Kevin Roberts remembers when he could get a bacon cheeseburger, fries and a drink from Five Guys for $10. But that was years ago. When the Virginia high school teacher recently visited the fast-food chain, the food alone without a beverage cost double that amount.

Roberts, 38, now only gets fast food “as a rare treat,” he told CBS MoneyWatch. “Nothing has made me cook at home more than fast-food prices.”

Roberts is hardly alone. Many consumers are expressing frustration at the surge in fast-food prices, which are starting to scare off budget-conscious customers.

A January poll by consulting firm Revenue Management Solutions found that about 25% of people who make under $50,000 were cutting back on fast food, pointing to cost as a concern.

  • reddig33@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    If you can eat at a nicer place for the same amount of money, why would you eat at McDonald’s?

    • BobbyNevada@discuss.tchncs.de
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      2 months ago

      I would rather spend that money on a local burger joint. Give me a single named joint with a generic paper bag with grease stains on the outside.

      • spongebue@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Unfortunately, so many local burger joints have a “flagship” burger featuring a Sysco patty, cheese, lettuce, tomato, and onion for $17, sides extra.

        • MrVilliam@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          I know a Sysco burger when I see one. Normal burgers aren’t chode cylinders; Sysco burgers have goddamn right angles. They taste like they’re about 40% gristle. It’s basically just the “technically beef” parts of dollar store dog food pressed into the vague shape of a burger patty. The paper that separates the frozen turd patties is better, both in terms of flavor and nutrition. Fuck Sysco burgers. If Sysco reads this and doesn’t like what I have to say, they can go fuck themselves until their asshole is as fucked up as a Sysco burger eater’s asshole 93 minutes after their shitty lunch.

          • catloaf@lemm.ee
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            2 months ago

            Sysco has variety in their products. I just checked and they apparently have 128 different beef patty SKUs: https://shop.sysco.com/app/catalog?q=beef+patty&BUSINESS_CENTER_ID=syy_cust_tax_meatseafood&ITEM_GROUP_ID=syy_cust_tax_meat

            Though I’m sure a lot of them are just variations on leanness and package size. Point is, unless you’re going to a specialty place, any restaurant is going to be buying Sysco patties (or at best, Sysco ground beef packs and hand-formed into patties) but the nicer restaurants are going to be using the better choices, and the shitty places are going to be using the cheapest ground beef formed into a cylinder and frozen.

            • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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              2 months ago

              Sysco supplies a lot of restaurants with food, all kinds of places. But they have also optimized and helped with Enshitification by having restaurants mold their menu on the offerings of Sysco.

              What ends up happening is every Mexican, Burger, and pretty much everything else that buys from Sysco tastes exactly the same. Mexican food is especially obvious.

              • spongebue@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                I’m not sure this is an enshitification thing. That should have a degree of hostility with users. This is plain ol’ low-quality product (made easy)

            • Potatos_are_not_friends@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              Spoilers:

              Sysco provides a lot of restaurant ingredients/premade food. Your chili from fancy restaurant might just be the same damn thing from Wendy’s, the dollar store, and the niche “homemade” food cart.

              They might decorate it a bit differently once they open the bag.

              This isn’t a good or bad thing. It’s how you can order fries in Maine and California, and they still taste the same. But also why some restaurants, side dishes taste the damn same.

      • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        Anything where you can get a burger bun that doesn’t taste like it full of sugar is worth it over anything else.

        The bread quality in america is the lowest of the low.

    • TheSpookiestUser@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Convenience and familiarity, mostly. If you go to a McDonalds you know exactly what you’ll get and you’ll be able to get it pretty quick.

      • Dkarma@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Name one burger joint that doesn’t have exactly what mcds has and more…this comment is laughable.

        People eat at McDonald’s because of marketing.

        • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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          2 months ago

          I hate McDonalds, but on roadtrips they are usually a godsend. A lot of them still have a play place which lets my kids be monkeys for a bit, and the Happy Meals give them a shitty toy to occupy their time for the evening.

          It sucls, I don’t eat there, but McD’s has its place.

        • bolexforsoup@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          I think all fast food is equal tier basically, but they absolutely taste different from each other. I get it like twice a year at most and even I know that man.

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          I’ve eaten a lot of burgers and fries in my life and can’t think of a single place that replicates a McDonalds burger and fry. Having the same menu item (as in a “double cheeseburger”) doesn’t mean anything as they all taste and look different from one another.

