mcdonalds
McDonald's Corporation
|
| Type |
Public (NYSE: MCD) |
| Founded |
May 15, 1940 in San Bernardino, California |
| Headquarters |
Oak Brook, Illinois, United States |
| Key people |
Dick and Mac McDonald, Founders
Ray Kroc, Founder of McDonald's Corporation
Jim Skinner, CEO
Michael J. Roberts, President/COO
Ronald McDonald, Corporate Mascot |
| Industry |
Restaurants |
| Products |
Fast food, including Big Mac, Quarter Pounder, Chicken McNuggets, french fries, and sundaes |
| Revenue |
$20.460 Billion USD (2005) |
| Net income |
$2.602 Billion USD (2005) |
| Employees |
447,000 (2005)[1] |
| Website |
www.mcdonalds.com |
McDonald's in Times Square, New York
McDonald's Corporation (NYSE: MCD) is the world's largest chain of fast-food restaurants, selling variations on meals consisting of hamburgers, french fries and carbonated drinks. While some branches of the restaurant also sell a limited range of vegetarian food and more healthy offerings like fruit and milk, the company is associated with its standardized menu and commitment to fast service.
The business was founded in 1940 with a restaurant opened by siblings Dick and Mac McDonald. It was their introduction of the "Speedee Service System" in 1948 that established the principles of the fast-food restaurant. However, the company today dates its "founding" to the opening of CEO Ray Kroc's first franchised restaurant, the company's ninth, in 1955. He opened his first McDonald's in Des Plaines, Illinois in April 1955.
As the first and largest international fast food franchise, McDonald's has become a focal point in public debate about rising obesity rates, corporate ethics and consumer responsibility. This is discussed in detail under Criticisms.
|
Contents
- 1 Corporate overview
- 2 History
- 3 Menu
- 4 Global impact
- 5 Criticisms
- 5.1 Legal challenge over trans fats
- 5.2 Arguments in defense of McDonald's
- 6 Legal cases
- 7 McDonald's advertising campaigns and slogans
- 8 Facts and Figures
- 9 Documentaries about McDonald's Corporation
- 10 Parodies
- 11 Gallery
- 12 References
- 13 See also
- 13.1 Food
- 13.2 Marketing
- 13.3 Related companies
- 13.4 Criticism
- 13.5 Miscellaneous
- 14 External links
|
Corporate overview
McDonald's restaurants are found in 119 countries and territories around the world and serve nearly 50 million customers each day. The company also operates other restaurant brands, such as Aroma Café and Boston Market, and has a minority stake in Pret a Manger. The company owned a majority stake in Chipotle Mexican Grill through the spring of 2006, when it was in the process of selling its stake. Until December 2003, it also owned Donatos Pizza. It also has a subsidiary, Redbox, which started in 2003 as 18-foot (5.5 m) wide automated convenience stores, but as of 2005, has focused on DVD rental machines.
Most standalone McDonald's restaurants offer both counter and drive-through service, with indoor and sometimes outdoor seating. Drive-Thru, Auto-Mac, Pay and Drive or McDrive as it is known in many countries, often has separate stations for placing, paying for, and picking up orders, though the latter two steps are frequently combined. In some countries "McDrive" locations near highways offer no counter service or seating. In contrast, locations in high-density city neighborhoods often omit drive-through service. There are also a few locations, located mostly in downtown districts, that offer Walk-Thru service in place of Drive-Thru.
Specially themed restaurants also exist, such as "Rock-and-Roll McDonald's" 1950s themed restaurants. Some McDonald's in suburban areas and certain cities feature large indoor or outdoor playgrounds, called "McDonald's PlayPlace" (if indoors) or "Playland" (outdoors). The first PlayPlace with the familiar crawl-tube design with ball pits and slides was introduced in 1987 in the USA, with many more being constructed soon after. Some PlayPlace playgrounds have been renovated into "R Gym" areas, which emphasize physical activity. [1]
The McDonald's Corporation's business model is slightly different from that of most other fast-food chains. In addition to ordinary franchise fees, supplies, and percentage of sales, McDonald's also collects rent, partially linked to sales. As a condition of the franchise agreement, the Corporation owns the properties on which most McDonald's franchises are located. The UK business model is different, in that fewer than 30% of restaurants are franchised, with the majority under the ownership of the company. McDonald's trains its franchisees and others at Hamburger University in Oak Brook, Illinois.
