Graduations, Weddings, and everything in between Scranton Wilkes Barre Areas Premiere Caterer

Are you planning a corporate appreciation event a wedding, birthday party, graduation communion party, pig roast or backyard BBQ?  If you are in the Scranton Wilkes Barre area and want a reasonably priced caterer with references why not choose Northeast Catering we have been catering for over 30 years in the Scranton Wilkes Barre Area Visit our facebook page to see what customers are saying about us.  All our food is made fresh from our meatballs to our rolls.

Feel Free to browse our menus compare our prices and ask our customers for a live reference on facebook.

If you want you could even order your party online with a credit card or your paypal account.

You will be happy with us we guarantee it.  James Reese

Invite Northeast Catering we will bring the food!

General  $8.50 Off Premise Catering Menu

General  $7.00 Off Premise Catering Menu

Review our BBQ Menu

Review our Tuscany Menu

Special Occasion Menu

Just need a Pan of Something

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Our Ala Carte Menu

A lot of people have been asking for a pan of this and a pan of that so here it is our Just a Pan Menu

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Our Email has changed

admin”@”northeastcatering.com is our new email please note exclude the ” ” this is to prevent spam

Thanks

Jim

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You could book your party online and pay for it with Paypal!!!!

You could now save time and book your party online. Get a price range or just browse the menu.. try it out!

http://northeastcatering.com/book-your-party-online/

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Brunch Menu

Download or view our Brunch Menu.  It’s perfect for bridal and baby showers!

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Butter Ball Turkey Calculator

See my Youtube Video for an explanation. Awesome website link to figure out Thanksgiving turkey cooking & thawing times and the ‘just right’ amount of turkey.  http://www.butterball.com/tips-how-tos/tips/calculators-and-conversions

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I bake my rolls for every catered party FRESH

Northeast Catering Fresh Rolls Scranton Dunmore Wilkes barre

Northeast Catering Fresh Rolls

I bake rolls fresh for each party. If you remember the Globe Store in Scranton, then you probably had the Charl Mont’s Bakery rolls. Guess who has the recipe? I do! I worked there when I was 19 years old and when they closed I made a copy of the recipe.

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Tacos for 700

Tacos for 700 people

Tacos for 700 people

We recently catered an event for 700 people… and take a guess what was on the menu!  Tacos!

Tacos everywhere

Tacos everywhere

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I’ll take mine medium rare

Jimmy helping with New York Strip steak

Jimmy helping with New York Strip steak

Another catering event, this time for 650 people! They wanted New York Strip, but there was a catch:  they wanted it cooked outside, and at one point the rain remnants of Hurricane Irene began to pour down.  Luckily, I was prepared with some rain gear.

New York Strips for 650 Northeast Catering

New York Strips for 650 Northeast Catering

We even cooked them at night.

New York Strip Steak at Night Northeast Catering

New York Strip Steak at Night Northeast Catering

New York Strip Steak chargrilled by Northeast Catering

New York Strip Steak chargrilled by Northeast Catering

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Kim Kardashian Gives Twice the Amount of Wedding Gifts to Charity

Kim Kardashian is making lemonade out of lemons.

The reality star, 31, and husband Kris Humphries received about $100,000 worth of wedding gifts back in August, but they famously called it quits after just 72 days, with Kardashian filing for divorce Oct. 31.

PHOTOS: Kim and Kris’ wedding album

But Kardashian wrote all of her wedding guests a thank-you note. As obtained by TMZ, the letter reads “I would like to thank you for your generous and thoughtful wedding gift. It has taken me some time to pull everything together but I wanted to let you know that the money for every gift received by me at my wedding has been donated to the Dream Foundation.”

VIDEO: Kris grabs Kim’s booty in the pool on honeymoon

A source confirms to Us that Kardashian wrote a check to the Dream Foundation worth double the value of her expensive gifts. (While Kardashian and Humphries, 26, kept the actual gifts, the source explains that the Dream Foundation, like most charities, could make far better use of the money versus high-priced vases and blenders.)

