Seriously, Michael Keaton was a great choice to be Ray Kroc. The transformations he went through during the course of the film were surprisingly legit. I usually don't watch films like this since they often play up events for drama/intrigue that utterly annihilate suspension of disbelief, but Keaton really sold it.
Of course, John Lynch and Nick Offerman as the McDonald Brothers were good too, but I am not sure the film would have really stuck the landing with anyone else as Ray Kroc.
Yeah, early on in the movie youre rooting for Kroc who just seems like a down on his luck salesmen, then he starts stepping on the MacDonald brothers toes with certain cost cutting ideas and by the end hes a full fledge villain. I really like the scene where he says what he really wanted was their all American sounding name because he hates his "Kroc, like crock of shit!"
Look in the backstory I posted in a different comment. Their parents came straight from the Emerald Isle. There may have been Scots somewhere further down the line, but it's not as though the Irish have any shortage of Macs either.
Richard James and Maurice James McDonald were American brothers and entrepreneurs who founded the McDonald's restaurant in San Bernardino, California, and inventors of the "Speedee Service System," now commonly known as "fast food".
The McDonald brothers were born in Manchester, New Hampshire, to Patrick J. McDonald and Margarete McDonald, Irish immigrants who came to the United States as children.
In 1937, the McDonald brothers opened a hot dog stand in Monrovia, California, inspired by a local hot dog stand that seemed to be the only profitable business in town, and which primarily served patrons at a local racetrack. However, the stand had few customers after racing season ended.
Maurice decided to open a bigger hot dog stand in San Bernardino, a large working-class town approximately 50 miles eastward, with a population of approximately 100,000 people. After several banks declined to lend them the money needed for this venture, Bank of America finally approved, and in 1940, with $5,000 in capital, they opened a drive-in restaurant on the corner of 1398 North E Street and West 14th Street (34.1255°N 117.2946°W).
The new restaurant proved a success and the brothers were soon making $40,000 a year. Most customers were teenage or young adult males in their 20s who came primarily to flirt with the carhop young women, or young working families looking for a cheap meal. The McDonald brothers decided that the latter were the customers they wanted to attract.
After a couple years, the brothers began making plans to renovate their business model based on the lessons they had learned. One of these involved finding a more efficient way to service customers than the carhop young women, whom they considered slow, unreliable workers who spent too much time flirting with customers to increase their tips. Another was that hamburgers accounted for a large proportion of total sales. The griddles were much easier to clean than grills and burgers were faster to assemble than sandwiches.
In 1948, the brothers fully redesigned and rebuilt their restaurant in San Bernardino to focus on hamburgers, milkshakes, and French fries. While this new "McDonald's," situated at the same address, was still premised on most customers arriving by car, its design was unique due to a combination of factors:
Like the brothers' previous food stands, the design deliberately omitted an interior dining area.
There was no waiting staff; orders were taken in person at the front counter, where the food was also delivered.
The brothers designed the kitchen area themselves, integrating their acquired knowledge into an assembly line–style layout that maximized efficiency and output.
The burgers were pre-cooked and kept warm.
The new restaurant was a success, and with the goal of making $1 million before they turned 50, the McDonald brothers began franchising their system in 1953, beginning with a restaurant in Phoenix, Arizona, operated by Neil Fox. At first they only franchised the system, rather than the name of their restaurant. Later, the brothers started franchising the entire concept, with restaurants in the googie architecture style built to a standard design, created by Fontana, California, architect Stanley Clark Meston, and featuring Richard's suggestion of the paired Golden Arches, which formed an M when viewed from an angle.
In 1954, the McDonald brothers partnered with Ray Kroc. The franchiser took 1.9 percent of the gross sales, of which the McDonald brothers got 0.5 percent. The brothers wished to maintain only a small number of restaurants, which conflicted with Kroc's goals. Ray Kroc eventually bought them out in 1961.
On November 30, 1984, Richard McDonald, the first cook behind the grill of a McDonald's, was served the ceremonial 50 billionth McDonald's hamburger by Ed Rensi, then president of McDonald's USA, at the Grand Hyatt hotel in New York City.
Maurice McDonald died from a heart attack in Riverside, California, on December 11, 1971, at the age of 69. He was buried at the Desert Memorial Park, in Cathedral City, California.
Richard McDonald died from a heart failure in a nursing home in Manchester, New Hampshire, on July 14, 1998, at the age of 89. He was buried nearby at the Mount Calvary Cemetery in his home city of Manchester. His wife Dorothy died January 10, 1999. She is buried at his side.
Well, they're like Walt Disney vs. Disney. Nothing like the founder's original vision. Outside of the food. McD's food is basically exactly what the McD bros envisioned, since it was always supposed to be cheap, fast food for families on a budget.
(BTW, Walter Elias Disney might show up later on this month.)
the movie The Founder is pretty great. All about how Ray Kroc cheated them out of not only their restaurant, but their name too.
Seriously, Michael Keaton was a great choice to be Ray Kroc. The transformations he went through during the course of the film were surprisingly legit. I usually don't watch films like this since they often play up events for drama/intrigue that utterly annihilate suspension of disbelief, but Keaton really sold it.
Of course, John Lynch and Nick Offerman as the McDonald Brothers were good too, but I am not sure the film would have really stuck the landing with anyone else as Ray Kroc.
