![]() ![]() ![]() Mark ultimately offers him $1.5 million for the Pizza Pack, but Tate came into the Tank determined to work with Lori. After the break, Tate asks for $5 million, which Mark calls “insane,” but he tells Tate to keep thinking as he hears from the other Sharks. So as they head into the final commercial break, he tells Tate to think what it’d cost to buy his company outright. Mark isn’t interested in a slice of the company he wants the whole damn pie. He wants $100,000 for 10 percent of the company. In just five months, he’s done over $250,000 in sales. ![]() He makes them for $4 per pack, and sells them for $24.99. You can also reheat the entire pie in the container, all at once. 3: COLLAPSIBLE PIZZA CONTAINER | Tate Koenig, who appeared in Season 12 and left without a deal for the Cheese Chopper, returns with the Pizza Pack, a collapsable pizza storage container that can store a single slice or an entire pie, and comes with five divider trays that not only keep slices separate during storage, but double as microwavable pizza plates. (Whoa!) Robert goes in with Barbara, and they up their offer to $600,000 for 10 percent. They up the equity to 12 percent, then Barbara comes in with an offer of her own: $400,000 for 10 percent - and if she can’t bring their sales up to $400 million in two years, she’ll give them half their stock back. But before she makes them an offer, we have our second viewer poll: Do you have a hard time picking baby boogers? The results clearly have no real impact on Lori’s decision, who comes in with an offer: $400,000 for 10 percent… but she’d like Mark to go in with her. So, he offers them $400,000… for 10 percent of the company. Believe it or not, he says, he doesn’t have a nose picker in his portfolio. This year alone, they’re on track to do $5.4 million in sales - and $1 million in profits. Since 2015, they’ve made over $15 million. It’s an $8 million valuation, but they have the sales to back it up. 2: BABY BOOGER PICKER | Sina and Nina Farzin enter the Tank seeking $400,000 for five percent of their company: Oogiebear, a product line that helps children (and parents!) breathe more easily. Lori matches that offer, then Daymond jumps back in - same offer! Jeff and Stacy came in hoping to partner with Daymond, so they accept his deal. After seeing the results, Robert makes the couple an offer: $200,000 for 15 percent. ABC then opens the polls for viewers at home to weigh in during the commercial break. Robert then turns to the studio audience for a show of hands, to see how often the average American buys new underwear. Barbara make them an offer - $200,000 for 20 percent - but it significantly reduces their valuation. (When their time is up, you can literally plant your pants!) They’re on pace to do $500,000 this year, but they’ve valued the company at $4 million - ouch! Also not in their favor: One pair of their eco-friendly skivvies costs between $20-24, which is more than the average American can afford. 1: COMPOSTABLE UNDERWEAR | Jeff and Stacy Grace enter the Tank seeking $200,000 in exchange for five percent of their company: Kent, maker of the world’s first compostable underwear. ![]()
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