The leading source for credible citizen reporting

Report Your News
Take the tour...

America is pretty much the same all over

Glendale : CA : USA | 6 months ago  
Views: 2,696
  • Ahh..the Good Old Days of Car Hops!
    Ahh..the Good Old Days of Car Hops!
    Posted by: slydog
    america
Ahh..the Good Old Days of Car Hops!

"This used to be a hell of a good country."
-- Jack Nicholson in "Easy Rider," 1969


I was reading an entry on Huffington Post about restaurant chains that are in danger of going out of business, and one of the ones they mentioned was "Krispy Kreme."

The southern donut chain expanded too far and too fast and is carrying a large amount of debt. Servicing that debt cuts way into the company's income.

For some reason, that made me think of Coors beer. Anyone who came of age in the East in the '60s and '70s probably remembers that Coors was only sold west of the Mississippi River. Folks who traveled out West would invariably bring back a six-pack of Coors -- "Colorado Kool-Aid" -- and we would marvel over its good taste.

I hesitate to say those were the days, but there was something very interesting about this country in the days before everything from coast to coast and border to border became homogenized.

If you grew up in California, you raved about In 'n' Out burgers, while folks in New England loved Friendly's ice cream. I remember the first time I came out West in 1978, I was surprised to see that you couldn't get Stroh's beer.

One thing changed all that -- shopping malls. About 25 years ago, I started using a term that I had never heard before. Ten years ago -- or so -- George Will started using it.

"The mallification of America."

I believe that if you were to be blindfolded and dropped into most shopping malls in this country, and you weren't allowed to ask anyone where you were, you wouldn't be able to figure it out from the stores, from the way people dress or even the way people talk any more.

Regional accents certainly aren't what they once were. Most people are influenced by what they hear on television, and everyone from network anchors to characters on situation comedies seems to talk with that flat Midwestern twang now.

Local bookstores have become endangered by Barnes & Noble and Borders, and local sporting goods stores are being eliminated by the big chains as well. As for the old downtown areas, I'd be willing to be that if your town has a Wal-Mart, there's no thriving downtown shopping district.

I suppose this is a really minor thing to rant about, and it isn't as if I find myself brooding on the subject. But it was wonderful to be a kid growing up in Dayton, Ohio, and to travel to New York and see all sorts of stores I couldn't see at home.

Or to move from Ohio to Northern Virginia when I was 13 and find a lot of different chain restaurants than I knew back in the Midwest.

For about a decade, from 1981 to 1990, I moved a lot for my career. I lived in seven different states, and I saw a lot of different things. When I left Virginia and moved to Gastonia, N.C., I discovered the wonderful barbecue joints and the terrific fish camp restaurants, both there and in my next move to Anderson, S.C.

When I went to St. Louis in 1984, I found the wonderful Italian cuisine in the part of the city known as The Hill. A move to Greeley, Colo., in 1986 taught me about Rocky Mountain oysters, among other things, and Reno in 1988 showed me all the wide and varied casino buffets as well as authentic Mexican food.

L.A. in 1990 had pretty much everything, but there was one thing I found every time I moved. There was always a McDonald's, always a Burger King, always a TGIFridays or a Sizzler. Go to the mall wherever you are and 90 percent of the stores would be national chains.

I understand it, but that doesn't mean I have to like it. Successful businesses try to expand their territory as much as possibly, and if they drive out small local businesses in the process, well, c'est la vie.

It certainly makes it easier for people who are traveling. If you're old enough, you might remember the old adage, "never eat at a place called Mom's, unless your only other choice is a place called Eat."

You never know what you're going to get.

But if you go into a Burger King, that Whopper with cheese is going to taste the same in Oregon as it does in Mississippi or New Jersey.

Well, maybe not New Jersey.

I just think it's a shame that taking the uncertainty out of life also takes away some of the adventure.