Yeah, early on in the movie youre rooting for Kroc who just seems like a down on his luck salesmen, then he starts stepping on the MacDonald brothers toes with certain cost cutting ideas and by the end hes a full fledge villain. I really like the scene where he says what he really wanted was their all American sounding name because he hates his "Kroc, like crock of shit!"
And then turned it into the world's largest drug dealer.
source?
Also, "I got these cheese burgers man."
What did you say to me?
Previously featured Irish Americans:
Day 1, Patrick Kane: https://patriots.win/p/12hkTjM7RG/
Day 2, Commodore John Barry: https://patriots.win/p/12hkTnthuz/
Day 3, John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara: https://patriots.win/p/12hkYNmV8K/
Day 4, Lt. Audie Murphy: https://patriots.win/p/12hkYTRNo1/
Day 5, Michael Collins: https://patriots.win/p/12hkd3InNQ/
Pretty sure McDonald is a scottish clan name? Regardless of their Irish claims, that name comes from angry scotland
Ustler Irish is a thing. In America its called Scotch Irish
Look in the backstory I posted in a different comment. Their parents came straight from the Emerald Isle. There may have been Scots somewhere further down the line, but it's not as though the Irish have any shortage of Macs either.
I always preferred McDowells and the Big Mic. The company with the golden arcs.
Macdonald is Scottish. McDonald is Irish. The Mc thing is why the Irish are called 'Micks.'
Hey, that's our word. You can't say that!
❤️❤️❤️
From Wikipedia:
Richard James and Maurice James McDonald were American brothers and entrepreneurs who founded the McDonald's restaurant in San Bernardino, California, and inventors of the "Speedee Service System," now commonly known as "fast food".
The McDonald brothers were born in Manchester, New Hampshire, to Patrick J. McDonald and Margarete McDonald, Irish immigrants who came to the United States as children.
In 1937, the McDonald brothers opened a hot dog stand in Monrovia, California, inspired by a local hot dog stand that seemed to be the only profitable business in town, and which primarily served patrons at a local racetrack. However, the stand had few customers after racing season ended.
Maurice decided to open a bigger hot dog stand in San Bernardino, a large working-class town approximately 50 miles eastward, with a population of approximately 100,000 people. After several banks declined to lend them the money needed for this venture, Bank of America finally approved, and in 1940, with $5,000 in capital, they opened a drive-in restaurant on the corner of 1398 North E Street and West 14th Street (34.1255°N 117.2946°W).
The new restaurant proved a success and the brothers were soon making $40,000 a year. Most customers were teenage or young adult males in their 20s who came primarily to flirt with the carhop young women, or young working families looking for a cheap meal. The McDonald brothers decided that the latter were the customers they wanted to attract.
After a couple years, the brothers began making plans to renovate their business model based on the lessons they had learned. One of these involved finding a more efficient way to service customers than the carhop young women, whom they considered slow, unreliable workers who spent too much time flirting with customers to increase their tips. Another was that hamburgers accounted for a large proportion of total sales. The griddles were much easier to clean than grills and burgers were faster to assemble than sandwiches.
In 1948, the brothers fully redesigned and rebuilt their restaurant in San Bernardino to focus on hamburgers, milkshakes, and French fries. While this new "McDonald's," situated at the same address, was still premised on most customers arriving by car, its design was unique due to a combination of factors:
Like the brothers' previous food stands, the design deliberately omitted an interior dining area.
There was no waiting staff; orders were taken in person at the front counter, where the food was also delivered.
The brothers designed the kitchen area themselves, integrating their acquired knowledge into an assembly line–style layout that maximized efficiency and output.
The burgers were pre-cooked and kept warm.
The new restaurant was a success, and with the goal of making $1 million before they turned 50, the McDonald brothers began franchising their system in 1953, beginning with a restaurant in Phoenix, Arizona, operated by Neil Fox. At first they only franchised the system, rather than the name of their restaurant. Later, the brothers started franchising the entire concept, with restaurants in the googie architecture style built to a standard design, created by Fontana, California, architect Stanley Clark Meston, and featuring Richard's suggestion of the paired Golden Arches, which formed an M when viewed from an angle.
In 1954, the McDonald brothers partnered with Ray Kroc. The franchiser took 1.9 percent of the gross sales, of which the McDonald brothers got 0.5 percent. The brothers wished to maintain only a small number of restaurants, which conflicted with Kroc's goals. Ray Kroc eventually bought them out in 1961.
On November 30, 1984, Richard McDonald, the first cook behind the grill of a McDonald's, was served the ceremonial 50 billionth McDonald's hamburger by Ed Rensi, then president of McDonald's USA, at the Grand Hyatt hotel in New York City.
Maurice McDonald died from a heart attack in Riverside, California, on December 11, 1971, at the age of 69. He was buried at the Desert Memorial Park, in Cathedral City, California.
Richard McDonald died from a heart failure in a nursing home in Manchester, New Hampshire, on July 14, 1998, at the age of 89. He was buried nearby at the Mount Calvary Cemetery in his home city of Manchester. His wife Dorothy died January 10, 1999. She is buried at his side.
And, as an added bonus, childhood obesity.
Irish “cuisine” for ya.
First thing they teach you when you work at McD's is how to fry potatoes.
Being Irish I'm happy with the entrepreneurship; not so much with the actual corporation. Food sucks as well.
Well, they're like Walt Disney vs. Disney. Nothing like the founder's original vision. Outside of the food. McD's food is basically exactly what the McD bros envisioned, since it was always supposed to be cheap, fast food for families on a budget.
(BTW, Walter Elias Disney might show up later on this month.)