tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7398382031999042636.post3219329849561019541..comments2024-03-11T04:58:46.899-05:00Comments on Where Your Treasure Is: WYTI Links: 09.28.200710 Minute Book Reviewshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13064276618362951920noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7398382031999042636.post-27674913292528168122007-10-01T16:13:00.000-05:002007-10-01T16:13:00.000-05:00Well, my days at McD's didn't really give me a lot...Well, my days at McD's didn't really give me a lot to add here. I'd say Trent did a pretty good job of comparison. Obviously if we were to make our own food we could save money - that's true of any restaurant though, not just fast food. At fast food you pay for speed and convenience, as Trent said. However, I felt there were two ways he could have been more fair: 1) it takes more than 2 minutes to go to the grocery store and buy those items he needed. Don't count the time walking into the store at fast food and only count the time to place certain items in your cart in making your own; 2) Service at fast food restaurants is usually much faster than in his experiment AND the drive thru is almost always faster than getting out and going inside. Unless there is a bus parked outside, the drive thru will be quicker - that's experience speaking. Drive thru gets priority - they get the food as it comes that they can use, and since they take several orders while the first are waiting for food, you are able to jump ahead in line.<BR/><BR/>There are cheaper ways to eat than fast food (there will always be the 50 cent soup and 20 cent Ramen noodles). However, perhaps we need to compare apples to apples - McD's $1 cheeseburger is a deal compared to the price of similar burgers at other fast food restaurants.JHDaltonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12908848602844234880noreply@blogger.com