• Re: This McDonald's Has Been Around since the 1970's and Never Served a Single Customer

    From Jerry Sauk@jerrysauk@hotmail.com to alt.food.fast-food on Fri May 22 13:17:56 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.food.fast-food


    "KlausSchadenfreude" <klaus.schadenfreudeREMOVE@gmail.com> wrote in message news:bvufuktj3ff3a3atke15q094v9v0ash1li@Is.Rudy.Canoza.dead.yet.com...

    There's a McDonald's in Southern California that's never served a
    single Big Mac or container of Chicken McNuggets to a paying public
    customer. At first glance, it has all the trappings of a suburban
    Mickey D's: the oversized sign displaying the brand's signature golden arches, the yellow-and-white accents and the drive-thru window.

    But despite all of its very real, very visible design touches, you'll
    never be able to place an order there.

    You see, this particular 5,000-square-foot McDonald's in the San
    Gabriel Valley's City of Industry is used solely for filming and
    production. Tucked away in a warehouse park on a quiet U-shaped side
    street off the main drag of South Azusa Avenue - which is otherwise
    home to a massive Walmart, car dealerships and big-box stores
    including Costco-like Asian market Resco Food Service - this ghost
    McDonald's is not open to the public. It's a point driven home by an
    ominous 10-foot steel fence that surrounds the property, as well as
    multiple signs indicating that security cameras are in use.

    "We could be open for business tomorrow if we wanted," Linda
    Magruder-Briggs, then the advertising production manager for
    McDonald's, told the Times in 1988.

    Interesting. I'll have to watch for it in the movie's and on commercial's


    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From KenitoBenito@Kenito@Benito.Het to alt.food.fast-food on Sat May 23 00:47:29 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.food.fast-food

    On Fri, 22 May 2026 13:17:56 -0500, "Jerry Sauk"
    <jerrysauk@hotmail.com> wrote:

    [...]

    "We could be open for business tomorrow if we wanted," Linda
    Magruder-Briggs, then the advertising production manager for
    McDonald's, told the Times in 1988.

    Interesting. I'll have to watch for it in the movie's

    Your feeding your well documented NEED to lie, via an apostrophe,
    is acknowledged.

    and on commercial's

    Your feeding your well documented NEED to lie, via an apostrophe,
    is acknowledged.
    You waited over a month to reply? What's the point in that?


    [Cue Jenny (Jerry) running away from the truth. Or diverting from it.]

    The name Jerry is a girl's name meaning "ruler with the spear or
    sacred name". https://nameberry.com/b/girl-baby-name-jerry
    --
    Over 500 documented lies of Jerry "Jenny" Sauk. http://jerrylies.byethost22.com/?i=2
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2