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        2 months ago

        If you go to a McDonalds you know exactly what you’ll get

        A poorly put together “meal” that very likely has been sitting under a heater for a length of time unless you went there when it was busy. And if it was busy, the chance for mistake is high and it’s going to be sloppily put together. What so you can save a few minutes? Most places do take-away… so you call them, place an order, pick it up. No sitting 10-20 minutes in drive-thru. And you got more food, better food, for the exact same price and you probably got it faster on take-out. And dining in… you wait a few minutes… how do you not have a few minutes?

        And who actually cares about familiarity? That’s either saying, you go to that one place way to much and your food choices are predictable and boring. Or you’re highly susceptible to advertising. And really, those two things aren’t mutually exclusive.

    • ZeroCool@vger.social
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      2 months ago

      Yeah I can get a better burger/fry combo from a local restaurant that uses high quality ingredients and cares about having my business. There’s no reason to pay the same for low quality junk from a fast food chain.

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      2 months ago

      Seriously. For the same price as McD’s I can go to In-n-Out. That’s just comparing fast food places. For the price they’re charging for a Quarter Pounder I may as well go to a sit-down restaurant.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Speed, for one. If I’m traveling across the country and I just want to eat and get back on the road, or even if I just need some breakfast before work, it’s a lot faster.

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        My go to for this stuff now is truck stops. They’ll usually have a fast food restaurant in them but also healthier options for snacks and meals

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      That nicer place is probably at home. Not that there’s anything wrong with it. But I think all fast food chains raised prices? At least here in Europe it’s not like McDonald’s is somehow standing out as more expensive. Worse, yes. But that was always the case

      • Dkarma@lemmy.world
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        You’re failing to realize that the issue here is that it went from basically the cheapest food you could buy to more expensive than cooking at home is the issue here.

        Millions of people grew up eating this crap cuz it was cheap. Now that it’s as expensive as other better options people are starting to realize it isn’t cheap anymore.

        • bolexforsoup@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          It’s still cheaper to feed a family of 4 with McDonald’s than cooking for 4 unless they all want instant ramen. You just might not get what you want off the menu.

    • Bluefalcon@discuss.tchncs.de
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      2 months ago

      I’m seeing more local places popping up. I’m happy with that. $15 for a big Mac meal or $15 for the Chicken tikka masala? I’ll take the big Mac, said no one.

      • The_v@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Full dinner for my family of 4 at McD’s us $65.

        Full dinner at my locally owned restaurant that offers takeout plus lunch the next day from leftovers - $70.

        • marx2k@lemmy.world
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          Full dinner for my family of 4 at McD’s us $65.

          That is fucking bananas in pajamas bananas.

          That is bottom tier food for even fast food. $65??!?

          It costs $65 for two dinners from my local Indian restaurant and those dinners can serve two. Our serve two for 2 days.

          wtf

      • HeyJoe@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Same here, but the reason this doesn’t work is because a bic Mac meal doesn’t cost $15. It’s more like $10 or even lower with deals. If you are on a budget and have no time to cook, I can see how the cheaper option can still sway the decision. For me, it’s lower than that and will settle for Wendy’s 4 for 5. At $5 bucks, it’s absolutely worth it every now and then when I just want something cheap and quick.

        • Bluefalcon@discuss.tchncs.de
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          Dave’s combo $9.69 I assume that is a small combo. Local burger place $14.30 that’s with a fountain drink 20oz and a small fry (sweet potato or normal ones). Their small fry will feed two adults, like five guys, they add extra fries.

          Local place uses local beef, veggies, and bacon. Wendy’s I get mystery meats. I’m hoping it’s fresh but we know none of it is.

          If you get an equal product at Wendy’s it would be around $14.69. You will get the large shit fries and a liter of cola. I’ll take the local place. For the record I picked the cheapest meal Wendy’s had bc most families would look for a “deal”. There is the cheaper menu which has jr burgers but my local place has sliders for more $4.45 compared to the $2.49 jr burger. However I can get a good medium rare slider with normal toppings for the $4.45. I will still take that. More food for cheaper.