According to Fast Food Nation by Eric Schlosser (2001), nearly one in eight workers in the U.S. have at some time been employed by McDonald's. The book also states that McDonald's is the largest private operator of playgrounds in the U.S., as well as the single largest purchaser of beef, pork, potatoes, and apples. The meats McDonald's uses vary with the culture of the host country.
History
This McDonald's location with a Drive Thru, located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, is representative of a typical North American location in its appearance.
-
Main article: History of McDonald's
McDonald's founders (Dick and Mac McDonald) first venture into the food business was in 1937, when they opened a hot dog stand in Arcadia, California (which they coincidentally purchased from another MacDonald, Erin Elizabeth). They opened the first McDonald's restaurant on May 15, 1940, in San Bernardino, California. Hamburgers proved to be their most popular product, so in 1948 the brothers introduced their "Speedee Service System," a streamlined assembly line for hamburgers that allowed them to produce burgers quickly and inexpensively. Their cheap burgers were very successful, and in 1953 they began to franchise McDonald's restaurants. Entrepreneur Ray Kroc visited the first restaurant in 1953, and sensing its potential, he convinced the brothers to put him in charge of franchising. He later purchased the brothers' interest in the company, and oversaw its worldwide expansion.
Menu
A typical McDonald's Menu
-
Main article: McDonald's menu items
McDonald's offers a variety of fast-foods, desserts, and beverages. Some items are only specific to certain regions. From 2005 McDonald's has offered more healthful alternatives, including salads, deli-style rolls, fruit, and a low-fat beef burgers, as well as having made improvements to its regular products, using low-fat canola oil blend, low-sugar buns, and deli-style bacon. McDonald's has also expanded the McCafé cafe chain in Australia to suburban stores. In the beginning of 2006, McDonald's started printing Nutrition Facts on the packaging of their products after pressure from groups and individuals who said nutritional information on charts and pamphlets available in the restaurants was not comprehensive enough. Beginning in early 2007, recommended daily intake information will be printed on most packing in Australia.
Pasta Zoo Happy Meals are expected to arrive in Australian McDonald's in late 2006 after several postponements due to incomplete items. It is anticipated that the meals will contain eight pieces of animal-shaped pasta filled with 3 different types of cheese and roasted vegetables, dipping sauce, flavoured 'Sippah' (i.e. low fat milk with a flavoured straw), tongs and a Happy Meal toy. Pasta Zoo is being launched as a healthier alternative to the present Happy Meals.
Global impact
Countries with McDonald's stores
McDonald's has become emblematic of globalization, sometimes referred as the "McDonaldization" of society. The Economist magazine uses the "Big Mac index": the comparison of a Big Mac's cost in various world currencies can be used to informally judge these currencies' purchasing power parity. Because McDonald's is closely identified with United States culture and lifestyle, its international business expansion has been termed part of Americanization and American cultural imperialism. McDonald's remains a target of anti-globalization protesters worldwide.
Thomas Friedman observed that no country with a McDonald's had gone to war with another. His "Golden Arches Theory" has since been disproved, first when the U.S. invaded Panama (which has had McDonald's restaurants since the late-1970s) in 1989, and later when NATO bombed Serbia in 1999.
Some observers have suggested that the company should be given credit for increasing the standard of service in markets it enters. A group of anthropologists in a study entitled Golden Arches East (Stanford University Press, 1998, edited by James L. Watson) looked at the impact McDonald's had on East Asia, and Hong Kong in particular. When it opened in Hong Kong in 1975, McDonald's was the first restaurant to consistently offer clean restrooms, driving customers to demand the same of other restaurants and institutions.
In addition to its effect on business standards, McDonald's has also been instrumental in changing local customs. By popularizing the idea of a quick restaurant meal, Watson's study suggests, McDonald's led to the easing or elimination of various taboos, such as eating while walking in Japan. McDonald's also flattens the social strata during dining -- there is no problem of losing face for certain customers (who might be embarrassed when someone else ordered a more expensive item in a restaurant); the food at McDonald's is all similarly priced.
