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Chipotle is targeting the top of the K-shaped economy

Chipotle Mexican Grill plans to raise menu prices by 1-2% this year — and leadership is betting that its core consumer segment, digital natives who earn over $100k, won’t mind.

Speaking during Tuesday’s fourth-quarter earnings call, interim CEO Scott Boatwright said Chipotle is focusing on boosting foot traffic and revenue amid weak comparable sales. To do that, they’re targeting their core customer, who sits firmly at the top end of the K-shaped economy.

Chipotle recently conducted a “deep dive” of consumer research to identify the demographics and desires of its core audience and refine its strategy accordingly, Boatwright said.

“What we’ve learned is the guest skews younger, a little higher income, is typically a digital native, and that their grounded purpose aligns with our North Star as a brand, around clean food, clean ingredients, high protein,” Boatwright said. “We are the way they want to eat, and we’re going to lean into that in the most meaningful way.”

“After looking at the data last week, we learned that 60% of our core users are over $100,000 a year in average household income,” he added. “That gives us confidence that we can lean into that group in a more meaningful way, whether it’s the solo occasion and/or group occasions to really drive meaningful transaction performance in the year.”

Chipotle beat revenue estimates in 2025, its earnings report released on Tuesday showed, despite comparable restaurant sales decreasing 1.7%. The company projected its comparable sales in 2026 would be “about flat,” accounting for the openings of between 350 and 370 new restaurants.

In 2026, Chipotle’s margins will remain “under pressure,” Chief Financial Officer Adam Rymer said during the call, so consumers can expect pricing to increase 1-2% to narrow the gap between rising expenses and menu prices.

The broader restaurant segment is struggling with slumping sales as the K-shaped economy has upended the typical playbook for value deals and marketing campaigns. Lower-income consumers have been cutting back on spending, especially dining out, as they face rising costs across the board, while higher-income households show no signs of slowing their spending.

To draw in traffic, Chipotle recently launched its new protein snack menu, allowing customers to purchase a single taco or a side of meat (either chicken or steak) in a cup. It has also sped up the cadence of its limited-time offer releases, such as the recent promotions for chicken al pastor and red chimichurri sauce.

Those promotions seem to be working, and are proof that Chipotle’s core customer isn’t particularly price-sensitive, Boatwright said during Tuesday’s call.

Prior to the protein snack menu debut, Boatwright said leadership considered whether the launch would result in a “consumer trade-down” effect, a common phenomenon in which price-sensitive consumers opt for a discount deal or a lower-cost menu item than they’d usually order to find better value — but “frankly, we just didn’t see it.”

Instead of becoming a cheaper alternative to their usual favorite, customers are frequently purchasing the protein side as an add-on to their typical order, which Boatwright said “gives us confidence that the core consumer is not necessarily looking for a smaller, lower price-pointed component to the menu.”

Boatwright added that Chipotle will continue to test ideas to keep consumers coming back, including more limited-time offers and drink innovations. He also teased a “Happier Hour” deal specifically to re-engage younger and lower-income customers, but he added, “I don’t know if it’ll be a meaningful unlock for Chipotle.”

Chipotle’s stock sank by more than 6% in after-hours trading.




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AOC and Paris Hilton team up on a bill targeting AI deepfake porn

Paris Hilton and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez are taking on AI-generated deepfake porn.

The hotel heiress and businesswoman traveled to the Capitol on Thursday for a press conference with the New York Democrat and Republican Rep. Laurel Lee of Florida to promote the Disrupt Explicit Forged Images and Non-Consensual Edits Act, or DEFIANCE Act.

The bill would create a civil right of action allowing victims of AI-generated deepfake porn to sue the creators and distributors of those images.

“While these images may be digital, the harm to victims is very real,” Ocasio-Cortez said. “Women lose their jobs when they are targeted with this, teenagers switch schools, and children lose their lives.”

Hilton spoke emotionally about having an intimate video of her shared widely online when she was 19.

“People called it a scandal. It wasn’t. It was abuse. There were no laws at the time to protect me,” Hilton said. “There weren’t even words for what had been done to me. The internet was still new, and so was the cruelty that came with it.”

“What happened to me then is happening now to millions of women and girls in a new and more terrifying way,” Hilton added.

Though Elon Musk’s X and the AI chatbot Grok were not mentioned by name at the press conference, the push to pass the bill comes after the AI agent began generating sexualized images of people, including minors, in response to prompts from users on X. The AI images spurring widespread concerns and even bans on Grok in some countries.

X has since stopped the Grok account from generating sexualized images of real people when tagged on the social network — though you can still do so using the app. Elon Musk, the owner of X, has said that anyone “using Grok to make illegal content will suffer the same consequences as if they upload illegal content.”

“There is an explosion of AI generating explicit images of children,” Ocasio-Cortez wrote earlier this month in response to news coverage of the Grok-generated images. “And it’s not just actresses. Across the country, more and more teenage girls are becoming victims of deepfake harassment. Congress must step in and pass my DEFIANCE Act to ensure victims can seek justice.”

Social media companies have largely been shielded from being held legally liable for illegal content shared on their platforms thanks to Section 230 of The Communications Decency Act of 1996, though the provision has come under fire from both Republicans and Democrats in the last decade.

The DEFIANCE Act passed the Senate last week by a voice vote, meaning no senator objected. It remains unclear when the bill will come up for a vote in the Senate, though Speaker Mike Johnson told The Independent recently that he’s “certainly in favor of it.”

In May, President Donald Trump signed the “TAKE IT DOWN Act” into law, which includes a provision requiring platforms to take down AI-generated revenge porn. That provision doesn’t fully take effect until May 2026.

This isn’t the first time Hilton has come to Capitol Hill to advocate for a piece of legislation.

In both 2021 and 2023, she came to Washington to push for the passage of a bill aimed at combating abuse in residential treatment facilities for troubled teens.




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