Stew Leonard discusses July 4 cookout costs, beef prices, and supply
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Summary
The segment features Stew Leonard, CEO of Stew Leonard's, discussing July 4th barbecue costs amid higher meat prices, consumer shifts to cheaper proteins like chicken, and reassurance of ample food supplies. Maria Bartiromo references American Farm Bureau data on cookout costs rising 4% year-over-year and USDA reports on tight cattle supplies. Leonard highlights store operations, patriotic items, TikTok-driven trends, and competition in the sector. The interview closes with a water safety message. Sourcing includes named data from USDA and the Farm Bureau, on-screen graphics for prices, and Leonard's direct commentary.
Editorial Assessment
Claims hold up well against recent authoritative data, with the cookout cost, herd size, and merger details aligning closely to primary sources. The segment provides useful context on beef supply dynamics and price-driven substitutions but offers limited counterpoints on broader inflation drivers or regional variations. Framing reassures viewers on availability while acknowledging cost increases, potentially downplaying longer-term supply constraints. Viewers miss deeper discussion of how consolidation might affect independent grocers or specific regional price data beyond national averages.
Key Moments
Average 4th of July cookout for 10 costs $73, up 4% from $70 last year
Matches American Farm Bureau Federation 2026 survey of $73.82 (rounded), up 4% from prior year
U.S. cattle herd at 75-year low, driving beef prices
USDA January 2026 inventory: 86.2 million head, lowest since 1951
Kroger acquiring Giant Eagle in $1.65 billion deal
Deal announced July 1, 2026; $1.25B cash plus $400M liabilities assumed
Plenty of food and no shortages for holiday weekend
Leonard states stores grinding beef and baking daily; no contemporaneous shortage reports