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10 Big Mac Facts McDonalds Always Secretly Knew About - YouTube
Channel: BabbleTop
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The Big Mac turned 50 last year, and this
beefy tower has had quite a life, surviving
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many changes and controversies, always maintaining
its title as everyoneâs favorite McDonaldâs
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burger.
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Although it is now world famous, some facts
about the Big Mac may still shock and surprise
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you to learn about.
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So here are 10 Big Mac facts McDonaldâs
always secretly knew about.
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The Big Mac was invented by franchise owner,
Jim Delligatti
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You might think that the Big Mac was crafted
by flavor scientists or CEOs, but it actually
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has much humbler beginnings in Uniontown,
Pennsylvania.
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Jim Delligatti bought the Uniontown McDonaldâs
after meeting Ray Kroc, the owner of the McDonaldâs
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company at the time, at a restaurant fair
in 1955.
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By the 1960s, Jim Delligatti had earned himself
some regular customers, many of whom worked
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at the nearby steel mill.
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Working with steel all day gave these customers
quite the appetite, and it became clear to
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Delligatti that his food couldnât quite
fill them up.
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Delligatti then decided to make a bigger,
more filling burger with two patties, some
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onions and some pickles.
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This rolled out in Uniontown in 1967 for the
fair price of 45 cents.
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This was so popular that, in just one year,
the Big Mac was on the menu of every single
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American McDonaldâs.
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In 1969, the Big Mac made up 19% of all sales!
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McDonaldâs gave Delligatti a plaque to commemorate
his invention and Delligatti apparently went
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on to eat a Big Mac every week.
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In 2007, he opened the Big Mac museum in Irwin,
Pennsylvania, which is home to the worldâs
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largest Big Mac: a 14 foot tall statue, where
each pickle alone is 2 feet across.
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Imagine how many steel workers that could
feed!
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The âSpecial Sauceâ recipe has been changed
multiple times
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This Special Sauce is a staple of the Big
Mac and has been kept top secret since its
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creation in the 1960âs.
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Originally called âSecret Sauceâ, this
signature flavor combination has undergone
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multiple re-brands and redesigns before becoming
the Special Sauce we all know and love now.
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When the Big Mac released, McDonald's made
two different sauces for the Big Mac.
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After seeing that both sauces were popular,
they combined them into one mega-sauce, which
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contained all the best bits of each.
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This was then branded âBig Mac Sauce â72â.
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Although the name was changed to âSpecial
Sauceâ in 1974, the recipe itself went unchanged
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for nearly 20 years.
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This legacy was ended in 1991, when McDonaldâs
HQ decided to tweak this classic recipe.
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However, this classic sauce was revived in
2004, when Fred Turner (former McDonald's
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CEO and friend of Ray Kroc) wanted the original
recipe back on the Big Mac.
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After a search of the archives, the original
recipe was found, and the Special Sauce was
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returned with the help of the original suppliers.
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Thanks to Fred Turner, we can now taste the
Big Mac in all its glory.
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Who wouldâve thought that a 50-year-old
sauce would taste so good?
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It wasnât always called the âBig Macâ
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Nowadays, the Big Mac is a household name,
and has been an iconic member of the McDonaldâs
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menu for over 50 years.
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When it was first released in 1968, the recipe
was perfect, but the naming needed some work.
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The original names for this beautifully beefy
burger were the âAristocratâ and the âBlue
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Ribbon Burgerâ.
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Both of these were flops at the marketplace,
with many people finding âAristocratâ
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hard to pronounce and confusing.
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This isnât surprising considering the burger
was intended for laborers to enjoy, not just
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the rich.
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The âBig Macâ name was coined by a woman
named Esther Glickstein Rose.
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Rose was working as an advertising secretary
for McDonaldâs corporate headquarters in
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Oak Brook Illinois when she saw the Big Mac
and created the catchy title.
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According to Rose, her bosses originally laughed
it off when she suggested it!
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It wasnât until after all the other name
attempts flopped that the execs decided to
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use Estherâs idea.
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Unfortunately, the only compensation she received
for her massive contribution was a plaque,
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nearly 20 years later.
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Half a century later, the name has still survived.
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The Big Mac has become one of our most-loved
McDonaldâs goodies, and the name might be
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one of the reasons it is now the second best-selling
item of all time (if youâre wondering, fries
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take the top spot).
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We think Esther deserves a cut of those deep
profits!
