1981: BURGER BOOM - Will US fast-food CONQUER BRITAIN? | Newsround Extra | BBC Archive

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  • čas přidán 6. 05. 2022
  • Paul McDowell and reporter John Craven look at the influx into Britain of American fast food restaurant chains like Burger King and McDonalds. They're clean, they're family friendly, and they're very, very quick. Is this the end of the traditional British chippy?
    Originally broadcast 8 May, 1981.
    You have now entered the BBC Archive, an audiovisual time machine that will transport you back to the golden age of TV to educate, entertain and enlighten you through our classic clips from the BBC vaults.
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Komentáře • 3,7K

  • @nickpook442
    @nickpook442 Před 3 měsíci +688

    What struck me here was the fact that this segment in BBC Newsround, a programme for children, was more adult and in-depth in 1981 than most mainstream news programmes nowadays.

    • @Candolad
      @Candolad Před 3 měsíci

      Yes, that's very noticeable. The dumbing-down of the media began in the late 1990s led by political correctness, the BBC and the diluting of the education system in order to not upset those who couldn't pass exams at school. We're here and it's now.

    • @KirksAudioSanctum
      @KirksAudioSanctum Před 3 měsíci +56

      They also did not need to add silly music to it, to dumb it down for the audience... Says a lot of today's news from the BBC!

    • @monkeymox2544
      @monkeymox2544 Před 3 měsíci +35

      @@KirksAudioSanctumTo be fair, that's the BBC following trends, not setting them. If they didn't do that sort of thing, they'd be accused of being ''out of touch'.

    • @OlaOla-so3il
      @OlaOla-so3il Před 3 měsíci +29

      It shows that Britain really is dumbing down

    • @mit6635
      @mit6635 Před 2 měsíci +34

      Newsround always went above and beyond in those days. One of its core principles was not to be patronising towards children, and I loved it for that. But yeah, turn on BBC News now and they start by assuming their audience has no knowledge about anything.

  • @Gadgetmonkey
    @Gadgetmonkey Před 2 lety +4939

    Wow! - archive footage of the last time a McDonalds milkshake machine worked.

  • @khlkhjhlk
    @khlkhjhlk Před 2 měsíci +208

    McDonalds in 1981: Takes 25 seconds to get your food
    McDonalds now: Takes at least 8 minutes

    • @Xalgucennia
      @Xalgucennia Před 2 měsíci +26

      Closer to 15 minutes.
      My local Chinese restaurant does food faster, cheaper and better than MacDonald's

    • @neilhurn2685
      @neilhurn2685 Před 2 měsíci +9

      Yes as it's all too automated now and the staff can't work as quick as they did then. The human brain works different now. Not so effectively

    • @LeeMcDaidDonegal
      @LeeMcDaidDonegal Před 2 měsíci +32

      Take a film crew with you... it tends to speed up service! :)

    • @user-zw9gf6if8s
      @user-zw9gf6if8s Před měsícem +8

      in 2039 takes up to 5 business days

    • @ths3525
      @ths3525 Před měsícem +4

      Plus the order being wrong or something missing.

  • @daviddixey
    @daviddixey Před 4 měsíci +180

    People forget how revolutionary this was. Britain wasn't familiar with the American type food outlet. Particularly memorable was a quote on a documentary about fast food: "People saw these brightly lit places and were puzzled; they looked like launderettes."

    • @GuyDude-hk8uy
      @GuyDude-hk8uy Před 3 měsíci +30

      Revolutionary indeed, but I'm thinking of the Russian Revolution sort. Wish they'd have stayed in America, honestly. I'd have to literally be starving to eat at McDonalds; not because it tastes bad (not that it tastes amazing either by any stretch) but because it's so unhealthy and I just disagree with the entire fast-food culture we imported from across the pond. Back then you'd make a packed lunch if you knew you'd need to eat on the go, with proper ingredients full of nutrition. The thought of people trying to work or study living only off of McDonalds is horrifying.

    • @bobrew461
      @bobrew461 Před 2 měsíci +14

      ​@@GuyDude-hk8uy
      The first MacDonalds to open in London (circa 1974 I believe), was vehemently opposed before it opened.
      People could see the writing on the wall, even back then!

    • @AshleyPomeroy
      @AshleyPomeroy Před 2 měsíci +14

      ​@@GuyDude-hk8uy I find it hard to believe that the average British packed lunch circa 1981 had "proper ingredients full of nutrition". It was wall-to-wall ham and beef paste sandwiches and crisps back then.

    • @GuyDude-hk8uy
      @GuyDude-hk8uy Před 2 měsíci

      @@AshleyPomeroy Imagine thinking ham and beef paste sandwiches and crisps aren't nutritious.
      (serious answer: in 1981 that would not be an average packed lunch, dummy)

    • @PatrickHutton
      @PatrickHutton Před 2 měsíci +5

      Ashley, exactly a proper nutritional lunch.

  • @drummerbod
    @drummerbod Před 2 lety +2756

    £1.52 for a Big Mac meal in 1981. Using an inflation calculator that equates to £4.70 today. That meal is £4.69 now. Quite impressive tracking.

    • @SmegulonPrime
      @SmegulonPrime Před 2 lety +73

      Strawberry milkshake that's extra and a terrible choice

    • @peteri8924
      @peteri8924 Před 2 lety +300

      £6.07 is what that would cost today. He ordered a Big Mac, Small Fries and a Milkshake which are Medium so that's not £4.69

    • @andyrob3259
      @andyrob3259 Před 2 lety +112

      and the burgers have shrunk as well. Wen't the other day after a while away and looked at the burger and thought 'damn this looks more like a slider or a kids burger'

    • @stevenmcguinness4751
      @stevenmcguinness4751 Před 2 lety +64

      @@andyrob3259 Not sure that’s correct, 1/4 pounder is based on a set weight

    • @craigjensen6853
      @craigjensen6853 Před 2 lety +37

      @@stevenmcguinness4751 No, it's still a 1/4 pound patty but it just means it costs them 1/4 of a pound to manufacture.

  • @mr.y.mysterious.video1
    @mr.y.mysterious.video1 Před 2 lety +897

    When a vintage kids news article is aimed at the same level as current adult news shows.

    • @Magicalfluidprocess
      @Magicalfluidprocess Před 2 lety +38

      Boom , something iv said for a while now

    • @themaskedmaestro4699
      @themaskedmaestro4699 Před 2 lety +167

      This was made for kids??? It's crazy how far we've fallen

    • @xenomorph6961
      @xenomorph6961 Před 2 lety +126

      @@themaskedmaestro4699 I remember a documentary discussing Newsround with John Craven, one of these presenters, and he made it quite clear that the aim of this 'children's' program was not to talk down to them, or to focus solely on simple topics but instead to present real world news in a manner children would enjoy.
      Quite the contrast from today's children's news programs that seem to focus solely on the latest pop bands and the latest social fad...

    • @Catchamat
      @Catchamat Před 2 lety +37

      The uk imported more than just America's fast food culture..quick sound bites have also proved popular.