The larger McDonald's grows, the more vulnerable it becomes to negative customer perceptions. In light of this, McDonald's has tried to cater to varying cultural requirements, such as by customizing its menu to each country. The introduction of the Filet-O-Fish to cater to Catholic abstinence during Lent is one example of this. However, the company also became involved in controversy when it was revealed that its U.S. french fries were flavored with non-kosher and non-halal beef extract, which greatly upset Muslim, Jewish, Hindu and vegetarian customers. It had been claimed that the fries were in fact koshercitation needed] and vegetarian [2] .
In other cases, the firm has shown itself ready to adjust its business practices. When environmentally damaging packaging and waste produced by the company's restaurants became a public concern, McDonald's started a joint project with Friends of the Earth to eliminate the use of polystyrene containers, only in the United States, and to reduce the amount of waste produced.
Criticisms
McDonald's has tried to improve its environmental image.
Because McDonald's multi-national, multi-billion dollar business and standardized products and procedures have come to symbolize globalization and the American way of life, the company has often found itself a target of activism and a focal point of public debate. In particular, it has generated much discussion about corporate ethics, consumer responsibility, obesity, the environment, intellectual property and animal rights.
Since the mid-1990s, a backlash against globalization has been well-documented in the media, on the internet and in books like Naomi Klein's No Logo. McDonald's restaurants have been the targets of protests, peaceful and otherwise, by environmental, anti-globalization and animal rights activists. The company's litigious approach to protecting its business interests has not helped its image in the minds of its opponents.
This conflict, and the company's approach to resolving it, was epitomized in the early 1990s by what came to be known as the McLibel case. Two English activists, David Morris and Helen Steel, distributed leaflets entitled What's wrong with McDonald's? on the streets of London. McDonald's wrote to Steel and Morris demanding they desist and apologise, and, when they refused, sued them for libel.
The trial, lasting more than two years, was described as 'the worst PR disaster in history' for the firm. The company's advertising techniques and business practices were scrutinized in the High Court of Justice in London and reported extensively in the press, who saw the case as a David and Goliath battle (under UK law, legal aid could not be granted for a defamation suit, so Steel and Morris did most of their own legal casework while McDonald's was represented by an extensive legal team).
In June 1997, the judge ruled in favor of McDonald's, awarding the company £60,000 damages, which was later was reduced to £40,000 by the Court of Appeal. The amount was low because the judge ruled that some of the claims made by Morris and Steel had been proven, including that McDonald's exploited children in its advertising, was anti-trade union and indirectly exploited and caused suffering to animals. Steel and Morris announced they had no intention of ever paying, and the company later confirmed it would not be pursuing the money.
Steel and Morris later successfully challenged UK libel law in the European Court, arguing that it was an infringement of the right to free speech. The Government was forced to re-write the legislation as a result. In 2005, a film was made about the court case.
In 2001, Eric Schlosser's book Fast Food Nation included criticism of McDonald's' business practices. Among the critiques are allegations that McDonald's (along with other companies within the fast-food industry) uses its political influence to increase their own profits at the expense of people's health and the social conditions of its workers. The book also brings into question McDonald's advertisement techniques where it targets children. While the book does mention other fast-food chains, it focuses primarily on McDonald's.
In June 2004, the UK's Private Eye reported that McDonald's was handing out meal vouchers, balloons, and toys to children in pediatric wards. This was especially controversial as the report was made within weeks of a British Government report stating that the present generation may be the first to die before their parents due to spiraling obesity in the British population.
Also in 2004, Morgan Spurlock's documentary film Super Size Me produced negative publicity for McDonald's, with allegations that McDonald's food was contributing heavily to the epidemic of obesity in American society, and failing to provide nutritional information about its food for its customers. For 30 days Spurlock ate nothing but McDonald's (supersizing whenever asked). He ate everything on the menu at least once, always accepted upsizing requests of McDonald's employees, and continued to eat after he was full. At the same time he consciously attempted to get little or no exercise. By the end of the month he reported mood swings and sexual dysfunction and had gained 24.5 pounds (11.11 kg).
After the film was shown at the Sundance Film Festival, but before its cinematic release, McDonald's phased out its Supersize meal option and began offering several healthier menu items, though no link to the film was cited in this decision. The company also began a practice of putting nutritional information for all menu items in light grey small print on the reverse of their tray liners. It is currently phasing in nutritional labeling in clear black print on the actual packaging of its food items.
