent of the proceeds will support Jays Care Foundation." Does anyone here know what the words "of the proceeds" means? Because it could either mean they are paying the entire $12 payment per transaction, or whatever money is left over after the subtract their real costs. I'm going to take a wild guess and say it's the latter
Foot-longs are good though, as long as the bun isn't too stale.
This is a tired myth that comes from people thinking that grocery stores get to lower their taxes with the donations they collect from you. No, the CRA would never let the grocery store claim those amounts as deductions.
and you can't beat the price
go jays go
The bun gonna be mushy no matter what. And the picture does not show packets. You are assuming a lot about me, i assume you are so offended because you are the driver? Lol
Heinz is all I've know, but I'll give French's a try when my current bottle of Heinz run out (and if I can remember the name then).
After reading about this, it looks like Heinz’s parent company is the same parent company who bought Tim Hortons....and we know how that turned out.
1.50 hot dog and drink, 7 dollars in fees :p