    • @Magicalfluidprocess
      @Magicalfluidprocess Před 2 lety +2

      @@Catchamat they are 24 /7

  • @theancientsancients1769
    @theancientsancients1769 Před rokem +238

    What struck me the most was how intelligent and informed this kids were about business 😳

    • @generalawareness101
      @generalawareness101 Před rokem +33

      Being 16 when this originally aired I can tell you that over here in the states the populace has become dumber. I read somewhere where the average IQ is dropping by about 0.5-1.5 per year. Average IQ in the 1960s was 110. By 1990 the average was 90. In 2020 it was around 80 and going south fast.

    • @horuslupercal2385
      @horuslupercal2385 Před rokem +43

      @@generalawareness101 this is scary. Following that pattern, the fast food in 2040 will be more intelligent than the kids eating it 😐

    • @generalawareness101
      @generalawareness101 Před rokem +12

      @@horuslupercal2385 It really is bad. Over here we have man on the street interviews that shows just how bad it is. Stuff I take for granted they simply have no idea about because none of it is taught in schools nor on tik-tok. When I bring this up the people always resort (same as the last 40 years when people brought it up about man on the street interviews) to saying they were cherry picked. I always tell them that may be the case, but how about you go ask people the same things, and when you pick yourself up off the floor come back and report your findings. I mean I have done this on the casual to people I bump into, and their ignorance amazes me though I am now used to the Idiocracy society in which I live.

    • @OscilateWildy
      @OscilateWildy Před rokem +11

      @@generalawareness101 Have you got any sources to back up these claims?

    • @bradford_shaun_murray
      @bradford_shaun_murray Před rokem +1

      I've heard it be said the food was always well usually flesh back then 5:05

  • @Cirias
    @Cirias Před rokem +245

    As a kid in the mid 90s, it was amazing being able to have your birthday in McDonald's and have the whole experience with dressed up characters, a specific party room and staff providing everything. Great times.

    • @carguynewb7856
      @carguynewb7856 Před rokem +1

      People still do that nowadays

    • @Morning404
      @Morning404 Před rokem +3

      @@carguynewb7856 do they?

    • @Bossman525
      @Bossman525 Před rokem +8

      Pizza Hut parties were so much better for that era. Always found the Mcdonalds and BK parties were "common".

    • @fabianbernard6819
      @fabianbernard6819 Před rokem +11

      Also, parents were given a ashtray and a fresh pint

    • @sundaysloth4559
      @sundaysloth4559 Před rokem +1

      ​@@fabianbernard6819 😂

  • @almatt8310
    @almatt8310 Před rokem +370

    3:25 Wow! Putin blended in nicely as a Wimpy's manager. This KGB agent will have a great political success in the future.

    • @michaeladams9806
      @michaeladams9806 Před 3 měsíci +29

      He probably realised there was no need to put polonium 210 in the inherently unhealthy junk food.

    • @roguesgallery4228
      @roguesgallery4228 Před 3 měsíci +8

      Sadly Wimpy didn’t make it. The Burger chain failed too.

    • @carlbaker1517
      @carlbaker1517 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Classic 😂

    • @1justme
      @1justme Před 3 měsíci

      😅😮

    • @RenegadeSound
      @RenegadeSound Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@roguesgallery4228 There is a Wimpy bar in Harlow ,Essex .

  • @th8257
    @th8257 Před 2 lety +1239

    Really great social history - people just didn't eat out back then in the way they do now. Choice was incredibly limited and people tended to either make their food at home or return home to eat. Eating out was a rare treat. It's probably one of the origins of the obesity crisis there is now.

    • @horsenuts1831
      @horsenuts1831 Před rokem +112

      Definitely. I was born in 1965, and I can count on the fingers of two hands how many times I ate out in a restaurant between 1965 and 1982. It just wasn't a 'thing'. I think the obesity crisis is probably partially due to what you describe, but also due to 'snacking' becoming normal. Back then, food wasn't available outside of set meal times for most of the population (set meal times being when you ate at home).

    • @FlyAmeliaEarheart
      @FlyAmeliaEarheart Před rokem +38

      I agree.
      I regularly tell my girlfriend's kid how rare eating out/takeaways were when we were young (70s kid here).
      Less disposable money, less choice, less expectancy to eat without cooking yourself.
      As a result, we enjoyed it so much more and understood that it was a massive rare treat.

    • @liammeech3702
      @liammeech3702 Před rokem +51

      People definitely confuse American fast-food culture with ours just because we both speak English. British people generally speaking, where way poorer than Americans in the 50's
      (pop-culture portrays it a time where everyone ate Burgers, fries and shakes)

    • @laurarules3642
      @laurarules3642 Před rokem +7

      And diabetes

    • @raggedbreath
      @raggedbreath Před rokem +7

      @@liammeech3702 not sure this is true. Show me a TV show or film based in England in the 50s or 60s that shows anyone eating fast food and burgers....

  • @CricketEngland
    @CricketEngland Před 3 měsíci +157

    Fish and Chips is a true British institution and will never go out of date.

    • @essa6315
      @essa6315 Před 3 měsíci +12

      Not sure I fancy out of date fish anyway

    • @CricketEngland
      @CricketEngland Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@essa6315 funny not!

    • @NLS_7
      @NLS_7 Před 3 měsíci

      You mean it came from Belgium.

    • @PoshMurder
      @PoshMurder Před 3 měsíci +11

      It's good to go passed a chippy today and still see queues going out the door every night. Really makes me feel good to know they aren't going anywhere!

    • @JarlGrimmToys
      @JarlGrimmToys Před 3 měsíci +8

      Greggs and Weatherspoons are the most common restaurants in the UK, with McDonalds coming in 3rd.
      Fish and Chip shops are obviously more common. But are generally owned by small family businesses, rather than big corporations. Which is a great thing.

  • @lazycatchphrase8148
    @lazycatchphrase8148 Před rokem +213

    Hearing competing fast food chains referred to as “rival firms” and the term “hamburger bar” are the biggest cultural takeaways I got from this.

    • @agfagaevart
      @agfagaevart Před rokem +17

      That's because the BBC didn't / still doesn't like to advertise companies.
      So at the start the "burger" was in an unbranded box.
      but we know he was talking about Macdonalds' Big Mac & Fries.

    • @bradford_shaun_murray
      @bradford_shaun_murray Před rokem

      0:36 👀

    • @davidmccann9811
      @davidmccann9811 Před rokem +4

      Back in those days, my dad (we're from London) always called his company his "firm" and his manager was simply his "guvnor".

    • @skylined5534
      @skylined5534 Před 8 měsíci +2

      No pun intended?

    • @karadan100
      @karadan100 Před 3 měsíci

      He also asked for chips.

  • @opo3628
    @opo3628 Před rokem +73

    As an aside, it's wild to realize that all of the children you see in this documentary are now 50+ years old...

