LAZ wrote:http://www.suntimes.com/news/cityhall/2167190,daley-taste-of-chicago-041610.article
The truth hurts.bibi rose wrote:Love that writer's prose stylings. "Stuff their faces;" "park their fannies." Makes the event sound really appealing.
Fran Spielman @ The Sun Times wrote:Sloughing off the threat of a suburban boycott, Mayor Daley today defiantly defended the city’s decision to ban suburban restaurants from Taste of Chicago.
“It’s called Taste of Chicago — not Morton Grove. Simple as that. A lot of vendors in Chicago are suffering. ... Those that exist in Chicago and pay real estate tax and sales tax” here deserve a break, Daley said.
“It’s common sense. We work with suburban people all the time — businesses and restaurants. But, in something like this, it was very important to the local restaurants, many of whom are suffering.”
Fran Spielman @ The Sun Times wrote:“Why should people from the suburbs go down to Chicago if they’re not gonna let suburban restaurants participate?” said Kathleen Gits, owner of Aunt Diana’s Old Fashioned Fudge in Riverside.
Is Daley concerned about a suburban boycott driving down attendance?
“No. I don’t think so. Food is food,” he said.
ronnie_suburban wrote:1) Taste of Chicago is a complete abomination and a parody of itself. Those who attend get exactly what they deserve: they actually have to spend time at Taste of Chicago. That anyone would choose for this themselves is unimaginable to me. I'd have to lose a bet -- or be forced at gunpoint -- to end up there.
ronnie_suburban wrote:2) It's fairly clear that sensible people already don't attend this event. Yet, millions of people do attend each year, so I don't think any new development is going curtail attendance very much, if at all. Rational human beings already avoid this event and have done so for years.
LOL! If I were hosting visitors, I'd give them a map, put them on the train and wish them all the best.Suzy Creamcheese wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:1) Taste of Chicago is a complete abomination and a parody of itself. Those who attend get exactly what they deserve: they actually have to spend time at Taste of Chicago. That anyone would choose for this themselves is unimaginable to me. I'd have to lose a bet -- or be forced at gunpoint -- to end up there.
I'm guessing you have been lucky enough to not have out-of-town guests during that magic week....That's the only reason I've ever gone, the Taste is like molasses for tourists.
Wise words, my friend. Wise words. If I'm still alive in 2025, I'll consider attending.riddlemay wrote:Just as our miserable winters make us really, really appreciate spring in a way that people in San Diego never could, the reason to attend Taste every twenty years or so is that it makes you really, really appreciate not attending Taste in a way that people who never attend Taste never could.
Rational human beings already avoid this event and have done so for years.
jbw wrote:Rational human beings already avoid this event and have done so for years.
I've visited ToC for almost all of its 30 years, and I've tried to approach it "rationally"; i.e, I've timed it carefully (and as a result have never waited for more than a minute or two for anything), I've selected carefully (basically, if you wouldn't order it in a cafeteria, don't order it here), I've had some stuff I've liked, had some stuff I haven't liked, experimented with stuff I wouldn't ordinarily eat, and had a chance to taste products from places I may not have a chance to get to. All in all, it's usually a satisfying enough communal experience, altho I suppose if I approached it "irrationally" (Hey, since it's July 3 and 90 degrees; let's take the SUV and the neighbor's kids down into the Loop and see the fireworks and visit ToC and grab some fried food and brewskies), I'd find it to be a somewhat less than pleasant experience..
riddlemay wrote:the reason to attend Taste every twenty years or so is that it makes you really, really appreciate not attending Taste in a way that people who never attend Taste never could.