Census of a fast food nation
Geoff West
I’m a guy like most guys. I’ve got urges -- hungers deep inside me.
So, I spend quite a bit of time hangin’ out with some of my favorite
ladies on 17th Street, enjoying their company and having my needs
met.
Ever since one of them, a long-in-the-tooth French chick named
Coco, was forced to leave her favorite corner, I found it necessary
to move on up the street a short distance whenever I felt like I
needed some midday satisfaction. Two very nice gals, Ruby and Wendy,
hang out on the other side of the street and kind of take turns
satisfying my hungers. Have I got your attention yet?
It’s always an interesting experience when I go to see Miss Wendy.
I don’t actually see her around much, so I just hang out at the place
with her name on it.
Every day is the same, but different, at Wendy’s. The music is
usually the same -- a nice blend of soft rock -- but the clientele
differs from hour to hour, day to day.
Some days, when I go in for my meal of chicken strips and “senior
frosty” (What did you think I was talking about, for goodness sake?
This is a family newspaper, after all) there will be hoards of
boisterous high school students, pretending no one else in the world
exists as they bellow their conversations and shout into cellphones
to friends across the room. I have not figured out whether all these
young people have gone deaf from the music they listen to on their
Walkman or Ipod, but I do know that most of them seem unable to
communicate at anything below a 100-decibel level.
Other times this store is a refuge for geriatrics, relaxing with a
meal not too dissimilar to mine, which always includes the senior
frosty. I watch them as they peacefully sit and enjoy their little
meal -- the best value in town, by the way -- and quietly talk with
friends who have joined them or who have just become friends for the
first time that day.
Sometimes I see young mothers with their accompanying infestation
of rug-rats, ranging in age from 0 to about 6 years old, each of whom
has demanded and received a kid’s meal with toy. The toy, of course,
is the only thing that really matters. No worries about these
youngsters becoming obese -- most of the food on their tray ends up
on the floor or table or is smeared on their hands and faces or
squished into their clothes. The debris field around their tables
reminds me of the food fight from “Animal House.” Only through
osmosis would these urchins get too many calories.
Sometimes I see business folks, young and old, yapping on their
cellphones while trying to grab a quick meal before continuing on
their quest for their next -- or first -- million. They are usually
rubbing elbows with electricians, plumbers, cable guys and
extermination technicians, all busily downing double-stacks,
double-bacon cheeseburgers or Mandarin chicken salads.
On occasion the ambience is spiced up by a fragrant homeless
person or two, wearing what looks like a lifetime’s supply of scum on
their clothes, as they seek a warm, quiet place to sit and eat their
dollar meal -- and doze as long as the manager will let them.
The most fun begins, however, when these groups descend on the
friendly confines of this establishment simultaneously. As I watch
from behind my Wall Street Journal, I get a real chuckle out of the
kids screaming and flinging “freedom fries;” the teenagers yelling
and cellphoning; the business folks squirming; the geezers frowning
and the homeless scowling as this mixture of ages, backgrounds and
interests compete for floor and air space to the beat of Jimmy
Buffet.
On days when I’m feelin’ like the company of a little more mature
woman, I mosey on up the street to Ruby’s place, where the setting is
slightly more formal. Here, I am waited on hand and foot by bright
young people who have been known to burst into song to celebrate a
client’s birthday. This establishment shares some of what passes for
ambience and also shares many of the same customers.
I’ve seen many of the same harried young moms and fry-flingin’
rug-rats here, too. Following a meal, during which they scribble on
their placemats with crayons and condiments, they usually top off
their attempt at nourishment with a kid’s ice cream cone. This makes
a perfect coat of varnish on the stains produced by ketchup, mustard
and guacamole. I’m sure some of these kids would stick to the wall if
you pressed them a little.
One difference here, though, is the noise factor. Since it doesn’t
have carpet like Miss Wendy’s place, the sounds emanating from the
screeching squirts bounces off the plastic walls and tile floors so,
particularly on Kids-Eat-Free-Tuesday -- it’s like having a meal
inside a drum. It’s very convenient that the parents can snag a
cerveza (beer) at this establishment -- a very necessary libation,
I’m sure.
Both of my favorite places provide a welcome respite from
contemplation of things political. There are worse places than these
two locations for lunchtime entertainment on my side of town.
* GEOFF WEST is a Costa Mesa resident and frequent contributor to
the forum pages.
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