  • @marshhen
    @marshhen Před rokem +641

    I am embarrassed to say that when I was a child my family drove 45 minutes to a city for shopping and the highlight of the trip for us was to eat in a McDonalds. There were just no child-friendly restaurants when I lived. My mother said that when she had us four young children, other customers in a regular restaurant would have looked at her disapprovingly for bringing us in there. She says it was quite hard as there were not alternatives. Restaurants were rather formal places for adults, not young children wanting child-friendly menus. A complete change from that today.

    • @ots1634
      @ots1634 Před rokem +21

      That is still a thing, i know people who drive 30mins for the nearest mcdonalds, or get a 45 min bus. even.

    • @cptrelentless80085
      @cptrelentless80085 Před rokem +42

      Surely you sat outside the pub with a coke and packet of crisps?

    • @rjjcms1
      @rjjcms1 Před rokem +17

      It's probably the fact that there were 4 children in tow that made some punters think "uh-oh",expecting at least one or two of them would act up and make a din that disturbed their evening out. My parents took me and my sister to a variety of restaurants,including Chinese and a Greek one,in the 70s and I never noticed any snobby attitudes towards us.

    • @experiment54
      @experiment54 Před rokem +60

      Yeah now in 2022 you can’t go to a decent restaurant without screaming kids on their iPads ruining the experience.

    • @daveyjones18
      @daveyjones18 Před rokem +16

      @@cptrelentless80085 Yeah, in the 80's, me and my little bro used to always go to the pub. Parents would watch a live band and we would fight our enemies from school on the on the climbing frame outside. Great times 🤣

  • @mogznwaz
    @mogznwaz Před rokem +88

    It amazes me (and makes me sad) just how much things have changed in such a short time. I remember the 80s and I’d swap the convenience and choice of today for the community and relative innocence and simplicity of then any day

    • @FCVP71
      @FCVP71 Před rokem +30

      I would gladly change the ethnic structure back also...

    • @anyexpat
      @anyexpat Před rokem +20

      Remove the internet and smart phones from the world and eveyone would be happier i guarantee you

    • @OscilateWildy
      @OscilateWildy Před rokem

      @@anyexpat You say whilst using your smartphone to watch amazing footage that if not for the internet you wouldn't have seen.
      You aren't an "expat" you are an immigrant, expat is just a term white people use to avoid being calledan immigrant.

    • @folksurvival
      @folksurvival Před 4 měsíci +15

      @@FCVP71 All of Europe must be reclaimed by the indigenous Europeans.

    • @musicjunk8266
      @musicjunk8266 Před 4 měsíci

      get rid of advanced capitalism and it’ll be so.@@folksurvival

  • @sparky6899
    @sparky6899 Před rokem +42

    27 seconds to get your food in McDonalds is an impossible dream now. Instead you place your order on a giant screen, get a receipt with an order number on it and then stand there for 15 mins like you're in Argos.

    • @kelmanl4
      @kelmanl4 Před 5 měsíci +5

      That's because the menu is like 10x bigger. There was only a few options back then.

    • @baldeepbirak
      @baldeepbirak Před 3 měsíci +1

      During COVID19 with a drive thru people waited over 30mins.

    • @jamlemon
      @jamlemon Před měsícem

      Whilst they prioritise all the Uber Eat drivers.

  • @rocon86
    @rocon86 Před 2 lety +495

    The service back in the 80s, without touchscreens or modern technology, was a hell of a lot faster than today. 25 seconds! Wow

    • @DaveCorbey
      @DaveCorbey Před 2 lety

      They have fooled all the millenials and generation Z in to doing most of the work to create the order themselves (badly|) on an irritating and unsanitary touch screen. Back in the day you rocked up, said what you wanted and 30s later you were walking out with a bagful of MaccyD. These days we don't get anything that can remotely be called service. We fill our own tanks with petrol, use those stupid self serve tills in shops, and deal with irritating automated phone systems with a 1000 menu items.

    • @TheStevenWhiting
      @TheStevenWhiting Před 2 lety +45

      I thought of this ages ago when I started to see the screens appear. I thought "This isn't great. The screens are slow and the kitchens haven't been designed to cope. The amount of orders that will now come in, will be more than the kitchen can handle". Thought I was just being old and not moving with the times. Looked it up a while ago and saw it confirmed on reddit by the kitchen staff. They explained when you order at the till, with each item entered into the till, they can see it instantly in the kitchen so can start making it. But with the screen orders, they only get the order once the customer has paid and the whole order comes in all at once.
      Granted, the screens have gotten better and the layout of the counters have changed. So maybe they've all started to change their designs and layouts in the kitchen to be able to cope. But I'm assuming they still have the same issue, that the order from a screen all comes in at once.
      The pandemic hasn't helped either, it's somewhat created greed. Being able to deliver food was good during lock down but those same stores that were never designed for deliver AND in house service are still continuing to do deliveries. Our local KFC is one such store. It was already poor before the pandemic when it didn't do deliveries. But now it continues to take online orders and in house its kitchen just can't cope. Orders are frequently wrong and stuff is always missing (how difficult is it to read what is on the screen for the order you're packing).

    • @psims7342
      @psims7342 Před 2 lety +23

      @@TheStevenWhiting these days they have it sat around for 15 minutes before they chuck it, for all we know in those days it couldve been sat around half the day and still be deemed acceptable, thus food would always be available and lets be honest, the food they show doesnt look particularly fresh made or appealing , they may not have had storage requirements that were as stringent then as they are now, and so forth..............times have changed massively in all areas and i dont think its anywhere near as black and white as "back in the day each item ordered is immediately sent to the kitchen but these days only the entire order is, thus it was quicker then"

    • @TheStevenWhiting
      @TheStevenWhiting Před 2 lety +3

      @@psims7342 I only said what the kitchen staff were saying when the system was fairly new, its possible things have changed but it does make sense, that with the touch screens, the whole order only appears in the kitchen once paid for.
      Not sure how the kitchen system works now but know that in the "old days" the "production bin" where the food was slid down those shoots, was always warm so it kept the food hot or at least warm but not sure how long it stayed that way. If was still in touch with my friends from back in the 90s could of asked them. Both were shift running managers back in the old days :)

    • @TheStevenWhiting
      @TheStevenWhiting Před 2 lety +1

      @D2M5 Nando's do that now, so we discovered when we last went. However, they were good enough to tell us. Just lucky we both have smart phones as I know some older folk don't.

  • @arthurjarrett1604
    @arthurjarrett1604 Před 2 lety +602

    I completed my army basic training in Woolwich, London, in 1984. There were four burger "shops" in the town centre, McDonalds, Wimpy, American Burger and one I can't remember. Myself and a Welsh bloke I was training with used to go on "burger crawls" because of the novelty as we didn't have burger places where we came from. Cheeseburger on its own in each and we'd compare whilst going round town. Good times...

  • @pearljam619
    @pearljam619 Před rokem +3

    Back in the 80s I went to many a McDonald’s Birthday Parties. Great fun and happy times.

  • @RollaArtis
    @RollaArtis Před rokem +8

    1981 seems rather late, there was a Wimpy bar in my high street in the mid 1960's and a McDonalds opened in 1974. Now there is plastic litter everywhere....

