Tag Archives: fast food

A Man Out of His Element

3 Jan

January 3, 2013

I was in Blimpie last week buying lunch. For those of you who don’t know, Blimpie is a large chain sandwich shop.

BlimpieLogoWhile I was waiting for them to make my sandwich, a family walked in. The father was in his 50’s, white hair, thin white mustache, nautical cap on his head. He was wearing a blue pea coat and wearing sneakers like you’d wear on a boat. His wife was wearing a fur and looked around like she had no clue what kind of jewelry this odd little boutique sold, if you catch my drift. The son was college age, with the worst case of acne I have ever seen. The son was wearing shorts and a windbreaker. I hate that look. The shorts say “I’m athletic.” The windbreaker says “I’m cold.” Sheesh, make up your mind.

The lovely couple. they never did see eye to eye.

The lovely couple. They never did see eye to eye.

The man walked up to the counter, ignoring the “line starts here” sign and cutting in front of three people who were already on line and asked “do you have any Blimpie Bests left?”

This is akin to walking into a McDonald’s and asking if they have any Big Macs left.

In the middle of the day.

Now remember, this is a deli. The man was standing right in front of the case with all the meats and cheeses and just on the other side of the glass was the meat slicer. They don’t take a sandwich out of the freezer and pop into the microwave, they make it in front of you.

“Do you have any Blimpie Bests left?”

To his credit, the man behind the counter did not say anything snarky or even look at the guy like he was an idiot, which I probably was doing, truth be told, standing not six feet away. The son, whose acne could have used a fresh trowling of Stridex, and the mother, who looked like she came in third in a Margaret Dumont lookalike contest, huddled together and, with excited and urgent gestures, studied and pondered the menu board with all the concentration of a man trying not to pass gas in front of his blind date. 

“Sure we’ve got plenty left,” the counter guy answered. “What kind of bread would you like?”

Uh oh. I told myself not to laugh because I just knew that there would a classic answer to this, and I was right.

The yachtsman drew himself up, standing, if at all possible, even straighter than he was before and, with the air of a man who knew- absolutely, totally knew that he was in the superior, rarified air of one who knew how to talk to the lower classes said, and I swear he said it with a lilt and a touch of pride, “why, the Blimpie Best bread of course!”

Have I mentioned that this man has never been to Blimpie before?

With that answer, he turned around to his family, who were still intently scouring the menu boards, and he smiled the smile of a man who just showed the little guy how it’s done and wanted some praise for it.

“What kind of bread?” asked the man behind the counter again. “We have Italian, whole wheat, cheese bread” and on and on. They really do have quite an extensive selection of bread, even if it all does tend to taste the same.

Meanwhile, my order was ready and I was paying, but slowly, since I wanted to see the rest of this.

“What kind of bread?”

The man turned to his family and the three of them huddled- yes, huddled in a circle- and quickly and quietly discussed this startling turn of events.

After a few seconds of animated discussion, in which the woman raised her nose and shook her head, the man turned back and said to the counterman “we’ll be back,” after which they left the store, got in their car, and drove away.

Imponderable #25: West Sussex England (w/ John Travolta)

11 Nov

November 11, 2011

I’ve never had a lot of respect for John Travolta, either as an actor or a person.

As an actor, I think he is a step above microbes but without the range of fungus. Now before you start yelling “Saturday Night Fever!” I grant you, that is a great film. And I further grant you that he is prefect in it. But he is more or less playing a moron. Not a big stretch. Want more evidence of his lack of acting ability? Battlefield Earth. ‘Nuff said.

As a person I have nothing against him, and I am not going to bring up his son’s tragedy out of respect, though I think he made many wildly wrong decisions regarding his son. However, it does bring up another strike against him, Scientology. You may recall that Scientology is a religion that was totally made up by a bad science fiction writer. But if you have seen Travolta on talk shows you know he isn’t the brightest star in the sky so the Scientology thing doesn’t come as a shock..

And that brings up another point. Why is he still a star? His career is based on a pair of films (Grease and Saturday Night Fever) that he made 40 years ago. Yes, he has Pulp Fiction in his résumé but thank Quentin Tarrantino for that film’s success. By the way, type “John Travolta” into imdb.com and it says “best known for Pulp fiction (1994).” That was 17 years ago!

And now this:

Oh how the paunchy have fallen.

Whoever the employee was that told Barbarino to get in line with everyone else had it right. Big deal, John Travolta gets to cut in line because he’s from Hollywood? Screw that; wait for your extra-crispy like the rest of the world.

But this kind of underscores my point. Would Anthony Hopkins have been turned down?

More to the point, would Anthony Hopkins have tried to reserve a table at a Kentucky Fried Chicken? Nobu it ain’t.

How out of touch is Travolta? Did he really think that KFC has a celebrity section? This is the typical Hollywood crap that Scientology reinforces. He’s special. Of course any old fast food place would have a VIP section. And of course he would never wait in line. He’s the guy in drag from Hairspray!

How out of touch is this guy?

What is wrong with the world where washed up actors think they can reserve a table at KFC of all places? And worse, what is wrong with the world that people let them get away with nonsense like that?

Why do people treat actors like they are more important or better than the rest of us?

The question is Imponderable.

And that KFC spokesman at the end of the article is a toad.