Legal challenge over trans fats
In September 2002, McDonald’s announced it was voluntarily reducing the trans fat content of its cooking oil by February 2003. The oil was not changed. In the ensuing lawsuits, plaintiffs claimed that McDonald’s failed to inform the public that the oil was not changed. Since that time, it has been discovered that the trans fat content of some of their products are higher than they claimed (one McDonald's large fries contains 8 grams of trans fat).
Settlement of the lawsuit brought by BanTransFats.com and one private party requires McDonald’s to inform the public that the oil was not changed. McDonald’s will also donate $7 million to the American Heart Association for public education about the risks of consuming trans fat.
McDonald’s is also required to spend up to $1.5 million on publishing notices to ensure that the public knows the status of its trans fat initiative. If the cost of publishing the notices is less than $1.5 million, the difference will be donated to the American Heart Association.
The California Superior Court for Marin County has entered an order preliminarily approving the settlement.
Arguments in defense of McDonald's
In response to the backlash against McDonald's, the firm has sought to include some healthy choices in its menu and has introduced a reactionary slogan to its recruitment posters: "Not bad for a McJob". (The word McJob, which was first coined by Douglas Coupland in his novel Generation X, has become a buzz word for low paid, unskilled work with few prospects or benefits and little security).
It has also begun working with organizations like Friends of the Earth about ways to reduce its negative impact on the environment and has engaged in some (albeit highly self-publicized) work with charities and local communities.
Throughout the McLibel trial, senior representatives of the firm said they were merely trying to protect its image from undue and unfounded attack. With regard to its numerous and often controversial copyright and trademark actions, McDonald's lawyers say they are simply protecting the company's intellectual property. This argument loses some credibility in light of the Viz Top Tips case, in which McDonald's copied the some of the tips from the UK adult comic's popular feature almost word (see the McDonald's advertising campaigns and slogans section). The case was settled out of court after McDonald's donated an undisclosed sum to the charity Comic Relief.
Following the release of the film Super Size Me, some people reported they had experienced no weight gain and suffered no ill effect by eating only at McDonald's for a month, but choosing menu items more judiciously and exercising frequently [2]. Merab Morgan, a North Carolina woman, was even able to lose weight [3]. She claimed that the transparency of nutritional information made it easy to control her daily caloric intake.
Advocates of McDonald's also argue that it is the ultimate realization of the American dream, provides employment and boosts economies around the world and has raised customer expectations in some less developed nations.
Legal cases
- Main article: McDonald's legal cases
McDonald's has been involved in a number of lawsuits and other legal cases, most of which involved trademark disputes. The company has threatened many food businesses with legal action unless they drop the Mc or Mac from their trading name. In one noteworthy case, McDonald's sued a Scottish café owner called McDonald, even though the business in question dated back over a century.
It has also filed numerous defamation suits. The McLibel case, mentioned above, is probably the best known of these.
McDonald's has had to defend itself in several cases involving workers' rights. In 2001 the company was fined £12,400 by British magistrates for illegally employing and over-working child labor in one of its London restaurants. This is thought to be one of the largest fines imposed on a company for breaking laws relating to child working conditions.
McDonald's advertising campaigns and slogans
-
Main article: McDonald's TV campaigns and slogans
To date, McDonald's has used a total of twenty-three different slogans in United States advertising, as well as a few other slogans for select countries and regions. At times, it has run into trouble with its campaigns.
In 1996, the British adult comic magazine Viz accused McDonald's of plagiarizing the name and format of its longstanding Top Tips feature, in which readers offer sarcastic tips. McDonald's had created an advertising campaign of the same name, which suggested the Top Tips (and then the alternative - save money by going to McDonald's). Some of the similarities were almost word-for-word:
- "Save a fortune on laundry bills. Give your dirty shirts to Oxfam. They will wash and iron them, and then you can buy them back for 50p." – Viz Top Tip, published May 1989.
- "Save a fortune on laundry bills. Give your dirty shirts to a second-hand shop. They will wash and iron them, and then you can buy them back for 50p." – McDonald's advert, 1996.
The case was settled out of court for an undisclosed sum, which was donated to the charity Comic Relief. However, many Viz readers believed that the comic had given permission for their use, leading to Top Tips submissions such as: "Geordie magazine editors. Continue paying your mortgage and buying expensive train sets ... by simply licensing the Top Tips concept to a multinational burger corporation."