    • @user-pm8xv4vf1u
      @user-pm8xv4vf1u Před 15 dny

      All the people that don't give a McSh*t. Except in the restuarant itself

  • @jeanlefranc3817
    @jeanlefranc3817 Před rokem +131

    10 year old kids answering questions from the BBC journalist in a well articulated way many adults simply couldn’t today.

    • @Riddlestar93
      @Riddlestar93 Před rokem +24

      I noticed that as well, the quality of education has certainly changed for the worse over the decades.

    • @jeanlefranc3817
      @jeanlefranc3817 Před rokem +5

      @@Riddlestar93 it most definitely has.

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 Před rokem +5

      I noticed that immediately. Indeed I assumed they were 12 or 13 to be answering questions like that. If they were 10 even better for them.

    • @john.premose
      @john.premose Před rokem +10

      That’s a bit condescending. Kids are quite intelligent you know, a lot more than adults give them credit for

    • @andrewtucker94
      @andrewtucker94 Před rokem +8

      @@Riddlestar93 In that case, those supposedly intelligent young adults have let their children down, haven't they?

  • @Nosedruul
    @Nosedruul Před 2 lety +162

    These were the last years when you could record footage of the public and everyone was still sort of normal-sized.

    • @MrLump
      @MrLump Před rokem +18

      Now we’re super-sized

    • @partyringsparty
      @partyringsparty Před rokem +48

      They just smoked 50 a day instead. Good times eh.

    • @john.premose
      @john.premose Před rokem +10

      Yes, the beginning of the end for public health. To paraphrase Galadriel, “McDonalds is the footsteps of doom for us”

    • @moaningpheromones
      @moaningpheromones Před rokem +6

      @@partyringsparty yeah - not everyone smoked. just like not everyone is fat today.

    • @Answersonapostcard
      @Answersonapostcard Před rokem +5

      @@moaningpheromones most people are though

  • @kazamenetworks7046
    @kazamenetworks7046 Před měsícem +3

    That tie is ridiculous!

  • @billy6044
    @billy6044 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Rip wimpy, there is still one in my home town but my home towns still stuck in the 80s

  • @dh8176
    @dh8176 Před 2 lety +275

    There will always be Fish and Chips. The experts were right. I do miss Wimpy though.

    • @4879daniel
      @4879daniel Před 2 lety +24

      Wimpy hasn’t gone, still has a reasonable amount of stores.

    • @dh8176
      @dh8176 Před 2 lety +4

      @@4879daniel with table service like in the clip or just as a fast food outlet?

    • @trippymchippy8586
      @trippymchippy8586 Před 2 lety +11

      I went to Wimpy a couple of years back, the food was absolutely horrible and the place was falling to bits.

    • @4879daniel
      @4879daniel Před 2 lety +8

      @@dh8176 Not been in decades but one I went to as a kid is still there and has a diner layout.

    • @chriswatkin5476
      @chriswatkin5476 Před 2 lety +9

      Shrewsbury has a wimpy

  • @lotuseater7247
    @lotuseater7247 Před 2 lety +212

    “Whatever happens, there’ll always be fish n chips” that gave me a minor shrill of patriotism, not felt since England made the euro final.

    • @rjjcms1
      @rjjcms1 Před rokem +13

      Long live fish and chips!

    • @HonestTraveller
      @HonestTraveller Před rokem +8

      Oh yes, I have fish friday every week. Cannot live without it

    • @lotuseater7247
      @lotuseater7247 Před rokem

      @@HonestTraveller lucky you!

    • @DubSalvation
      @DubSalvation Před rokem +4

      Its actually Jewish in origin

    • @lotuseater7247
      @lotuseater7247 Před rokem +19

      @@DubSalvationActually it's attributed to the French. But what's your point? the most popular food in the UK is a curry, derived from India. If you want to bang on about origin you'll be banging all day.

  • @NecroMorrius
    @NecroMorrius Před 3 měsíci +10

    Anyone notice that virtually no one is overweight?

    • @ianlaker9161
      @ianlaker9161 Před 15 dny +2

      ...yet

    • @user-pm8xv4vf1u
      @user-pm8xv4vf1u Před 15 dny +1

      @@ianlaker9161 Yes, there was literally nothing on the lack of nutrition. If this was nowadays they would have had to place "AD" in the top corner of the screen

  • @TripleR250
    @TripleR250 Před 2 měsíci +3

    3:12 "Whatever happens they'll always be Fish and Chips" that's true! Despite when Asian food and American fast food became the norm in Britain but traditional fish and chips were still pretty popular 💯 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @garrymartin6474
    @garrymartin6474 Před 2 lety +111

    " Here in the Midlands" points at the Lake district, " Here in Sheffield" puts sticker to the west of Manchester. I take it a knowledge of the geography of |Britain wasn't necessary to work for BBC News in those days 🤣🤣

    • @summan41man
      @summan41man Před rokem +8

      It was pretty much bang on Manchester, it was that burger placed on that map that made me watch the video as I was curious to see if Manchester was one of the first places to have an 'American fast-food outlet'

    • @minners71
      @minners71 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Just a liking for underage children was the main criteria for hiring back then on the BBC.

    • @green1880
      @green1880 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @minners71 - STILL IS!!

    • @chrishateley5582
      @chrishateley5582 Před 2 měsíci +1

      They didn't have Google maps back then.

    • @tomkandy
      @tomkandy Před měsícem

      The UK consists of London, the home counties, and then untamed wilderness full of whippets and miners and possibly wolves.

  • @simonhodgetts6530
    @simonhodgetts6530 Před 2 lety +209

    Sadly, fish and chips has become so expensive that it’s gone from being a family Friday night dinner, to an occasional treat. While McDonalds on a Saturday morning is absolutely chock full of customers………

    • @CasperUK31
      @CasperUK31 Před 2 lety +17

      Which is odd since they are still about the same price. Big Mac medium meal here is £5.49 or £5.89 if with a milkshake as the guy in the video had. The average price for fish and chips, a quick look on just eat has shown...£5

    • @andrewjohnston2850
      @andrewjohnston2850 Před rokem +39

      @@CasperUK31 where is that , 9 quid beside me!!

    • @CasperUK31
      @CasperUK31 Před rokem +1

      @@andrewjohnston2850 Wirral, North West, across the Mersey from Liverpool

    • @tomcolton5662
      @tomcolton5662 Před rokem +17

      Try eating proper food once in a while

    • @MrStevieb00
      @MrStevieb00 Před rokem +7

      fish and chips are a 10 spot in Edinburgh but soon to be 14 or 15 if reports are to be believed

  • @BloodMoonASMR
    @BloodMoonASMR Před 4 měsíci +5

    4:00 "Here in the Midlands"
    *points to Newcastle Upon-Tyne*

  • @stevedickson5853
    @stevedickson5853 Před rokem +2

    John Craven " I would chips", assistant " would you like large French Fries " 🤣

  • @Scrapper.
    @Scrapper. Před rokem +83

    John Craven = Legend. As a kid I loved his news broadcasts through the 70s

    • @trevhib
      @trevhib Před rokem +5

      I watched him on Countryfile just last night on the subject of picking raspberries 😅 His style hasn't changed. National treasure.