  • Print
  • Share:
  • Share
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Stumbleupon
  • Posted By slydog slydog | 6 months ago
    Nice nostalgia & social commentary piece!
  • Posted By jongleur jongleur | 6 months ago
    CaliforniaMike, Thanks for sharing this trip down memory lane! I grew up in L.A. and my wife, then girlfriend, and I often frequented In-And-Out Burger when they gave away the free cartoon glass with every drink and before they proliferated like bunnies. I like Krispy Kreme donuts but noticed they are made with artificial ingredients and I would never eat another. And I wouldn't be caught dead in a Walmart or put my mouth around anything from Mickey D's. I had an artisan all natural specialty food business that was squashed by major grocers, distributors, and the disproportional costs of running a small business. My quality delicious products were replaced on store shelves by "Frankenfood" from "Frankenfoodfactories." Certainly, times have changed and we should give our support to local small businesses.
    - jongleur
  • Posted By JerrySatire JerrySatire | 5 months ago
    I miss the Mom & Pop candy store. I would have an egg cream & read the sports section @ the counter. [:-)
    JerrySatire@aol.com www.Lampoon.net
  • Posted By mona37 mona37 | 5 months ago
    I WOULD say it is not just happening in America but all across from what my daddy tells me!!
  • Posted By Changez Changez | 5 months ago
    When I was in Appleton they were trying to ramp up the downtown where the uni was to compete with the mall. They had some success but downtown became a strip of bars and clubs instead of shops etc. Mona is so right. This consumerist binge is taking over the whole world, not just the U.S.
  • Posted By Ross1776 Ross1776 | 5 months ago
    Great article, and this is the price of "nationalization" and even more so now in "globalization," where McDonald's has now in almost every foreign country. If the U.S. Chamber wants to know why tourism is down, tell them to check out most metropolitan U.S. airports. All the trinkets are made in China, with only the city or state represented changed - and in a great many of them you can buy gifts there representing any state in the union.

    It's not simply the malls, its the airports now too. All the same, with the same chains and stores and gift shops. And that is why these "corporate" mergers and nationwide "Associations of Retailers," and "U.S. Chamber of Commerce," are really nothing more than the East India Tea Company of pre-Revolutionary days. They have stiffled American entrepreneurs and small businesses and gobbled them up, and now we are all Wal-Mart shoppers because they have monopolized really the retail business.

    Until America gets sick of them. Which is also now happening and more and more are looking for the real "change," in rewinding this country somewhat back to its roots, and its intended form of government, which will in turn bring back the America and American spirit once again.

    Good article on really the price of "progressive" agendas.
  • Reply By CaliforniaMike CaliforniaMike | 5 months ago
    I'm not sure Wal-Mart and malls are considered part of the progressive agenda, although maybe a "progress" agenda.

    Other than that, I agree with most of what you say.
  • Reply By Ross1776 Ross1776 | 5 months ago
    Kawasaki, Nissan and Toyota now have plants in the U.S., a grea many of them non-union since they are foreign owned companies merely based in the U.S. And GM has a major plant in Mexico, which the U.S. government now owns in partnership with the UAW for mutual benefit. The UAW now has another plant it can now more actively have a voice in Mexico, and the U.S. has a greater "global" voice due to GMs ownership of plants in both Mexico and Canada.

    And as I have told as many of my friends or acquaintances, or even strangers at this point, if I were a border state resident right now, I would be packing it up. The union bosses now in partnership of an auto manufacturer in Mexico, just means the method of transport for the drugs marketed by those drug cartels will continue to be upgraded. And now a Chinese concern owns the Hummer Division, and a stake in GM - in order to get one of its cash crops, heroin, now also in through Mexico.