Similar to the Make-a-Wish Foundation, the Dream Foundation, founded in 1993, is a “wish-granting organization” for adults (from paying bills to creating happy memories to providing emotional support) with life-threatening illnesses.

PHOTOS: Kim’s challenging year

“Our dreamers have received a life expectancy of one year or less, and lack the resources to achieve their dreams on their own,” the charity’s website explains. “While we cannot cure their diseases, we can dramatically impact the quality of their fragile lives with the joy experienced from a dream come true.

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Should Kim Kardashian return her wedding gifts? Expert weighs in

Kim Kardashian

Kim Kardashian is offering up some answers to guests about her August wedding to Kris Humphries — specifically regarding the fate of the luxurious gifts folks gave the couple.

In a printed note, Kardashian informed her friends, family and the odd magazine editor that “it has taken me some time to pull everything together but I wanted to let you know that the money for every gift received by me at my wedding has been donated to the Dream Foundation.”

The Dream Foundation works toward wish fulfillment for adults battling terminal illness. Kim valued the gifts at around $100,000, according to TMZ, and allegedly cut the foundation a check for twice that amount. Humphries commends her for the gesture, the website said, but thinks the lot of loot should be returned to the givers. 

To review: Kim donates twice the value of her wedding gifts to charity and still gets to enjoy that gravy boat. Kris wants the goods back in the hands of guests. Clearly this a question for Emily Post.

“It’s a sticky, messy thing,” said Anna Post, great-great-granddaughter of etiquette queen Emily. “I think people want to make it tidy and put it in a box, but that’s not possible.”

So what’s a reality star to do?

“While I fully appreciate the sentiment of giving to charity, it’s a good idea to return the gift. It’s more about a personal exchange, returning that gift and coming full circle with your guests. That note … doesn’t gratify what could be an uncomfortable situation,” Post said.

And the mass-produced note is a no-no too. 

“Notes should be handwritten, not a blast note with an auto signature at the bottom. They should be written to guests when you return the gift. These are people who care deeply about you, and took time and money to celebrate you.”

So Humphries wins the war of manners, but it’s not all bad news for Kim.

“It’s not a punishment, it’s not as though someone’s saying, ‘Your marriage didn’t work so now you have to do all this work.’ For Kim, it’s about the respect of each and everyone on of those individual, personal relationships,” said Post. 

RELATED:

‘SNL’ slams Kardashian divorce; Kristen Wiig nails Kris Jenner

Kris Humphries targets Kim Kardashian, reality TV in divorce duel

Kris Humphries calls split ‘difficult,’ finds solace in new watch endorsement

– Matt Donnelly
twitter.com/MattDonnelly

Photo: Kim Kardashian at the Screen Actors Guild Awards in Los Angeles on Jan. 30. Credit: Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times

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Kim K. doubles wedding gift amount for charity

Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries were married for 72 days.

Kim Kardashian is making lemonade out of lemons.

The reality star, 31, and husband Kris Humphries received about $100,000 worth of wedding gifts back in August, but they famously called it quits after just 72 days, with Kardashian filing for divorce Oct. 31.

PHOTOS: Kim and Kris’ wedding album

But Kardashian wrote all of her wedding guests a thank-you note. As obtained by TMZ, the letter reads “I would like to thank you for your generous and thoughtful wedding gift. It has taken me some time to pull everything together but I wanted to let you know that the money for every gift received by me at my wedding has been donated to the Dream Foundation.”

VIDEO: Kris grabs Kim’s booty in the pool on honeymoon

A source confirms to Us that Kardashian wrote a check to the Dream Foundation worth double the value of her expensive gifts. (While Kardashian and Humphries, 26, kept the actual gifts, the source explains that the Dream Foundation, like most charities, could make far better use of the money versus high-priced vases and blenders.)

Similar to the Make-a-Wish Foundation, the Dream Foundation, founded in 1993, is a “wish-granting organization” for adults (from paying bills to creating happy memories to providing emotional support) with life-threatening illnesses.