    • @williamshakespeare3429
      @williamshakespeare3429 Před rokem +5

      I remember ‘John Craven’s Newsround’

    • @judet5426
      @judet5426 Před rokem +2

      I agree, he's still going strong 💪

    • @Scrapper.
      @Scrapper. Před rokem +6

      @@williamshakespeare3429 Although they softened the edges of international war reports and other negative news, mindful of their young viewers, Newsround let us know that not every person on Earth were living nice lives. It gave some balance.

    • @bradford_shaun_murray
      @bradford_shaun_murray Před rokem

      1:42 Burger Time!

  • @JosephusAurelius
    @JosephusAurelius Před 2 lety +113

    No chance! Thank you BBC for uploading such valuable historic footage

  • @johnshields6852
    @johnshields6852 Před 11 měsíci +4

    I was 6 in 1966, mom gave me 2 dollars and me and friends would go to the local McDonald's near us, the foods not really great but there's something about the quick service and the taste that's enjoyable. Plus the ads were constantly bombarding our minds. Thank you for the ride back in time.

  • @NSResponder
    @NSResponder Před 2 měsíci +2

    I was living in Bonn, West Germany, in 1977 when the first MacDonald's opened in Köln, about an hour away by bicycle. My dad, my sister and I used to make the trip on the occasional Saturday. It was how he got us to exercise!

  • @UncleFeedle
    @UncleFeedle Před 2 lety +57

    I lived in New Malden in the late 70's. Going to the McDonald's in London was an incredibly rare treat, once or twice a year at most.
    And my older brother always got to sit in the swivel seat, the git.

  • @junk5354
    @junk5354 Před rokem +39

    Several weeks back here in Wilmington, Delaware, USA they discovered a time capsule, a Burger King close 27 years ago in our Concord Mall. They boarded it up and left the tables and everything just as it was on the last day. Strangely they never tried or succeeded in renting this space in 27 years.

    • @kimeojin6447
      @kimeojin6447 Před rokem +6

      I looked it up and you're exactly right, it's very cool. I like how they're using it as an opportunity to advertise the mall and they're trying to keep it as-is without clearing it out and removing the historical space!

  • @tiocfaidh28
    @tiocfaidh28 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Newsround. I remember watching this when back from school.. Usually before Grangehill!

  • @Lolotrixx
    @Lolotrixx Před rokem +8

    This is honestly facinating and funny. From the way to way they have explain a Mcdonalds Meal to the Viewers to the map of the five whole Mcdonalds places that will open in Britain. Crazy how things changed

  • @anonnymous4684
    @anonnymous4684 Před rokem +158

    I used to work in a McDonald's in the late 80s and it was a point of pride to get orders to customers as quickly as possible. Officially, we weren't allowed to run to avoid accidents, but we did whenever mangers weren't around. I've not been to McDonald's in years, but reading the comments here it does sound as if standards have slipped on the 'fast' front.

    • @T27FRL
      @T27FRL Před rokem +20

      I’m a delivery driver and can honestly say the wait times are horrendous for all orders. I heard a few people say they’ve been told it’s no longer “fast food”. The standard of food has slipped too. I used to be a big fan of McDonald’s but now I rarely order anything for myself.

    • @Makiaveli01
      @Makiaveli01 Před rokem +2

      Yeah it has slipped, but now it depends on where you go, I wonder what would cause that fall of pride?

    • @MVgaming627
      @MVgaming627 Před rokem +2

      2 minutes que one at the counter

    • @davidlanham99
      @davidlanham99 Před rokem +7

      Are you kidding, today I wouldn't let the people they have working there handle my food. People today are disgusting.

    • @aaroncousins4750
      @aaroncousins4750 Před rokem +3

      Ill be waiting 20+ minutes in a drivethrough for food. Its a joke

  • @DeannaAllison
    @DeannaAllison Před 2 lety +281

    I remember visiting London around 1977 and walking into a MacDonald's for the first time. I had no idea what to do - how to order food - I had never used a counter-service restaurant and I was so confused! I can't remember whether I actually bought anything in the end.

    • @jeshkam
      @jeshkam Před 2 lety +9

      What was London like back in 1977?

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 Před 2 lety +3

      The monosodyermind glutalot worked then? If you returned you obviously would have no memory of it either

    • @hawsrulebegin7768
      @hawsrulebegin7768 Před 2 lety +18

      I’ve similar experience in 78. It was such a big change for us in the U.K. I’m just surprised Wimpy are still going.

    • @kupus6622
      @kupus6622 Před 2 lety +23

      @@jeshkam I remember hot summers reggae music and exotic smells in market. Lots of old woman with curlers in with blueish hair. Alot of my dad's mates were from Jamaica and most were rastas. Alot more poverty tho. No food some days , never saw a carpet just floor board. That what I remember from about 78/79 if that helps.

    • @HaggisMuncher-69-420
      @HaggisMuncher-69-420 Před 2 lety +10

      So since your first visit in 1977, you still haven't figured out how to spell McDonald's?

  • @leeosborne3793
    @leeosborne3793 Před 6 měsíci +1

    The Hammersmith McDonald's! I remember my mum taking me there when i was a kid, almost certainly around the time this report was made. Never saw John Craven in there, though. :) He was such a good presenter. Made things accessible and informative for kids without ever sounding patronising.

  • @c.brogansavage3385
    @c.brogansavage3385 Před rokem

    Well this was absolutely wonderful. John Craven is such a dreamboat 🥰

  • @chrisbradley977
    @chrisbradley977 Před 2 lety +253

    Got to love the presenting style of the time. We'll take two smartly dressed, well-spoken chaps and make them look utterly befuddled by the modern world. "I hear the young people like this so-called 'fast food'. They actually eat it out of the packaging, under illuminations powered by something called electricity."

    • @tetsuoshima7385
      @tetsuoshima7385 Před 2 lety +34

      “This popcorn chicken is not the type of popcorn that you or I might enjoy on a night out at the pictures, but something entirely different”.😝

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 Před 2 lety +1

      Craven tended to be patronising because he'd volunteered for children's TV and presumed his audience struggled to keep a room temperature iq
      I was a teenager so presumed he was relegated but in fact the BBC were smart enough to try and reach a younger audience.
      This was a blatant TV commercial, children that well spoken...
      The majority of people were traditionally brainwashed enough to pay for a TV licence in those days. 🤣

    • @rosiefay7283
      @rosiefay7283 Před 2 lety +24

      @@davepowell7168 There was no suggestion that this was something that only young people like -- clearly adults were eating in fast food eateries too. And John Craven wasn't patronising. Rather, he told his young audience what they needed to know. He didn't treat them as unintelligent, he treated them as not already knowing but capable of learning.

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 Před 2 lety +4

      @@rosiefay7283 Shooting the messenger would be unfair l agree. John would have had to work from a script approved by the BBC.