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Everyone knows the top-secret sauce recipe
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For years, McDonaldâs has marketed their
Big Mac sauce as a secret recipe and has even
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sold bottles of the coveted Big Mac Sauce
to hungry buyers.
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Amazingly, one bottle of Special Sauce sold
for nearly $100,000 on eBay.
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Clearly it was a valuable secret, but nowadays,
itâs an open one.
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Who let the cat out of the bag?
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McDonalds did!
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In 2012, the Vice President of Culinary Innovation
for McDonaldâs, Dan Coudreaut, showed everyone
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how to make the Big Mac (including the Special
Sauce) from home.
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According to the video, itâs a mix of mayo,
mustard, sweet pickle relish and white wine
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vinegar seasoned with onion, garlic and paprika.
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Although he shows you the method, he doesnât
give exact measurements, so you might need
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to do some guesswork and taste as you go.
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However, even this is controversial, as the
real recipe has supposedly been leaked online
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and differs from the one shown in the video.
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The leaked recipe contains more ingredients
(33, in total) than the McDonalds instructional
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video uses, such as high fructose corn syrup
and preservatives.
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These do more than just prepare the sauce
for mass distribution, those extra ingredients
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really affect the taste, too!
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It seems McDonaldâs will never take away
the mystery of the Special Sauce.
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One man has eaten 30,000 Big Macs
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We all love McDonaldâs, but this man has
taken it to the extreme.
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Don Gorske is the Guinness World Record holder
for Big Mac digestion for more than 15 years
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and has eaten Big Macs nearly every day since
he first tasted one in 1972.
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On the day it all started, Gorske ordered
three Big Macs and immediately fell in love.
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He went back later that day and got 6 more,
and was hooked.
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At the start of his obsession, he ate 265
Big Macs in a month.
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This amounts to 4,600 calories and 247 grams
of fat per day, well above the recommended
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daily allowance.
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According to Gorske, the habit started when
told himself he would eat Big Macs every day
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until he was drafted for the Vietnam War.
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In the end he wasnât drafted, so he never
stopped!
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Nowadays, heâs down to just two Big Macs
a day, and he always keeps back-ups.
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So he never misses a day, he keeps six Big
Macs stored in his freezer for emergencies,
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and even packs Big Macs in his luggage for
flights!
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Gorske has been a loyal McDonaldâs customer
for years, and although he has no serious
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health problems from this diet, it is crazy
how addictive the Big Mac really is.
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The Big Mac is no longer trademarked
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McDonalds recently went head-to-head with
an Irish chain called âSupermacâsâ in
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a trademark dispute, where they lost the EU
trademarking rights for the Big Mac.
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This is a big deal as McDonalds barely ever
loses court cases, and this one meant that
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other fast-food joints can legally sell copy-cat
Big Macs.
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Supermacâs made the complaint against McDonaldâs,
accusing them of âtrademark bullyingâ.
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They claimed that McDonaldâs used the Big
Mac name to prevent Supermacâs from being
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able to trademark their own name in the EU
and expanding through Europe.
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Supermacâs called the win a âvictory for
all small businessesâ, but this was a big
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loss for McDonaldâs.
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Immediately after the ruling, Burger King
released a new line of fast food items called
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âNot Big Macsâ which included burgers
such as the âKind of like a Big Mac but
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juicier and tastierâ.
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Thatâs some pretty direct shade youâre
throwing there, Burger King!
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Obviously, this was not ideal for McDonaldâs
and they have already started their appeal
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for the verdict to change.
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In the meantime, we can at least enjoy the
trolling, and the many more Big-Mac-like burgers
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that can piggyback on this verdict for our
pleasure.
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It inspired the âBig Mac Indexâ
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The Big Mac Index was invented by The Economist
in 1986 as an easily-digestible (pardon the
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pun) guide to comparing economies.
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It is used to test the idea that exchange
rates should line up in different countries
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so that the price of goods (or Big Macs) is
the same.
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The so-called âBurgernomicsâ allows them
to create a Big Mac exchange rate.
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For example, Big Macs in the US cost $5, whereas
they cost 20 yuan in China, making an exchange
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rate of 1:4.
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The actual exchange rate is $1=6.4 yuan and
so this means that the Big Mac in China is
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undervalued (cheaper) compared with the US
Big Mac.
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Thereâs some more complex math that comes
afterwards, but this is essentially what they
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use the Big Mac Index for.