          Large big Mac is $12.21 so I was off by $2.79

    • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      It’s not just fast food unfortunately. Sit down restaurants, even mom and pop ones are through the roof in pricing as well. Even groceries to cook at home are crazy these days with the pricing

  • Snapz@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Overdramatic headlines to try to make this more exotic and mysterious than the reality - YOU GREEDY FUCKS HAVE INTENTIONALLY TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF EVERYONE SINCE THE PANDEMIC STARTED. It was never acceptable and you finally pushed fast enough to even upset the wealthy and those who spend outside their means.

    You are all broken humans. You chase endless growth without purpose, you are a disease.

    • eyy@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      News headlines gonna be like “millenials are bankrupting an American institution, the fast food industry”

          • Krauerking@lemy.lol
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            2 months ago

            Actually I still can get avocados for a dollar a piece and you only use half for some toast plus a single slice of bread and an egg and a some hot sauce…

            I think avocado toast literally is the cheaper option.

            But it’s really just older people seeing constant access to specialty foods that were rarer and thinking if we are burning the planet down to have produce whenever we want it then it must be better than it was back when you couldn’t.

            • meowMix2525@lemm.ee
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              Tbf I think the avocado toast outrage was over people paying inflated prices at a restaurant for something so easy and cheap to make at home, not the dish itself or any of its ingredients ever being a luxury.

    • Facebones@reddthat.com
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      In 2024, pointing out that costs have been down for a couple years now and increased pricing is just greed makes you a dirty communist, even to liberals.

      They can fly their little pride flag but it turns out there’s only one class they’ll REALLY go to bat for and its the owner class.

  • spaghettiwestern@sh.itjust.works
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    Not only have the prices become absurd, the quality control has gone to crap.

    For years we’ve taken regular road trips and use to stop at fast food places every single time. In the past 3 years we’ve repeatedly been served triple salted food, awful sub sandwiches, “cheese” burgers missing the cheese and condiments, and cold burger patties so old and dry they couldn’t be choked down. When you factor in the amount of waste due to the lousy food, the actual prices are way higher than what’s shown on the menu.

    The ridiculous prices and regular bad experiences pushed us to a tipping point and we now find a grocery store along the way for deli sandwiches. It usually only adds about 5 minutes to the trip. Not only are the prices about 30% less but the food is consistently edible which makes the real price probably 1/2 of fast food places.

    This is something we wouldn’t have taken he time to do a few years ago, so for us there’s been a big upside to the absurd prices and lousy food. We’re permanently changed our habits and cut fast food out of our diet completely. We are now spending less and getting consistently better quality, healthier food.

    Maybe we should send “thank you” notes to the various fast food corporate headquarters.

    • Tikiporch@lemmy.world
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      You can’t pay your employees poverty wages and expect them to care about quality.

      It has to hurt for the people who spend their hard earned money on a night off from cooking by ordering out at McDonald’s, but it’s a lesson we all learn the hard way.

      • _number8_@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        it’s very hard to give a shit when you’re making a meal that costs $15 in 30 seconds when you make maybe $9/hr. the math is so plainly unfair and it’s right in front of you all day

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          Yeah. When you entire shift could just barely afford a days worth of calories and nothing more I think you would basically check out.

    • 🔰Hurling⚜️Durling🔱@lemmy.world
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      I usually go to the salad bar of my grocery store and pickup a salad with no protein or dressing, then go to the dressing isle and buy a bottle of the dressing of my choice, finally go to the deli and pickup a cooked chicken. At home I shred the chicken and store it in a container and every day after I just stop buy the salad bar and pickup a hefty salad for $5, add a bit of my shredded chicken and dressing with gusto.

      Best lunch ever.

    • scops@reddthat.com
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      After trying a few grocery store deli sandwiches, I will avoid fast food sandwich shops unless there’s simply nothing else available. The deli is there to get you in the store to spend money. They don’t have as much of a financial incentive to skimp on the ingredients. It wasn’t uncommon for me to get a sandwich so stuffed I couldn’t close it

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    2 months ago

    The ridiculous part of this is that fast food is already subsidized by cheap corn, soy and dairy so their customers are getting screwed at both ends. I’m guessing we’ll see record fast food profits soon if we haven’t already.

    • buzz86us@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I wish we’d end corn subsidies… They put it in everything. Just move those subsidies to hemp so people can have real sugar. Hemp would be there much better crop to subsidize since it does everything.

      • seaQueue@lemmy.world
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        Ah, but you see - the proles might find a way to get high using hemp and that would hurt productivity. Better to drown them in corn syrup and obese corn fed factory farmed animals, then we can sell them diabetes medications and end of life care too.

        • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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          Also obesity and other such diseases kill people at around the point they’re reaching retirement age, meaning that the typical prole can create wealth for others during the full or almost full period of wealth creation and then likely die just before or just after retiring, saving on post-retirement and old-age costs.

          For the owner class in Capitalism, the perfect life expectation for proles is the one that exactly matches the retirement age.

        • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Ironically The War of Independence, The French and Indian War, and The War of 1812 were all fought, in part, over hemp production or taxes.

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        Not only does it do everything, it captures carbon better than any other plant. It’s so effective at it, that one harvest of one acre of hemp removes almost 10 times the carbon that one acre of trees would capture. Thing is that hemp does that in 3 months allowing 4 harvests per year, while trees take 150 years on average to grow. It also stores 85% of that carbon in the roots of the plant, the “waste” part as far as we are concerned, so we could produce biofuel, paper, clothing, food, and housing from the stuff without harming the effectiveness of the carbon capture. All we would need to do is collect the roots, compress them into a density that will not float, and dump them into the Marianas Trench. That way that carbon will be trapped down there for a few hundred million years.

      • TORFdot0@lemmy.world
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        The corn subsidies are here for a purpose. To ensure that we maintain a surplus so that we can avoid mass food shortages if a natural disaster such as the dust bowl of the 1930s wipes out several years of harvests. Hemp can’t be used as a food source.

        • zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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          So during a famine, we’ll have to live on what, canned corn for the duration? I think I’d rather eat the hemp.

          I’m no farmer, so I could be way off, but I feel like there are much better crops we could keep in surplus in case of famine.

          • TORFdot0@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            Corn is used in cereals, tortillas, chips, as a sugar substitute, and as animal feed. The one thing you won’t be eating is canned corn because that’s not the kind of corn that we subsidize.

            Corn is actually probably one of the most effective crops we could use in a surplus

        • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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          Hemp is a complete protein. Corn is not. Remember the gruel that Scrooge was eating? That’s hempseed. Hemp can be used for food, clothing, shelter, paper, biofuel, and a fuckton of other uses.

          • TORFdot0@lemmy.world
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            I’m not meaning to disparage the other uses of hemp.

            I’m not an expert in the uses of hemp for food but we already have the cultural palate and infrastructure for cornmeal and cornflour products, not so much for hempseed right now. If we had that back in the depression, maybe we would have subsidized hemp instead. Maybe attitudes could change in the future and we could shift to subsidizing hemp in the future. I know of a couple big hemp farms that have popped up near me, it’s possible. But it’s not feasible right now.

    • droans@lemmy.world
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      Don’t forget the beef subsidies, too!

      Per a 2015 Berkeley study, witjouy the beef and dairy subsidies, a Big Mac would cost $13 and a pound of beef would cost $30. Obviously both would be more now since inflation has raised prices by about 1/3 across the board and food prices have definitely grown faster than the average.

      • seaQueue@lemmy.world
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        Right, and beef is in turn subsidized by corn and soy subsidies as cheap feed - plus whatever industrial surplus feed they can find, like Skittles, which are subsided again via corn.

  • Kumatomic@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    tHe MaRkEt WiLl ReGuLaTe ItSelF! Okay sure, for the most profit without regard for the consumer. Corporations need a heavy hand.

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    I was flabbergasted yesterday when I got 2 happy meals for the kids, a mcrispy and a filet of fish, and the teller said $30. My wife and I just stared. Wtf happened. We went there for a quick easy cheap meal while road tripping. Next time we’re packing sandwiches.

    • snake_case_guy@lemmynsfw.com
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      I don’t know your family composition, but even here in Europe, 30€ for a quick meal for 4 is fucking cheap. Like, under the poverty-line cheap.

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        In Europe there is actually about 20% (it varies from country to country) VAT in such meals and in the countries were the price of those MacDonald’s products would be that high, the minimum salary (which is what most of people working for McD get paid) is actually high enough for people to be able to afford it.

        Were I am - Portugal - a Happy Meal is about €5, but then again the local minimum wage is €820 (per month, for 40h/week, so about $5.5 per hour)

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    Hey McDonald’s.

    This isn’t reddit so you probably won’t see this.

    Hashbrowns cost $1. Figure it out. Not here to haggle.