PHOTOS: Kim’s challenging year

“Our dreamers have received a life expectancy of one year or less, and lack the resources to achieve their dreams on their own,” the charity’s website explains. “While we cannot cure their diseases, we can dramatically impact the quality of their fragile lives with the joy experienced from a dream come true.

Toby Canham / Getty Images

Launch slideshow

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Catering staff no-shows annoy stadium boss


More than a third of the catering staff did not turn up for
Saturday night’s Highlanders game, leaving Forsyth Barr
Stadium boss David Davies disappointed.

The Highlanders beat the Crusaders 27-24 at the stadium, the
first time it hosted a Super 15 match, but Davies, the chief
executive of Dunedin Venues Management Ltd, said he was not
happy with the way the stadium had performed.

“We have got some staffing issues around catering and had an
incredibly high number of staff no-shows. Whether many of
them did not find it attractive enough to come along and work
for us we will have to look at,” he said.

“We will have to have a good talk with our contractors and
see what has happened.”

Davies said 35% of the 400 catering staff employed to work at
the stadium had not shown up, and that had led to
difficulties in delivering service.

The corporate suites had to wait for service and there were
lengthy queues at some food and beverage outlets.

Davies said the staff who did not turn up were of various
ages and were not all students. The work was at irregular
hours but he had to ensure people turned up to work.

Along with the staff not turning up, Davies said it was
disappointing there was an issue with the stadium clock at
the end of the match.

The clock did not include time for stoppages during the game,
leading to confusion at the end of the match as the
Highlanders twice kicked the ball out thinking time was up.

Taylormade Media boss Ian Taylor took responsibility for the
mistake with the clock, and Davies said it obviously could
have been done better.

He said there were about 300 single tickets not sold for the
match on Saturday night, so it was not quite a sell-out.

With the ground nearly full, there had been suggestions the
Otago Daily Times stand at the western end of the
stadium could be used.

Davies said only if the team made it to the playoffs and
hosted a game was there a possibility the temporary seating
at that end would go up.

It cost $30,000 to put the seats up and took eight days, so
it was a big undertaking. The seating would be used for the
test between the All Blacks and South Africa in September.

The Highlanders host the Waratahs at the stadium on Saturday
night and Davies said early indications for a decent crowd
were encouraging.

 

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East Haven to host expo catering to Hispanics

EAST HAVEN, Conn. (AP) – The Connecticut town where police have been reeling from allegations of ethnic discrimination is hosting an annual expo catering to Hispanics.

An annual festival of Hispanic culture and business known as Latino Expo is coming to East Haven for two days beginning May 5.

Town official Frank Gentilesco (jen-tih-LES’-coh) Jr. said Monday that the mayor will discuss the event at a news conference later this week.

Expo founder and producer Deby Gould said she was looking for a new venue after 11 years in Hartford and decided last week on the East Haven high school. She said it will be an opportunity for the town to work together with its Hispanic businesses.

Four East Haven police officers were arrested by the FBI in January on charges they harassed and abused Latinos.

Copyright Associated Press, Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Owner Defends Catering Company Amid Lawsuits

The owner of Morrell Caterers, who is facing a lawsuit by two former employees for allegedly serving tainted kosher food at three Long Island synagogues, including Temple Beth Torah in Melville, defended his business in a statement Monday.

“Those of you who have worked with me and my family over the decades know we take our responsibility to the Jewish community as a solemn promise. There is no price that can be attached to that trust and I will not allow my family’s heritage to be tarnished by what is essentially a terror attack on my company,” Scott Morrell wrote in an open letter to his customers.

Tom Cataldo, the former general manager of Morrell Caterers, and former executive chef, Michael Savitsky filed a lawsuit in February accusing Morrell, of ordering staff to prepare non-kosher food for outside parties in the kosher kitchen of the temple. They said that congregation’s kosher kitchen was used for the preparation of shrimp, pork and other non-kosher food.