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The Big Mac Index was intended to be a method
of making exchange rates clearer for The Economistâs
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reader but has since taken off.
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It is now a global standard, and has become
widely used in textbooks and academic research.
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Aside from helping us learn about the economy,
Burgernomics shows you where to get a cheaper
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Big Mac, with Switzerland being the most expensive
and Russia being the cheapest.
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Big Macs arenât the same everywhere
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Before you pack your bags to get the cheapest
Big Mac you can find, bear in mind that the
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Big Mac changes its recipe depending on the
country it is being sold in.
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One surprising tweak is that, in some places,
the Big Mac doesnât use beef.
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McDonaldâs is the worldâs largest user
of beef, and so in places like India, where
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the cow is revered, McDonaldâs isnât quite
as beloved as it is here.
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Pro-cow rallies are common in India, so to
avoid controversy, they have stripped beef
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from the whole menu.
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Due to the 140 million Indian Muslims, thereâs
also no pork, so all menu items are substituted
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with either mutton or chicken.
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Therefore, the Big Mac there is called the
âMaharaja Macâ and it is quite different
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from the classic burger we know.
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With chicken patties, habanero sauce, jalapenos
and tomatoes, it shares very little with its
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ancestor.
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It doesnât even have the Special Sauce!
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Although it might seem that this would be
successful, thereâs also a large amount
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of resistance against multinationals setting
up shop in India, and so the restaurants are
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often empty.
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McDonalds tried to cut prices to draw people
in, so the Maharaja Mac now costs 187 rupees,
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or $2.69 US.
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Itâs a pretty good deal, right?
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The future of the Big Mac is uncertain in
India, but donât worry, thereâs plenty
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of other places you can get your fix.
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McDonaldâs wanted to pay rappers to say
âBig Macâ in their songs
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Back in 2005, McDonaldâs thought up a new
and scandalous way to advertise their favourite
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burger to young people.
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The plan was to pay rappers up to $5 every
time a song containing the words âBig Macâ
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was played on air.
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Although they allowed the rappers to write
the burger into the song in any way they wanted,
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McDonaldâs had the final say over whether
the lyrics were appropriate.
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Although this isnât the first time that
products have been promoted in rap music (Gucci,
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Bentley and Porsche to name a few), there
was backlash when the plans were announced.
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Nowadays, it is much easier to tell when content
is sponsored.
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Laws now require influencers and YouTubers
to state whether what they are posting is
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a paid promotion.
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Back in 2005, however, people were worried
that children would not understand that the
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artists were paid to advertise the burger.
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They were also concerned about the already
alarming rates of childhood obesity being
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increased by these targeted advertisements.
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The McDonaldâs company defended itself,
saying: âeach McDonald's market has the
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freedom to design programmes that best resonate
with customersâ.
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They had also made efforts to promote a balanced
lifestyle and offer more fruit and veggies
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on the menu.
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This plan eventually stalled and so there
is not much Big-Mac-themed music hitting the
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airwaves.
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I guess weâll have to keep making do with
songs about love and heartbreak.
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80% of Millennials have never tried a Big
Mac
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This one is shocking!
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According to the Wall Street Journal, only
1 in 5 people ages 18-34 have ever tried a
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Big Mac.
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Despite it being the second most popular item
on the menu, it seems that young people just
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arenât lovinâ it.
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So why isnât the Big Mac selling to millennials?
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A franchisee reportedly told McDonaldâs
that is has âgotten less relevant with timeâ.
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Millennial consumers are generally choosing
fresher, made-to-order burgers nowadays, such
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as Five Guys and Shake Shack.
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Research shows that millennials are particularly
concerned about the healthiness and ethics
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of their purchases.
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McDonaldâs are trying to access this crowd,
by making all burgers to order and using fresh
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beef.
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Theyâve also gone wider with the effort,
using cage-free eggs and removing antibiotics
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from their food.
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But is this modern rebranding enough to save
the Big Mac from obscurity?
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Well, the Big Mac has made a comeback, with
the release last year of the Grand Mac, the
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Big Macâs super-sized cousin, selling out
across the UK in what some branches called
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a ânational shortageâ.
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This limited edition 50th anniversary burger
gave the Big Mac some much-needed promotion
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and proved that the Big Mac is not as obsolete
as everyone had thought.
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Spend some more time with us by checking out
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