Business & Tech
Chuck E. Cheese Could Close All Restaurants, Including 4 On LI
With $1 billion in debt, Chuck E. Cheese is reportedly not paying rent, furloughing staff and paying executives millions in bonuses.

LONG ISLAND, NY — It appears the popular children's restaurant chain, Chuck E. Cheese, may be the latest business to close its doors permanently as a result of financial struggles amid the coronavirus pandemic.
CEC Entertainment, the Texas-based company that runs 527 locations in 47 states, is nearly $1 billion in debt, reports the Wall Street Journal. There are four Chuck E. Cheese locations on Long Island, including Hempstead, West Islip, Patchogue and Hicksville.
The chain, known for hosting children's birthday parties, closed all of its locations in March when the coronavirus pandemic struck. According to the Journal, it stopped making its monthly rent payments, furloughed most hourly employees and about two-third of all its support staff.
In recent weeks, CEC Entertainment has approached lenders seeking a $200 million loan to delay bankruptcy and deciding whether to make a nearly $2 million quarterly debt payment due at the end of the month, according to the Journal.
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Chuck E. Cheese, which opened in 1977, serves pizza, complemented by arcade games, amusement rides and animatronic displays with a focus on family entertainment.
CEC Entertainment. Inc. ("CEC"), headquartered in Irving, Texas, was originally incorporated under the name ShowBiz Pizza Place, Inc. In 1998, the company changed its name.
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The asset management firm Apollo Global Management purchased Chuck E. Cheese in 2014 and subsequently took it private. Last week, CEC announced nearly $3 million in what the Journal described as "prebankruptcy bonuses" for a trio of top executives last week.
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