In 2003, a ruling by the UK Advertising Standards Authority determined that the corporation had acted in breach of the codes of practice in describing how its French fries were prepared[4]. A McDonald's print ad stated that "after selecting certain potatoes" "we peel them, slice them, fry them and that's it." It showed a picture of a potato in a McDonald's fries box. In fact the product was sliced, pre-fried, sometimes had dextrose added, was then frozen, shipped, and re-fried and then had salt added.
Facts and Figures
- The first Hamburger University, a school for future executive managers of regional franchises, is in Oak Brook, Illinois, where the company headquarters is located. Similar "Hamburger U" training schools have been set up around the world.
- The first McCafe store in the world was opened in Melbourne in 1993.
- Current members of the board of directors of McDonald's are: Hall Adams, Edward Brennan, Robert Eckert, Enrique Hernandez, Jeff Hunter, Richard Lewis, Andrew McKenna, and Cary McMillan.
- Only 2 McDonald's Restaurants in Australia so far have a double lane drive thru. One is McDonald's North Mackay, in North Queensland and one soon to be completed in North Sydney, New South Wales. Mackay North has also got the longest Drive-thru in Australia fitting a total of 22 cars from start to finish.
- McDonald's is well known for its sponsorship in American sports. It is the official fast food of the U.S. Olympic Team, and has former NBA superstar Michael Jordan as a spokesperson. McDonald's is also famous for its longtime sponsorship of Bill Elliott's NASCAR team. Kasey Kahne now carries the Golden arches on his #9 car. Additionally, McDonald's sponsors Sebastien Bourdais' #1 car in CART Champ Car competition.
- In the 1980s, the New York Mets had a player in its farm system named Ronald McDonald. He would have been an interesting addition to a squad that already featured a player named Howard Johnson (as in Howard Johnson's restaurants). However, McDonald never made it to the major leagues.
- Ronaldo's son with Milene Domingues is called Ronald in honor of the famous clown.
- In 1986, Guantánamo became host to Cuba's first and only McDonald's restaurant, as well as a Subway.[3] These fast food restaurants are on base, and not accessible to Cubans. It has been reported that detainees showing good behavior have been rewarded not only with dates, pita bread and Twinkies, but also 'Happy Meals', hamburgers or Filet-O-Fish sandwiches from the McDonald's near the Navy Exchange.[4]
- McDonald's Australia has cooked up a world first - The New Pasta Zoo Happy Meal. The meal includes 10 Pasta pieces with Zoo Goo (Cheese), Italian sauce, a milk drink with a Sipaah flavoured straw. The meal also includes ripper grippers (a very simple version of chop sticks) and one of three paper masks, either an elephant, turtle or lion. It was expected to be released in August/September 2006, but has since been postponed to January 2007 due to incomplete items in production.
- McDonald's Australia is also trialling a new promotion called "My Dinner Now™" in selected restaurants within the Newcastle area in New South Wales. The menu consists of over 30 different home style based dishes including steak, vegetables and fish.
- The volume of food used annually by UK McDonald's Restaurants according to the McDonald's Area Management Guide:
- Beef: 32,000 tonnes
- Chicken: 21,500 tonnes
- Potato products: 86,000 tonnes
- Eggs: 100 million
- Buns: 667 million
- Milk shake and sundae: 40 million litres
- Cheese: 7,250 tonnes
- McDonald's Canada incorporates a maple leaf into the Golden Arches logo, a move copied by other fast-food chains. When McDonald's expanded to the Soviet Union, the operation was carried out by McDonald's of Canada, and the Golden Arches there initially included a Soviet flag in the location of the maple leaf.
- The world's most northern branch of McDonald's is in the city of Rovaniemi, Finland.
- The world's most southern branch of McDonald's is in the city of Punta Arenas, Chile.
From left to right: Hamburglar, Ronald McDonald, Grimace and Birdie the Early Bird (as they appeared in a series of commercials for McDonald's).
Documentaries about McDonald's Corporation
- The Japan Project: Made in America - The emergence and evolution of McDonald's business in Japan.
- Super Size Me - Morgan Spurlock's diet of nothing but McDonald's for 30 days.