In addition to the kosher violation allegations, Morrell is facing another lawsuit from his former employees, accusing him of withholding wages and tips to servers. The lawsuit also states the he substituted cheap alcohol for top-shelf liquor clients had paid for.

The charges have led at least one of Morrell’s clients, The Woodbury Jewish Center, to sever ties with the catering company.

Morrell is retaliating with a $10 million defamation suit against his accusers. He i

“Caterers are with people at key emotional points in their lives,” he said. “Weddings, bar mitzvahs and even shivas (a week of mourning practiced by many Jewish families) are catered and require a caterer to have an intuitive understanding of people’s needs and comfort levels. For some 40 years we have been part of people’s lives and many feel offended that our reputation has been attacked.”

Rabbi Susie Moskowitz of Temple Beth Torah said that the synagogue would continue its partnership with Morrell Caterers unless the company is found guilty of the charges. ”If the allegations turn out to be true, it will be a violation of legal and sacred trust,” she said in an earlier interview. 

“The truth is it can take decades to build trust and just moments to have that reputation destroyed. I am grateful to the president, board and Rabbi at Temple Beth Torah that they have displayed their confidence in me and our long standing integrity,” Morrell said in a statement.

Morrell had security cameras installed in the kitchen of Temple Beth Torah last week to monitor that the food preparation is in line with kosher customs.

Morrell Caterers also operates out of Temple Israel in Lawrence.

*This article has been corrected. Orginally it was written that the The Woodbury Jewish Center was located in Lawrence. The building is in Woodbury.

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Graduate Students Should Be Allowed to Unionize in Hawaii, But Legislation Failed

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University of Hawaii-Manoa Campus

BY UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII-MANOA GRADUATE STUDENT ORGANIZATIONGraduate student workers at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa have not received a pay increase since 2004 because they are legally barred from organizing to advocate for their rights as State employees.

Friday, March 2nd was the deadline for the House Committee on Finance to schedule a hearing for HB 2859 – a bill that would remove an impediment to forming a union by taking graduate students employed by UH off the list of state employees statutorily barred from inclusion in an appropriate bargaining unit.

Currently, graduate students are classified as “student help” and cannot organize. Sadly, the House Committee on Finance did not schedule HB 2859 for a hearing and now graduate student workers at UH are facing another year of advocacy before their pleas may be heard again before the House Committees.

Overworked and underpaid

With costs of living in Hawai‘i skyrocketing, it is becoming increasingly impossible for graduate students to survive on the often-meager income that they receive as graduate or teaching assistants and researchers. In addition to not receiving pay raises, graduate student workers also often face having to pull long hours grading for their professors, working in the lab or teaching courses.

“What is the typical life of a graduate student worker?” asked a Labor and Public Employment committee member to Sue Haglund, a former graduate student research assistant, and current Ph.d. candidate, during the House Committee on Labor and Public Employment February 7th hearing.

Sue Haglund explains, “Not every graduate student employee has the same typical life. We all have different experiences, stories, and struggles. When I was a graduate research assistant, I worked three other jobs to make ends meet. My typical day starts at 4 a.m. in the morning and usually ends well past midnight because I also have to work on my own academic requirements in order to complete my dissertation. Believe me if I had a decent livable wage, I wouldn’t be working three other jobs. I would be able to complete and focus on my work as a research assistant, as well as my own dissertation project in a timely fashion.”

“On average, I work 40-50 hours per week in addition to attending classes and writing my thesis,” says graduate assistant Justine Hamer who works for the Athletics Department at UH. “They just expect it of us. We can’t complain since we don’t want our advisers to think we are lazy.”

Graduate student workers like Ms. Hamer experience long work-hours that affect their ability to perform in their classes and complete their degrees in a timely manner.

Even though graduate student workers are only supposed to work 20 hours per week, which leaves some time for coursework and thesis/dissertation-writing, students like Ms. Hamer are constantly pressured to pull longer hours, which makes “graduate assistants in my department take an average of three years to graduate instead of two,” according to Ms. Hamer.