    As far as I'm concerned what Obama did last week was sell the border state and border state residents down the river to the drug cartels and unions. That's about the size of it.
  • Reply By Ross1776 Ross1776 | 5 months ago
    As one who is familiar with Wal-Mart's history, who worked for the law firm providing corporate counsel for Wal-Mart, and since Hillary Clinton was on the Board of Wal-Mart at one time, I would say that Wal-Mart has been the recipient of much governmental support at both the federal and state levels, and is definitely a receipient of the "progressives" agendas, since they have received tax breaks at the local and state level throughout the nation due to the promise of "jobs" and state and local tax revenues. And actually the largest purchaser of foreign and not U.S. made goods bar none. So yes, Wal-Mart is a prime example, along with Microsoft, of the "progressives" and internationalists in the "global economy, globalization" agendas which have been "progressively" promoted by both the Democrats and Republicans. And not the national sovereignty, and protection of American jobs and industries and "protectionism" in economic positions as that of the founders that the true Constitutional conservatives in this country represent. Such as secured borders, and protectionist agendas against foreign competition with American industry. Just why DO you think the U.S. auto industry has essentially become Government Motors? Couldn't be due to the fact that the import taxes on foreign autos were removed, thus basically placing GM in direct competition with foreign made brands, rather than domestically produced products? And why do you think Wal-Mart can undercut the small businessman and entrepreneur - couldn't be those cheap, Chinese products they are allowed to import also without import taxes?
  • Posted By Jonalex Jonalex | 5 months ago
    I want America to go back to just the good old days without MCyDS on every corner. Good job
  • Posted By Ross1776 Ross1776 | 5 months ago
    But if you want authentic Mexican food in the future, here's a hint. Forget Reno - it is too far North of the border for real, Sonoran style Mexican food. Go to Phoenix or Tucson. At least in Arizona, that much has not changed.

    Although be sure to watch your credit card after paying for your meal, or drive very, very carefully on the ride home and stay out of the Mexican gang neighborhoods or drug cartels major haunts in South Phoenix, or the Mexican-American community - or in front of the local high schools or middle schools around 3:00 p.m.

    And definitely forget Nogales right about now. Or around the Yuma area.
  • Reply By CaliforniaMike CaliforniaMike | 5 months ago
    Oh, I've lived in L.A. for 19 years now. There's good Mexican food around here.
  • Posted By Ross1776 Ross1776 | 5 months ago
    I had a friend 10 years ago lose her family owned bookstore after the Borders store opened up less than a block from where her family store had been. Had been in her family for over 20 years, and had to file bankruptcy and dissolve the company - and then ended up working for Borders but left when the pay wasn't enough in the San Francisco area for her to actually pay her rent each month.

    So the retail giants have been afforded many "privileges and immunities" at the state and local levels due to the promise of jobs, and then have actually ended up placing more and more Americans on welfare, or then working at far lower salaries and thus with less money to spend in order to generate that ballyhooed "stimulus" in state and loccal tax revenue.

    So this is not "progress" at all, it is "socializing" industries through "favored" benefactors, and a "progressive" globalization agenda. Which is why few know that Farmer's Insurance is no longer a U.S. owned insurer at all, but simply a branch of the mega-financial services global Zurich Corporation based out of Switzerland.

    Which is why foreigners now are gaining more and more voices and "rights" over and above the lawful Americans. Due to such allowance of ownership of major U.S. industries by global conglomerates, in whole or in part.

    And due to the trade imbalance, China really pretty much owns Wal-Mart, with the American people actually now due to our trade imbalance and deficit merely subsidizing Wal-Mart's foreign purchases - and also many of their employees who are collecting state and locally provided health care benefits through the state.

    So that "low price leader" has been subsidized in both its material goods purchases and also employee health care benefit costs by the state and local area residents in every store throughout the nation. So you aren't really paying any discount at all, when those costs are factored in - which have been "socialized."
  • Posted By proletariatx proletariatx | 5 months ago
    It is quite disgusting. I went to college in Durango, CO, which is allegedly an "old west" type of town, but it is suffering the same plight. I haven't been back since I graduated a year and a half ago, but a friend of mine was just there and she said that historic main street, where Jack Dempsey started his quest for the title belt inside of El Rancho Tavern, is getting developed like crazy. Durango is a small mountain town with a pretty close-knit community, but there is a problem; everybody makes the 2:30 AM run to Del Taco, shops at Wal-Mart, and gets their prescriptions filled at the brand new and totally unnecessary Walgreen's, and everybody claims to hate it despite the abundance of mom and pop type shops at their disposal. Welcome to the American Condition where homogenization is king.
  • Reply By CaliforniaMike CaliforniaMike | 5 months ago
    Amen.
  • Reported by Michael Rappaport
    Report Your News Got a similar story?
    Add it to the network!

    Or add related content to this report

    Cell phones Cell phones use report code: @3437004

    Most Popular Reports

    Related People

    Contributions

    Help and Accounts


    Use of this site is governed by our Terms of Use Agreement and Privacy Policy.

    © Allvoices, Inc 2008-2009. All rights reserved.