- McLibel - 2005, a remake of McLibel: Two World's Collide (1997), from Spanner Films [5]
- Maxime, McDuff & McDo - 2002 - is the title of a French language (w/English subtitles) documentary film that shows the attempt of unionizing a McDonald's restaurant in Montreal, Canada. The restaurant becomes unionized only to be shut down shortly afterwards by its owner.
Parodies
- In the 1973 film Sleeper, Miles Monroe (Woody Allen) stops at a McDonald's from the year 2173. A sign on the restaurant shows the number of customers served to date as a '1' followed by fifty-three 0's.
- In one Calvin and Hobbes strip, Calvin refers to "McZargalds, over 75 Million Earthlingburgers served."
- In a skit on his popular show, Chappelle's Show, Dave Chappelle portrays a young black man (Calvin) who gets a job at the local WacArnolds.
- In the movie Coming to America Prince Akeem of Zamunda and his servent, Semmi, go to work at a franchise called McDowell's, which is so similar to McDonald's that the owner is constantly shooing off people taking pictures of the place and accusing him of copyright infringement. Apparently his "differences" were the "golden arcs" rather then "arches" and his signature hamburger was the "Big Mic (or Mc)" which distinguishes itself from the Big Mac only by not having sesame seeds on its bun.
- In the anime series InuYasha, Kagome, a main character sometimes is seen eating at a fast-food restaurant called WcDonald's. Its logo is a "W" which is identical to the golden arches of McDonald's, except it is upside-down. In another anime, Please Save My Earth, a restaurant with a similar logo appears.
- In the animated series Beavis and Butt-head, the duo works in a fictitious fast-food restaurant called Burger World with a golden upturned arches as a sign.
- In the video game series Space Quest, a recurring location is the fictitious fast-food restaurant called Monolith Burger which has a more pointy version of the golden arches as its sign. A restaurant of the same name also appeared in the game Jones in the Fastlane this was the lowest paying place to work in the game.
- On an episode of Robot Chicken, Mayor McCheese is a real mayor.
- In the cartoon Invader Zim, there is a fast food chain called McMeaties
- In Kevin Smith's Jersey Series movies (mainly Dogma, Jay & Silent Bob, and Clerks 2), there is a fictional fast food chain named Mooby's. While it could be a parody of any burger chain, its heavy level of advertising to children parodies McDonald's.
- In the anime series SuperGALS, the McDonald's Arch Logo can be seen, however it's flipped upside down.
- In the animated series Clerks, The mayor and Chief of Police are both stuck in Mayor McCheese costumes with faulty zippers. Later, when asked if anything can kill the Grimace, the Chief of Police replies scornfully, "Nothing can kill the Grimace."
- In the anime Ah My Goddess, Keiichi and Belldandy are seen eating at a fast-food restaurant called NcDonald's, which is identical to McDonald's except there is one arch in the logo instead of two.
- In The Simpsons episode Treehouse of Horror X the display changes from 99 Billion Served to 0 Served after the Y2K bug hits making all computers display the year as 1900.
- In the anime Zeta Gundam, an AEUG meeting prior to their invasion of the Titan's Jaburo base takes place at a fast-food restaurant called McDaniel's.
- In the movie The Flintstones, McDonald's is called "RocDonalds" and was marketed as such during a campaign promoting the movie at real McDonald's restaurants.
- In the "Myth" series by Robert Asprin, the Bazaar at Deva has a restaurant called 'the Yellow Cresent Inn' and serves 'pink goop the consistancy of swamp muck'(Strawberry Milkshakes)
Gallery
McDonald's + Drive Thru in Moab (Utah)
|
A McDonald's restaurant in Singapore.
|
|
McDonald's in Belgrade, Serbia
|
Retro McDonald's in Bloomington, Minnesota
|
McDonald's store in Dortmund, Germany
|
McDonald's Sekime national route store Osaka, Japan
|
Retro McDonald's in Tampa, Florida
|
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
McDonald's
Look up McDonald's in
Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
- ^ http://www.hoovers.com/company-information/--ID__10974--/free-co-factsheet.xhtml
- ^ Letter from McDonald's headquarters claiming fries are vegetarian
- ^ Warner, Margaret (October 14 2003). INSIDE GUANTANAMO. Online NewsHour. Retrieved on 2006-03-15.
- ^ Corera, Gordon (16 Jan 2006). Guantánamo Bay's unhappy anniversary. The New Nation. Retrieved on 2006-03-15.