Hawaii as exception

While Hawai‘i maintains its ban on graduate student worker’s right to unionize, other universities across the United States enjoy positive working relationships with graduate student unions that can advocate for graduate student workers, including those at New York University; Columbia University; the entire University of California system and dozens more on the mainland.

Despite paying taxes on their often-insufficient income, graduate student workers in Hawai‘i are considered “student help” by the current legislation and therefore barred from collective bargaining rights alongside “inmates, patients or wards of a state institution,” as the language in the current bill states. Instead of seeing the graduate student population as a tremendous asset to the State’s economy, the invaluable work that graduate students provide for the functioning of the UH system is not seen as important enough to merit the right to collectively bargain.

Opposition from University of Hawaii Administration

Since the bill was introduced in the end of January, both the House Committee on Labor and Public Employment and the House Committee on Higher Education passed the measure. The bill passed its second hearing and was referred to the Finance Committee where it failed to receive a hearing. After launching a massive signature campaign and garnering campus-wide, as well as national-level support, graduate student employees at UH are now left wondering – what happened?

The bill may have failed due to lack of political incentive on the part of the Finance Committee, but it is also possible that they experienced pressure from the University of Hawai’i Administration that has starkly opposed the bill since its inception. The university’s executive vice president for academic affairs/provost, Linda Johnsrud, opposed the bill at a hearing citing concerns that this may make graduate worker’s salaries negotiable in a time when the whole campus is experiencing cutbacks.

As universities across the country are being run more like corporations than institutions of higher learning, graduate student workers need to protect their rights as workers and taxpayers. The UH System employs over 8,000 people and is the third-largest-earning company and the third-highest employer in the state. Of the roughly 5,800 graduate students at UH, roughly 20 percent are employed by the university; teaching classes, running labs, grading papers and performing a variety of essential tasks that keep the university running.

Not giving up

Graduate student workers comprise an indispensable workforce for the UH-system, which greatly helps the State’s economy. If graduate students workers were paid livable wages and received affordable basic healthcare, we would see improved working relations between students and faculty, faster time to graduation, and in general, a healthier and more productive university workforce.

As it stands now, graduate student workers remain barred from even proposing the idea of a union to advocate on their own behalf.

Though, HB 2859 failed in this round, the Graduate Student Organization at UH- Mānoa remains firm in their vision to continue the campaign and will be actively working to ensure that by next year, graduate students workers in Hawai‘i will have the right to unionize.

Submitted by the UH- Mānoa Graduate Student Organization

 

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Obama to speak at Joplin High graduation

The high school was among the thousands of homes and buildings destroyed, and students have been attending classes in a nearby mall this year. Word traveled quickly through the student body Monday after the White House announced the president would speak at the May 21 graduation. He’ll also deliver remarks at Barnard College’s May 14 commencement and the Air Force Academy’s May 23 graduation.

“It’s just amazing that we can have such huge recognition for our school,” said senior Lexi Willcoxon, 18. “It’s such a huge honor. To be able to say the president is giving our commencement speech — that’s a memory that will last a lifetime.”

Obama attended a memorial service in Joplin one week after the deadly tornado, the worst to strike the United States in decades. Seven students and one staff member at Joplin schools were among the victims. Speaking at the memorial service, Obama promised residents “your country will be there with you every single step of the way.”

The president will travel to Joplin after the G-8 and NATO summits in Chicago. The school agreed to delay its graduation one day and hold it on a Monday to accommodate his schedule.

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Obama to speak at Joplin High graduation

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — President Barack Obama will speak at Joplin High School’s commencement, a year after a tornado struck just after the ceremony, killing more than 160 people and destroying much of the city.

The high school was among the thousands of homes and buildings destroyed, and students have been attending classes in a nearby mall this year. Word traveled quickly through the student body Monday after the White House announced the president would speak at the May 21 graduation. He’ll also deliver remarks at Barnard College’s May 14 commencement and the Air Force Academy’s May 23 graduation.

