Fast Food Nation ties Non-Fiction Literature, Journalism and Marketing with History, Social Studies, Foreign Affairs, et. al.
Multi-subject discussion and project opportunities!
Sample discussion questions/topics for projects:
How has America's 'Fast Food Culture' affected our economy and the economies of other countries?
How has it affected the government's policies and America's foreign affairs relations?
What are the ethics involved in this 'Westernizaion' - this spread of the 'fast food culture' - across the globe?
Is it possible for a corporation to get Too Big? Too Powerful? Too Controlling? What can we do about it?
What are the differences between marketing campaigns and government propaganda? Are there any?
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From Kirkus Reviews: "The golden arches of McDonalds, resplendent in the dour precincts of Pushkin Square, are symbols of the triumph of capitalism." - http://ecosalon.com/15_reasons_never_to_let_anyone_you_love_near_a_mcdonald_s/
To Russia With Fries
by: George Cohen
Reviewed by: Robert Legvold - http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/54136/robert-legvold/to-russia-with-fries "Cohon, head of McDonald's Restaurants of Canada, brought the chain to Russia, an opportunity he had been chasing since the mid-1970s. Originally he had hoped to open in time for the 1980 Olympics, but after three years of exhausting negotiations, at the last minute the contract was scotched. Cohon started over and after six more years began to make headway in what was now the Gorbachev era. Two more years in the labyrinth -- perestroika notwithstanding -- and he had a deal. McDonald's opened on Pushkin Square in January 1990, with all the U.S. morning TV programs watching. By the end of the day the restaurant had served 30,000 hamburgers, the largest first-day sales in the franchise's 30-year history. Cohon's tale of the long trail leading to this moment, into which he weaves a good deal of his own biography, is not only wonderfully entertaining, but it provides endless insights into the bureaucratic maze that was the Soviet Union and many of the obstacles still facing Western investors eager to enter the Russian service sector. Cohon, as the book conveys, is an effusive, can-do personality. He must also be very stubborn."
Fast Food Nation ties Non-Fiction Literature, Journalism and Marketing with History, Social Studies, Foreign Affairs, et. al.
Multi-subject discussion and project opportunities!
Sample discussion questions/topics for projects:
How has America's 'Fast Food Culture' affected our economy and the economies of other countries?
How has it affected the government's policies and America's foreign affairs relations?
What are the ethics involved in this 'Westernizaion' - this spread of the 'fast food culture' - across the globe?
Is it possible for a corporation to get Too Big? Too Powerful? Too Controlling? What can we do about it?
What are the differences between marketing campaigns and government propaganda? Are there any?
___
To Russia With Fries
by: George CohenReviewed by: Robert Legvold - http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/54136/robert-legvold/to-russia-with-fries
"Cohon, head of McDonald's Restaurants of Canada, brought the chain to Russia, an opportunity he had been chasing since the mid-1970s. Originally he had hoped to open in time for the 1980 Olympics, but after three years of exhausting negotiations, at the last minute the contract was scotched. Cohon started over and after six more years began to make headway in what was now the Gorbachev era. Two more years in the labyrinth -- perestroika notwithstanding -- and he had a deal. McDonald's opened on Pushkin Square in January 1990, with all the U.S. morning TV programs watching. By the end of the day the restaurant had served 30,000 hamburgers, the largest first-day sales in the franchise's 30-year history. Cohon's tale of the long trail leading to this moment, into which he weaves a good deal of his own biography, is not only wonderfully entertaining, but it provides endless insights into the bureaucratic maze that was the Soviet Union and many of the obstacles still facing Western investors eager to enter the Russian service sector. Cohon, as the book conveys, is an effusive, can-do personality. He must also be very stubborn."