    • @markfox1545
      @markfox1545 Před 2 lety +1

      @@davepowell7168 - he wasn't relegated. Weird thing to say.

  • @PABLOSTRONGVLOGS
    @PABLOSTRONGVLOGS Před 2 lety +103

    "Would you like large French fries?" "small ones please" LOL

  • @Oneness2023
    @Oneness2023 Před rokem +3

    Now you wait 20mintues for order

  • @anthonyluna352
    @anthonyluna352 Před 3 měsíci +1

    The same meal he ordered would set you back about £7 now and It's way smaller than it used to be. Look how big his drink cup and fries bag were despite ordering small

  • @ewtwetrwerwteet
    @ewtwetrwerwteet Před rokem +24

    This was the moment my career in weight loss begun. Thank you McDonald's I owe my life and career to you

  • @grail68
    @grail68 Před rokem +62

    Newsround is a children's news TV show. Geared solely toward children. Pretty shocking to see how modern news, geared toward adults, looks exactly like this (except even flashier.)

  • @simonjones7727
    @simonjones7727 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I love "Look Around You". This is hilarious, an almost perfect parody of the real thing.

  • @timothyc5497
    @timothyc5497 Před rokem +2

    “Big Mac and chips please” perfect.

  • @kinetsievarvenfloot1237
    @kinetsievarvenfloot1237 Před 2 lety +17

    I very much enjoy going to the fast food centre.

  • @HomerSlated
    @HomerSlated Před 2 lety +307

    True story: I was in my mid-teens before I discovered that hamburgers could be eaten between two slices of bread. Up to that point, everyone I knew ate them as is, often with mash, peas and gravy.
    These days I'm more likely to have a curry.

    • @andyrob3259
      @andyrob3259 Před 2 lety +18

      Many still do ....... If I buy hamburger patties from the supermarket I don't make an entire burger.... I'll have it with vegetables or chips on a plate. I don't know anyone that doesn't still do that.

    • @DeannaAllison
      @DeannaAllison Před 2 lety +12

      Well, there's nowt wrong with gravy. Or curry sauce, for that matter. I sometimes think of curry sauce as a super-enhanced spicy gravy.

    • @bradavon
      @bradavon Před 2 lety +8

      It's just a burger without the bread. The bread turns it into a hamburger.

    • @oddities-whatnot
      @oddities-whatnot Před 2 lety +6

      @@DeannaAllison I make a sort of chinese curry sauce with gravy granules and curry powder mixed in. Works well

    • @ChrisWarsop
      @ChrisWarsop Před 2 lety +14

      And people called them "beef burgers"

  • @Derek_S
    @Derek_S Před rokem +7

    McDonalds had already been operating stores in London for around five years when this programme was made. The Hard Rock cafe near Hyde Park corner and other lesser known brands opened around five years before that, so there is no way American style burgers were a new thing in 1981.

    • @huntergray3985
      @huntergray3985 Před měsícem

      I agree, I remember catching a bus up to Marble Arch to try McDonalds in the mid-70s.

  • @moottori_paa
    @moottori_paa Před rokem

    love those kids, spoke so well!

  • @euanwalsh7604
    @euanwalsh7604 Před 2 lety +106

    This is clearly back when we thought fast food was the same as a regular meal out where you'd gather up the family for an outing

    • @oninbridders
      @oninbridders Před 2 lety +9

      Happened again in the 2010s (The Nandos Generation) but it was called Casual Dinning with the table service reinstated. No idea is new I guess you can say. But you are correct to state that kids go without parents these days meaning bouncers now have to police McDonald's.

    • @freakstate
      @freakstate Před 2 lety +1

      Gross isn't it.

    • @yourrightimsooosorry884
      @yourrightimsooosorry884 Před 2 lety +3

      The new trend is German doner kebab, kebabs done right ✅

    • @allanallen1835
      @allanallen1835 Před 2 lety +3

      Also when we thought it actually had good vitamins and was healthy.

    • @rosiefay7283
      @rosiefay7283 Před 2 lety +1

      But if there's a family to be fed, what's wrong with gathering the family for a meal out?

  • @Batwolf1968
    @Batwolf1968 Před 2 lety +13

    I can’t see it ever taking off.

  • @sporkfindus4777
    @sporkfindus4777 Před 10 měsíci

    I like the foliage in the restaurants and I LOVE the black backgrounds on the display boards

  • @johnleake5657
    @johnleake5657 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I remember listening (at my boarding school in 1979) to a schoolmate from Hong Kong talking about MacDonalds. I'd never heard about it before and it sounded so amazing (I was a country boy).

  • @finnmanproductions9240
    @finnmanproductions9240 Před 2 lety +19

    Fascinating to see the early days of fast food in the UK

  • @hand587
    @hand587 Před rokem +78

    Wimpy has had an amazing history. It was founded in the US but when the founder died, there were only 7 locations in the USA... but 1,500 worldwide. Many Wimpy locations were rebranded to Burger King, as the parent company at the time owned that brand too. It's now headquartered in South Africa!

    • @RW-nr6bh
      @RW-nr6bh Před rokem +12

      Went to Wimpy in Swanage recently. Good service and food. Preferred it to what McDonald's is these days; their self service machines have slowed everything down.

    • @bhew7409
      @bhew7409 Před rokem

      @@RW-nr6bh I was going to say Swanage!

    • @bradford_shaun_murray
      @bradford_shaun_murray Před rokem

      1:04 MBGA Make Burger Great Again?

    • @halfbakedproductions7887
      @halfbakedproductions7887 Před 9 měsíci

      I think there's still a Wimpy in Felixstowe. But I never went there.
      There was one in my home town a million years ago and I remember the kid next door going there for his birthday one year. Again, I don't recall ever going.

    • @davidbowie2046
      @davidbowie2046 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Nothing tasted better than a Wimpy spicy beanburger. They were amazing. I'm not even vegetarian

  • @HyuugaCharlie
    @HyuugaCharlie Před rokem +1

    i remember those old tills with the pre-printed button options. god thats a blast from the past

  • @dodgydruid
    @dodgydruid Před rokem

    Being a south Londoner we were blessed with the first McD's in Woolwich followed by the bigger one in Catford, for kids it was the ultimate day out treat.

  • @grinsko6741
    @grinsko6741 Před 2 lety +19

    I’d still rather watch something like this than the majority of today’s telly.

    • @oddities-whatnot
      @oddities-whatnot Před 2 lety +5

      Me and my best mate, in our 50s, probably watch more on YT than anything else. It has so many good factual and interesting videos. You can pick anything you want. Its excellent.

  • @AntGeezer
    @AntGeezer Před rokem +21

    “A Big Mac….and some chips” What a rebel..😂

  • @adina2419
    @adina2419 Před měsícem +1

    1:45 “Is that large fries?” Reminds me of my tenure at McDonald’s. 😅

  • @oscoe
    @oscoe Před 3 měsíci +4

    I loved the way John steadfastly asked for ´chips’ and the server asked what size French fries he wanted.