“It’s just amazing that we can have such huge recognition for our school,” said senior Lexi Willcoxon, 18. “It’s such a huge honor. To be able to say the president is giving our commencement speech — that’s a memory that will last a lifetime.”

Obama attended a memorial service in Joplin one week after the deadly tornado, the worst to strike the United States in decades. Seven students and one staff member at Joplin schools were among the victims. Speaking at the memorial service, Obama promised residents “your country will be there with you every single step of the way.”

The president will travel to Joplin after the G-8 and NATO summits in Chicago. The school agreed to delay its graduation one day and hold it on a Monday to accommodate his schedule.

Willcoxon was among a handful of Joplin residents who knew Obama was considering a return visit — her father is a Joplin school board member. But she remained skeptical until the 450-member senior class was told at a special assembly Monday morning.

“I was like, ‘Sure Dad, whatever you say,’” she recalled. “I was shocked, to say the least. Joplin is such a small town.”

Joplin schools superintendent C.J Huff said Obama’s visit will keep the nation’s attention on the recovery effort and honor a senior class that has “grown up a lot this year, just like all the rest of us.”

“I can’t even begin to express how proud I am of this particular class,” he said. “The resiliency they’ve shown, their leadership, their strength … Having the president here shines a spotlight on these kids, and all they’ve been able to accomplish.”

The tornado struck the city of 50,000 less than an hour after Joplin High wrapped up its 2011 graduation ceremony at nearby Missouri Southern State University. Will Norton, one of the students receiving a diploma that day, was killed in the storm as he drove home. This year’s commencement also will be held at the university.

News of Obama’s return to Joplin came other communities were struggling with the aftermath of deadly tornados. At least 40 people in five states died after tornado-spewing storms rolled across the Midwest and South on Friday. In Henryville, Ind., tornadoes destroyed the education complex housing the Henryville Junior/Senior High School and the town’s elementary school.

An earlier round of storms last week killed 13 people.

Obama traditionally delivers the commencement address at a different military service academy every spring.

His appearance at Barnard, a women’s college affiliated with Columbia University in New York City, is significant in an election year when Democrats are trying to use gender politics to their advantage. A strident backlash by social conservatives against a new federal requirement that insurance plans offer women free birth control has created what Democrats see as a golden opportunity.

Associated Press writer Julie Pace in Washington contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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Kim Kardashian donated wedding cash to Dream Foundation: report


Kim Kardashian thanked her money-bag wedding guests, telling them their green gifts all went to charity, according to a published report today.

The reality starlet claimed that gifts she received for her made-for-TV wedding to Nets forward Kris Humphries went to the Dream Foundation, a California charity that assists terminally ill patients, celebrity Web site TMZ reported.

Kardashian’s vague statement didn’t make clear if she only forked over just cash gifts, or if she also liquidated non-cash presents as well.

“I would like to thank you for your generous and thoughtful wedding gift,” she wrote. “It has taken me some time to pull everything together but I wanted to let you know that the money for every gift received by me at my wedding has been donated to the Dream Foundation.”

She called the Dream Foundation “an organization that I am very passionate about.”

A rep for the Santa Barbara-based charity and Kardashian’s publicity could not be reached for comment.

TMZ reported the total donation to be about $200,000.

Wedding guests have also received a thank-you note from the Dream Foundation.

“Kim felt that this was the most fitting way to acknowledge and pay forward your gift with the same compassion and kindness it was intended,” the charity wrote to guests.

Kardashian filed for divorce after her 72-day “marriage” to Humphries.

They reportedly made about $17 million off the reality TV event — almost $15 million in a deal with E! for a four-hour special and more than $2 million from selling wedding pictures to People magazine.

The wedding ceremony cost $10 million to stage, but it’s been widely reported they didn’t spend a dime, with vendors and friends tossing money and services at them just to be included in the high-profile TV event.

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