For this week’s Basin Bites, we visit Presotea, a boba shop in Odessa that was one of the first to bring boba tea to the ...
Entrepreneurs Sébastien Fiset and Jess Frenette, who founded the bottled popping bubble tea brand called Bobba, were asking for funding in exchange for 18% of their company's ownership ...
A boba tea company apologized after Simu Liu called them out for cultural appropriation on his Canadian reality series Dragons’ Den. After the business partners introduced their bubble tea ...
In a clip from the series’ Oct. 10 episode that has since gone viral, two owners of a Quebec-based bubble tea brand called Bobba were looking for investors to go in on their growing business of ...
The Marvel actor has called for social media users to stop attacking a Canadian drink company after he voiced concern over the company's Dragons' Den pitch A Canadian boba tea company has ...
According to Fiset and Frenette, Bobba offers “unique” ready-to-drink bubble tea with “popping boba.” Bubble tea typically combines flavorful milk or regular tea with chewy tapioca balls ...
As much a textural marvel as a refreshing drink, bubble tea is one of Taiwan’s most renowned cultural exports. The eponymous ‘bubbles’ aren’t the result of carbonation, but a pile of chewy ...
They all contributed to the rise of bubble tea, the insanely popular Taiwanese drink that’s taken the world by storm in recent years. And now, it’s back in the spotlight thanks to recent ...
So why is TikTok in an uproar over bubble tea — and cultural appropriation? The saga kicked off last week, when an episode of “Dragons’ Den” aired Thursday on Canadian network CBC.
A boba company is apologizing after Chinese Canadian actor Simu Liu voiced concerns about cultural appropriation on CBC’s “Dragons’ Den.” On Thursday's episode of the “Shark Tank ...