  • @banna1150
    @banna1150 Před 2 lety +27

    I used to love wimpy in the old Basingstoke town center in the early 90s then it shut. Then a few years ago it opened up again! The nostalgia to see wimpy back ❤️

    • @muckle8
      @muckle8 Před 2 lety +1

      Wow I will have to visit, I grew up in frimley and used to love the wimpy there as a young teen

    • @oddjobtriumph1635
      @oddjobtriumph1635 Před 2 lety +5

      Wimpy so much better than Mcdonalds

    • @banna1150
      @banna1150 Před 2 lety +1

      @@muckle8 I’m still in Basingstoke, was great to see wimpy back!

    • @muckle8
      @muckle8 Před 2 lety +2

      I’d love to see them open up more sites and come back en masse

    • @philsaspiezone
      @philsaspiezone Před 2 lety +1

      I went there with my girlfriend and we had a meal at the Wimpy at Festival place about 4 years ago.

  • @GrilloTheFlightless
    @GrilloTheFlightless Před 2 lety +28

    I was probably about ten before I first had a McDonalds. My parents would never take me. They didn’t approve, but my older cousin took me once. I didn’t go into one again until I was about 16, went to college, and did my own thing.
    As a kid, a meal out was always Wimpy or the local fish n’ chip restaurant. Wimpy had a bit more than just burgers or nuggets on offer so my parents would go for that. I never really considered Wimpy as fast food though because they cooked to order ( the chef was usually in full view to the diners) and you had to wait for it to be cooked. I love Wimpy and really miss them since they started to disappear. McDonalds and Burger King are nice, but they don’t beat freshly cooked food eaten with a plate and knife and fork.

  • @someoneontheinternetuvenev6268

    Is anyone going to mention how well mannered, articulate and overall intellectual those 10year old kids were? Now most kids/teens are too scared to even speak, let alone share an opinion on the public broadcast.

  • @andremp03
    @andremp03 Před rokem +2

    25 secs back in 1981 - Today in 2022, 10-15 minutes if you're lucky, ha!

  • @rosspidoto
    @rosspidoto Před 2 lety +5

    That second last boy sure takes life seriously 😅

  • @petermurphy75able
    @petermurphy75able Před 2 lety +45

    This was an incredibly accurate report looking back at it now, the kids at the end were so well spoken too.

    • @johnmiller0000
      @johnmiller0000 Před 2 lety +7

      Yes, I don't think they raided the local comp.

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 Před 2 lety +1

      @@johnmiller0000 😆

    • @mr.y.mysterious.video1
      @mr.y.mysterious.video1 Před 2 lety +10

      they certainly were not using words like 'bro' or 'mandem'

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 Před 2 lety

      @@mr.y.mysterious.video1 Not likely, sounded more like boyscouts with hopes of ATC and after Uni daddy's Masonic Lodge

    • @mountainbearoutdoors
      @mountainbearoutdoors Před 2 lety

      if ever there was argument for smacking your kids to bring them back in line this is it. not like the evil little turds being mass produced these days who go round cutting old ladies for fun.

  • @marine4lyfe85
    @marine4lyfe85 Před 8 měsíci

    When I was a kid in America in the 70's, my parents used to take us to Arthur Treacher's Fish and Chips for a change up.

  • @jjwebster1
    @jjwebster1 Před 7 měsíci +1

    And now it's quicker and cheaper to get a pasty from Greggs

  • @coolmacatrain9434
    @coolmacatrain9434 Před rokem +27

    They had won the war by '83.
    I remember coming over from Ireland to work in London that year and by then Kilburn high road had McDonalds, Wimpy, Kentucky Fried Chicken and Burger King!
    In fact Burger King (it was beside where the exit from Kilburn High Road overground station is now) was the first "proper" fast food I ever tried!

    • @irishboer7124
      @irishboer7124 Před rokem

      There used be a Spudulike in Kilburn, closed down though!

    • @bradford_shaun_murray
      @bradford_shaun_murray Před rokem

      0:42 burger taken from WWII bomb shelter?
      1:04 MBGA Make Burger Great Again?

  • @billparsonson7259
    @billparsonson7259 Před 2 lety +85

    My best fast food memories as a kid were in Wimpy. Great times. I remember when they were replaced here in Plymouth by Burger King in the late 80's.

    • @billparsonson7259
      @billparsonson7259 Před 2 lety +8

      @Mk1TTdude Wow, really?! Thats crazy, thats the same price as Five Guys here, which is a rip off!

    • @antonioverdad5071
      @antonioverdad5071 Před 2 lety +5

      I remember Wimpys too. When I was a kid in the 1960s there was a Wimpy in the high street, and my brother and I used to walk past it with mum on the way to the shops. It used to be frequented by big burly blokes in donkey jackets. When I we walked past once they had the door open, and I asked mum in a loud voice if you have to be wimpy to eat there. Several donkey jacketed gorillas turned and glared at me and mum hurried us along before anything kicked off!

    • @4879daniel
      @4879daniel Před 2 lety +1

      @@antonioverdad5071 There’s a decent amount of them still around including one I went to 30 years ago.

    • @coffeebot3000
      @coffeebot3000 Před 2 lety +5

      I remember visiting London as a child (i’m American), and looking through the window of a Wimpy’s was so surprised to see people eating their burgers with a knife and fork.

    • @alzeNL
      @alzeNL Před 2 lety +4

      Theres a Wimpy in Swanage and there is one at Clarence Pier Southsea :O)

  • @christopherlogan9315
    @christopherlogan9315 Před rokem +1

    They looked so much nicer inside in those days.

  • @ernietaggert
    @ernietaggert Před měsícem

    the lad on the far left puts his hand up in an interesting way at 5:23 😂

  • @robertgronewold3326
    @robertgronewold3326 Před rokem +85

    It's rather interesting watching this from the American perspective. Fast food started pretty early in the US. Besides the food carts that have always been around, we had diners here, usually the rail car variety, where people could pop in to get a quick meal that was often times a hamburger or some other kind of easy sandwich. Then when the 50's came about, when my own parents were kids, you had the drive-in restaurants cropping up, such places as the Dog and Suds, and A&W, where you would park your car and waiters wearing roller skates would come out to take your order and then deliver it just as quickly. By the time fast food really started to show up, McDonalds especially, the country took to it quite quickly. Now we're spoiled for variety and quality, though sadly it's often not very fast. I only usually go to one of these places once a month, and often I have to wait ten minutes or more for my order to come through.

    • @donkmeister
      @donkmeister Před rokem +11

      Of course we had other options besides fish and chips - the equivalent to US diners was the cafe, aka a greasy spoon. Great places to get breakfast and lunch, and if you are ever in the UK I'd recommend searching the reviews to find a good one for your breakfast. In London you had pie and mash shops (much less common these days but there are still a few). In North London there were of course Jewish salt beef shops (fewer of those around now too), and basically anywhere there was a sizeable diaspora of any nation or culture you'd find eateries catering to those people.

    • @vordman
      @vordman Před rokem +2

      @@donkmeister I still use greasy spoons. The best places for a breakfast, no question. These independant cafes, despite the unflattering moniker, are usually spotlessly clean too. Wouldn't be seen dead in one of those fast food dumps.