    Also can someone sue these MFS giving deals through apps? Like “sorry homeless guy pan-handling out front, medium fry is only free if you have a $200 phone! Sucks to suck.” How is that ok?

    • Liz@midwest.social
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      I have vague memories of there being a law that you’re supposed to just be able to ask the cashier to apply any discounts you know about at the cash register?

        • Liz@midwest.social
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          I thought about it for a second, and could see it being an accessibility law passed for this very type of thing. Kind of like how (in the US) you must always be able to join a sweepstakes without paying any money (usually you mail them your name and address) even if the way they want you to join us by buying product or something. But anyway, I don’t actually know about that coupon thing.

          • jj4211@lemmy.world
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            The “No Purchase Necessary” isn’t about giving everyone fair access to the winnings, it’s about being legal even where gambling is not, since “maybe winning” something in exchange for money is either illegal or highly regulated throughout the US.

        • foggy@lemmy.world
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          There is a law in the US that any x for y deal must be sold at the ratio unit price.

          So like “10 for $10!” Means they are breaking the law to sell them at a price more than $1 for 1.

          The caveat is packaging. E.G. Marlboro can wrap two packs of cigarettes and call it a Buy One Get One deal which is not the same. Weird little loopholes.

    • scottywh@lemmy.world
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      The apps are fucking awesome though.

      I literally get free burgers with no purchase required regularly at the moment thanks to a fast food app.

      • Rekorse@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        I’m surprised to see all the replies about the McDonalds app and how its actually a great deal.

        Most companies are doing this now, and giving free food regularly as an incentive to keep using it.

        Why would these companies spend money to keep us using the app, and keep it installed?

        The truth is, they make far more off selling your data then they spend giving away food periodically. Look at the permissions the app needs under the guise of “making it easy to tell when you are near a McDonalds so we can start cooking your food!”.

        Lemmy is supposed to be better about privacy and such than this.

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          2 months ago

          That’s not the only motive. The other is that if people are in the habit of using the phones and kiosks to place their orders, then that’s less money spent on people stuck on order taking. I’d even speculate that is the primary driver of “discounts in the app”.

          For many of the restaurants, I’m actually in favor of tapping in the order, since it’s less likely to screw up getting the order right when I’m tapping it in.

  • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Im in Canada and i was telling my daughter that when I was her age, I could walk into McDonald’s with $5 and get a big Mac meal and a nickel in change. Now it’s like $17+ for the same thing. Probably lower quality too.

  • ThrowawayOnLemmy@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Used to be that people went to fast food because it was good, fast, and cheap.

    These guys running the show have managed to reverse all three of those points. Now fast food is shit, slow, and expensive. It’s honestly amazing that people put up with it as long as they did.

  • Skyline969@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    My solution to making home cooking taste better than fast food was buying a fat sack of MSG and using it in everything. Truly it’s the king of flavor.

    • eyy@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      I mean, that’s basically what restaurants do…

      My friends and I were hanging out at my mates’ place (he used to work as a line cook), he made us all pasta and it tasted amazing.

      Turns out the secret was to add a scary amount of butter, and then add some more.

      Salt, butter and MSG is the secret behind half the restaurant industry.

      • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        2 months ago

        Sugar too.

        The calories don’t count if somebody else adds them behind closed doors.

      • Skyline969@lemmy.ca
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        2 months ago

        Pretty much. But publicly MSG still has that “ooo scary and harmful” stigma to it. It’s no more harmful than salt or sugar, but some weird racism against Chinese immigrants in the 40s created that stigma.

        • LeroyJenkins@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          “I ate 2 lbs of chow mein, a bucket of orange chicken, and 14 egg roll. the fucking MSG makes made me feel like shit!”

        • JovialMicrobial@lemm.ee
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          2 months ago

          It was invented by Japanese chemist Kikunae Ikeda who studied the chemical basis of kelp. Long story short He ate soup with brown kelp flakes and wondered why the kelp tasted so good, studied it and found msg. He then discovered a way to mass produce it from wheat and soy.

          Man was a food genius

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        2 months ago

        My wife and I made a pact never to return to TBell after they messed up 5 consecutive orders. The final straw was them putting meat in her potato+bean crunchwrap…

    • Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      They’re going to blame minimum wage raises, even though it was happening before the minimum wage raises, and in states where the minimum wage wasn’t raised at all.