See also
- McDonald's restaurants
- McDonald's urban legends
- List of countries with McDonald's franchises
- List of trademarks owned by McDonald's
- McWords
Food
- McDonald's menu items
- Two all beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, onions on a sesame seed bun.
- Happy Meal
- Mighty Kids Meal
Marketing
- Fast food advertising
- Golden Arches
- I'm lovin' it
- List of promotions by McDonald's
- McDonaldland: Ronald McDonald, Birdie the Early Bird, Grimace, Hamburglar, The Fry Kids, Mayor McCheese
- McDonald's Menu Song
- McDonald's TV campaigns and slogans
Related companies
- Pret a Manger, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Donato's Pizza (McDonald's subsidiaries)
- Burger King - McDonald's biggest rival
- Wendy's - McDonald's 2nd biggest rival
Criticism
- Fast Food Nation, by Eric Schlosser
- George Ritzer's McDonaldization thesis
- Super Size Me, a film critical of McDonald's by Morgan Spurlock.
- McLibel, a documentary film about the corporation's attempt to sue two English eco-warriors.
Miscellaneous
- Lincoln Fry, a viral marketing campaign centering around what is supposedly a McDonald's fry with Abraham Lincoln's likeness on it
- McMurder in San Ysidro, California
- Don Gorske, a McDonald's enthusiast who has eaten over 20,000 Big Mac hamburgers
- M.C. Kids
- List of pop culture references to real restaurants
- PCPOS is the point of sale system used in most McDonald's Restaurants in the US.
- WcDonald's is a trans-canonical fictional restaurant that spoofs an upside-dwon Golden Arches logo.
External links
- McDonald's official worldwide website
- DMOZ: McDonald's, directory of links
- McSpotlight, an "Anti-McDonald's extravaganza"
- McDonald's breakfast @ Review the World
- News for McDonald's ® Franchisees, database of insightful articles and news.
- McDonald's Company Ratings and Political Contributions
- McDonald's Talk, an Internet forum of McDonald's employees
- McDonald's McMakeover
- McDonald's grabs a piece of the apple pie, Gary Younge, The Guardian, March 23, 2005.
- SupersizeMyPay.Com, a union campaign to organise McDonalds workers and drive up the price of a hamburger
- The McChronicles, Chronicling the McDonald's Brand Experience from the Customers' Point of View.
| McDonald's |
People: Dick and Mac McDonald | Ray Kroc
Fred L. Turner | Jim Skinner | George Cohon | Don Gorske | Michael R. Quinlan | Joan B. Kroc
Foods: Menu items | Arch Deluxe | Big Mac | Big N' Tasty | Big Xtra | Chicken McNuggets | Chicken Selects | Filet-O-Fish | Happy Meal | Lean Beef Burger | McChicken | McDLT | McDonald's Fruit and Walnut Salad | McFlurry | McRib | Mighty Kids Meal | Quarter Pounder | Shamrock Shake | Special sauce | Egg McMuffin | McGriddle
Characters: Ronald McDonald | Mayor McCheese | Birdie the Early Bird | Hamburglar | Grimace | Captain Crook | Big Mac | Fry Guys/Fry Kids | Uncle O'Grimacey | Mac Tonight
Places: Countries with McDonald's franchises | McDonaldland | The Hamburger Patch | McDonald's Museum | Ronald McDonald House | Hamburger University
Other: History | TV campaigns and slogans | McDonald's Menu Song | i'm lovin' it | Fast Food Nation | Super Size Me | Golden Arches | The Wacky Adventures of Ronald McDonald | Legal cases | McDonaldization | M.C. Kids video game | Monopoly Best Chance Game | Supersize | Urban legends
|
Categories: Companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange | Articles with unsourced statements | Companies established in 1940 | Dow Jones Industrial Average | McDonald's | Fast-food chains of the United States | Fast-food chains of Canada | Fast-food franchises | Fast-food burger restaurants | Fortune 1000 | Multinational food companies | Companies based in Illinois
mcdonald mcdonlads mcdonals mcdonnalds mcdonlds mccdonalds mcdonadls mcdonads mconalds mddonalds mcdonelds ncdonalds mcdanalds mcdoalds mcdoanlds mcdonales mcdonalsd mcdonalda mcconalds mcdonakds
|