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The history of KFC
CFetters_Nacho_Lover
Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 32,887
I just read through the history photo porn thread and the posts about I-5 going through downtown reminded me of the story of Colonel Sanders and the start of the KFC empire.
He originally owned a gas station along the Dixie Highway and the start of I-75 2 miles from town meant he would lose out on the traffic so he took his secret spices and started selling the franchise rights to what eventually became one of the largest, if not the largest franchise chains ever.
https://youtu.be/pKa_u31EJwU

He originally owned a gas station along the Dixie Highway and the start of I-75 2 miles from town meant he would lose out on the traffic so he took his secret spices and started selling the franchise rights to what eventually became one of the largest, if not the largest franchise chains ever.
https://youtu.be/pKa_u31EJwU
Comments
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I love KFC and I’m not afraid to admit it.
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Quick side note, Mrs Nacho and I drive down to hike the Cumberland Gap and realized we were at the original location for KFC. Had to stop and take some photos, read the historical marker, etc. but didn’t have time to eat lunch there. It’s on my list next time I head that way.
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How KFC Became a Christmas Tradition in Japan
What began in 1974 as an impulse promotion by a KFC store manager in Nagoya, has turned into a national tradition in Japan.
3.6 million families dine at KFC every December 25th.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46JaN2NZoks -
My grand dad built the Evergreen Ballroom on the original 2 lane 99 a couple years before the glitzy 4 lane Martin Way opened up taking folks from Nisqually to downtown Olympia. It worked out though because being in the middle of nowhere close to Ft Lewis allowed the Black acts to play and the soldiers and townies to mix.
What the Interstates did was move commerce to the outskirts of towns away from downtown. Interstates were the cure for traffic lights which we no longer had time for as the pace of the world picked up
Sears and JC Penny moved to the South Sound Mall. Capital Mall would follow and be repeated across America. The national store won.
Downtown Olympia became TESC grads selling trinkets.
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The people of the Czech Republic love them some KFC, too.
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Can confirm. KFC and Christmas CakeDerekJohnson said:How KFC Became a Christmas Tradition in Japan
What began in 1974 as an impulse promotion by a KFC store manager in Nagoya, has turned into a national tradition in Japan.
3.6 million families dine at KFC every December 25th.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46JaN2NZoks -
Link?biak1 said:The people of the Czech Republic love them some KFC, too.
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My first job was cooking chicken at KFC. Hardest job I ever had. I was still 14 when I started. This could never happen in these tims. Put myself through high school working here. I still have restless dreams 40 years later from this job. You'd run 3 to 4 pressure cookers, the trick was to keep them going non stop, spacing them out so you had just enough time to take the chicken out, spread it on a tray, bread another round and get it back into the cooker after if finished heating back up. As soon as you did that, the next cooker would go off and repeat the process. 3 to 4 hour clean up when you were done cooking for the evening. Not only was it hard, it was a classic Mike Rowe dirty job. Go home covered in grease.
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I was like, there man.DerekJohnson said:
Link?biak1 said:The people of the Czech Republic love them some KFC, too.
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Don’t fucking no why but I love that mash and gravyYellowSnow said:I love KFC and I’m not afraid to admit it.






