
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


McDonald’s is mind-boggling. According to Adam Chandler, author of the recent book, Drive-Thru Dreams, it sells roughly 75 burgers every second and serves 68 million people every day—equivalent to 1 percent of the entire world’s population. “The golden arches are thought to be, according to an independent survey, more recognizable as a symbol than the Christian cross is around the world,” Chandler told us. This episode, we tell the story of McDonald’s—but more importantly, we explore what it has to say about who we are. To do that, we’re also joined by historian Marcia Chatelain, author of the new book Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America, who helps us unpack the troubled but fascinating relationship between McDonald’s and African Americans. Why did taxpayers end up funding the spread of McDonald’s into the inner city “food deserts” it now dominates? Who invented the hamburger and how did it become America’s national cuisine? From a bustling barbecue stand in San Bernardino to Ray Kroc’s location-scouting airplane rides, and from the McNugget to the McJob, this episode we figure out how McDonald’s became so ubiquitous, and what that means for America.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley4.7
35083,508 ratings
McDonald’s is mind-boggling. According to Adam Chandler, author of the recent book, Drive-Thru Dreams, it sells roughly 75 burgers every second and serves 68 million people every day—equivalent to 1 percent of the entire world’s population. “The golden arches are thought to be, according to an independent survey, more recognizable as a symbol than the Christian cross is around the world,” Chandler told us. This episode, we tell the story of McDonald’s—but more importantly, we explore what it has to say about who we are. To do that, we’re also joined by historian Marcia Chatelain, author of the new book Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America, who helps us unpack the troubled but fascinating relationship between McDonald’s and African Americans. Why did taxpayers end up funding the spread of McDonald’s into the inner city “food deserts” it now dominates? Who invented the hamburger and how did it become America’s national cuisine? From a bustling barbecue stand in San Bernardino to Ray Kroc’s location-scouting airplane rides, and from the McNugget to the McJob, this episode we figure out how McDonald’s became so ubiquitous, and what that means for America.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

43,977 Listeners

26,219 Listeners

2,548 Listeners

7,865 Listeners

10,748 Listeners

2,671 Listeners

9,579 Listeners

3,087 Listeners

3,941 Listeners

1,095 Listeners

379 Listeners

3,155 Listeners

12,176 Listeners

2,999 Listeners

1,484 Listeners

24,338 Listeners

1,899 Listeners

3,488 Listeners

2,164 Listeners

42 Listeners

23,610 Listeners

4,859 Listeners

714 Listeners

6,454 Listeners

2,318 Listeners

1,217 Listeners

150 Listeners

1,747 Listeners

440 Listeners

1,368 Listeners

437 Listeners

32 Listeners