Hooters opens ‘Hoots’ without skimpy outfits

Waitresses at the US-franchised Hooters restaurant strike a pose for a group photo following a busy night where customers packed a full-house to watch the much anticipated China-USA basketball game in Beijing on August 10, 2008, where the US defeated China 101-70 in their 2008 Beijing Olympic Games men's basketball opener. Hooters, which first opened in Clearwater, Florida in 1983 and became known for its scantily-clad waitresses serving beer and chicken wings, opened in 435th branch in the Chinese capital in September 2007 as Beijing prepared to spruce itself up with more international restaurants and lifestyle options in anticipation of the 2008 summer Olympics now underway.     AFP PHOTO /Frederic J. BROWN / AFP PHOTO / FREDERIC J. BROWN

Waitresses at the US-franchised Hooters restaurant strike a pose for a group photo following a busy night in Beijing, China. Hooters, which first opened in Clearwater, Florida, in 1983 became known for its scantily-clad waitresses serving beer and chicken wings. AFP

NEW YORK, United States — Hooters is hoping people really do like it for its food.

Hooters Management Corp., a licensee of Hooters of America, says it opened a restaurant Monday that doesn’t feature waitresses in tight tops. It says the “Hoots” restaurant outside Chicago has people ordering at the counter rather than at tables, from male and female employees.

Neil Kiefer, CEO of Hooters Management Corp., says the restaurant in Cicero, Illinois, is a test and it will serve only about a dozen menu items, including chicken wings.

Hooters, which first opened in Clearwater, Florida, in 1983 became known for its scantily-clad waitresses serving beer and chicken wings.

The move comes as the restaurant industry faces flat customer traffic, though fast-food places are expected to steal business from sit-down chains, according to The NPD Group.

The U.S. had 337 Hooters restaurants in 2015, down from 340 in 2014, industry tracker Technomic said. CBB

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