    • @straightpipediesel
      @straightpipediesel Před rokem +5

      Development in the UK was slower because the country was destroyed and bankrupted by WWII. Food rationing post-war was worse than during the war due to economic reasons, poor weather, and the end of US aid. Food was under ration until 1954, nearly a decade after the end of the war. Other issues included social turmoil in the 1970's, with the oil crisis and multiple strikes.

    • @XXXTENTAClON227
      @XXXTENTAClON227 Před rokem +1

      @@straightpipediesel pretty sure the “ration” was to stop hoarding since the government didn’t control the media
      Either way I’ve always found Britains attitude towards it funny… basically just “Food is food, calories is calories, stop wasting time eating fancy meals and conquer somewhere”

    • @straightpipediesel
      @straightpipediesel Před rokem +2

      @@XXXTENTAClON227 Nope. Might want to learn some history. The UK had a balance of payments crisis. It had huge wartime debts, needed to pay for reconstruction, and the economy was ruined so it couldn't collect taxes. Everybody demanded either dollars or gold to repay loans, the UK spent all of theirs. The US had over $20 billion of gold reserves, the UK had $1 million. Without gold or dollars to back it, nobody wanted Sterling. So, the UK couldn't pay for imports. While the US and other countries shipped food in during the war on loan, this all ended when the war ended. There was less food available in the UK after the war than there was during it.

  • @paulmolyneux599
    @paulmolyneux599 Před 2 lety +17

    It`s not fast food anymore...with the improvment of technology somehow you now wait much longer to get your food.

  • @albertsaffron7582
    @albertsaffron7582 Před 2 měsíci

    Used to drive 25 mins to get to a Maccas when I was a kid, now I’m 23, and we have Maccas in our own town! It was quite an event, and people turned out to the work site to protest its construction, but by then the slab had been laid and it was too late, but I has been good to the kids as a source of jobs.

  • @Dinadino994
    @Dinadino994 Před 3 měsíci

    I remember maccys when it started rolling out .
    It was a very rare treat until I became an adult.

  • @helenhucker346
    @helenhucker346 Před rokem +6

    I went into the McDonald's in London's Oxford Street soon after it opened. When the young man handed me my order and said 'Have a nice day' I replied ' Oh that's very kind of you, thank you so much ' I thought he meant it lol.

    • @Dr170
      @Dr170 Před rokem +2

      Have a nice day 😉

    • @TotemoGaijin
      @TotemoGaijin Před 2 měsíci

      Well, whether he meant it or not, it sounds like it did make your day nicer, so there's that, haha.

  • @MichaelGeorge161
    @MichaelGeorge161 Před 2 lety +42

    I remember the days when going to McDonald's and Little Chef was a special treat.

    • @SmegulonPrime
      @SmegulonPrime Před 2 lety +5

      I grew up in the 80s and little chef was always a punishment

    • @MichaelGeorge161
      @MichaelGeorge161 Před 2 lety +1

      @@SmegulonPrime You must have ordered the wrong things!

    • @andyrob3259
      @andyrob3259 Před 2 lety +2

      Little Chef crumbed garlic mushrooms......mmmmmmm

    • @thegreenknight2658
      @thegreenknight2658 Před 2 lety +4

      We used to call it "Little Theif" because everything was overpriced.

    • @James-xu6sc
      @James-xu6sc Před 2 lety +2

      For me, it was always a trip to happy eater!

  • @bobikdylan
    @bobikdylan Před měsícem

    It's funny how they present this as something new. I went to the opening of the first UK McDonalds, which was in Woolwich, south-east London, in 1974, seven years before this. Wimpey had been around for many years before that.

  • @GPOTOM
    @GPOTOM Před rokem

    This was clearly the inspiration for Look Around You’s casserole segment.

  • @lypanov
    @lypanov Před rokem +3

    If only it was 25 seconds. Here in the Netherlands it's sometimes 25 minutes. Complete joke. Customer service doesn't even respond to complaints. Don't understand why people still go here.

  • @zaixai9441
    @zaixai9441 Před rokem +4

    What these videos show really is that change was very uncommon compared to today. The rate of change now is massive. Trends come and go like like they are nothing.

  • @chris-rfs
    @chris-rfs Před 3 měsíci +1

    2 minutes max in the queue!!?😂....take me back to 1981 please.

  • @goldieandblackie
    @goldieandblackie Před 3 měsíci

    Look at that kipper tie,wow.😸

  • @martinh4982
    @martinh4982 Před rokem +4

    John Craven. What a champ!

  • @ScottZ370
    @ScottZ370 Před rokem +11

    1:47 Love how he says "small" as if any other size would be greedy, crazy how these firms moulded our minds over time!

  • @coffeepot3123
    @coffeepot3123 Před 4 měsíci

    I like the retro colors with the red and black burger signs etc in the fast food stores.

  • @davidrobinson4659
    @davidrobinson4659 Před 3 měsíci

    25 seconds in 1981 and yet now 25 minutes is not unusual. It really was fast food back then, wish we could go back there!

  • @CricketEngland
    @CricketEngland Před 2 lety +18

    3:26 yea and by 2020 my town has no longer got a McDonald’s or Burger King (both closed due to high rents) but the Wimpy bar is still going strong after 55 yeas and with the same family running it

    • @techreviewer
      @techreviewer Před 2 lety +3

      What area is this in?

    • @oddities-whatnot
      @oddities-whatnot Před 2 lety +1

      Hope the food isn't 55 years old as well !

    • @jerusalem330
      @jerusalem330 Před 2 lety +1

      Horsham?

    • @Abo999
      @Abo999 Před rokem

      That family probably own the premises, I'm glad they're having the last laugh

    • @pdxyid
      @pdxyid Před rokem

      I thought that bloke was Putin for a second…

  • @shaunw9270
    @shaunw9270 Před rokem +13

    Wow the footage inside a Wimpy brought back great memories. For years I thought McDonald's burgers tasted like cardboard. Anyone else remember McDonald's tin foil ash trays ?

    • @uncooked_ham
      @uncooked_ham Před rokem +3

      Lol, I remember those ashtrays! I used to go for a McDonalds after work before I made my way home, and would often empty the ashtray into my handbag so my husband would have a tasty treat when I got home!

    • @shaunw9270
      @shaunw9270 Před rokem

      @@uncooked_ham You're now divorced? 😅

    • @shaunw9270
      @shaunw9270 Před rokem

      @PestoMayo Yay ! Someone else remembers the good old days too lol 😊

  • @snowdog9954
    @snowdog9954 Před 11 měsíci

    I went to Wimpy in the 70s, it was table service though. First McDonalds was on a visit to Germany, had no idea what to do!

  • @jasonladd6400
    @jasonladd6400 Před měsícem

    I can remember as a 13 y/o going into a Wimpy sit down restaurant in 1981 with my younger brother and mother when she was allowed the occasional car from her then office job. We were quite poor then so it was quite an event.