About book
Author:Eric Schlosser
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd (2002/4/4)
Version: Paperback
Completed: 2006
My Rating: 3.5/5
Author:Eric Schlosser
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd (2002/4/4)
Version: Paperback
Completed: 2006
My Rating: 3.5/5
Comment
I bought this book to give me a good reason to avoid the big M.
The verdict: I still hit MacDonald's once in a while. Why: Simple, bang-for-buck. You get better perceived value for your money when you order a set meal there. But the thing is that the marketing people behind the scene really know how to play the cards by getting the children hook on the gifts so that the helpless parent has not much of a choice but to give-in. The truth is, the burgers and the fries ain't half as bad.
To be absolutely fair to MacDonald's, a similar book like this should also be written about the food-chain so that there can be an apple-to-apple comparison. In any case, the things that go into that BigMac sure ain't just beef. That's for sure. At best, there must be parts-of-someone's fingernails, at worst, well, feces or so it seems. Then there are the so called abuse of power all the way from the farm to the person behind the counter. I am not so sure about the working conditions for other countries like Japan though. I guess they must fare better than the part timers in US.So does eating at MacDonald's make me an accomplice to evils of the open market and industrialization. Perhaps so, but I feel that I am so remotely removed from the actual problems that I don't feel a tinge of guilt every time I eat at MacDonald's. Hey, information maybe power, but sometimes, the stomach and the wallet sure makes more ruckus. Maybe it's high time to hit the revolving-sushi bar or the curry-rice place more often. After I finish my extra-large fries and coke...