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AIBU?

to not understand why people consider McDonalds to be a "treat"

712 replies

TalkinPeace · 13/03/2014 15:22

if I want a family "treat" meal I go somewhere with fresh, favoursome food made especially for us.

Why do people take their kids somewhere that sells the lowest common denominator of food and call it a "treat" ?

OP posts:
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LaurieFairyCake · 13/03/2014 15:23

Because it's very cheap and poor people don't have much money.

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TalkinPeace · 13/03/2014 15:24

is it actually that cheap for what you get?

OP posts:
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HoleyGhost · 13/03/2014 15:25

Children like it, no waiting about, relaxed and informal, no judging

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phantomnamechanger · 13/03/2014 15:25

the real issue is why do so many NOT think of it as a rare "treat", and consider it acceptable fare several times a week.

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NigellasDealer · 13/03/2014 15:25

it is not that cheap, we cannot afford to go there at £7 a throw

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jenniferlawrence · 13/03/2014 15:25

Because its not very healthy do people see it as an occasional 'treat'?

I'm with you though. McDonalds is not a treat. The Fat Duck would be a treat.

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pjmama · 13/03/2014 15:25

Good for you. We like McDs and it's an occasional treat because it is a load of rubbish and unhealthy, so we don't have it very often.

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CrushingCandies · 13/03/2014 15:26

Dd enjoys the chicken.nuggets and she gets a toy. Cheap fast fun.

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jenniferlawrence · 13/03/2014 15:26

*so not do

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LaurieFairyCake · 13/03/2014 15:26

Yes it's very cheap, like £5 for a meal.

Round here that wouldn't get you coffee and cake in a coffe shop (south east ) - in fact a coffee is £4 in my local coffee shop.

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LaurieFairyCake · 13/03/2014 15:28

I went out for a sandwich last week and it cost £9 in a coffee shop.

9 fucking quid, more than an hour at minimum wage.

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ChocolateSnowflakes · 13/03/2014 15:28

It's cheap and children like it. Not everybody can afford to take their children to somewhere that offers "fresh, favoursome food made especially for them".

YABU. It might be hard to see that all the way from that horse you're on though...

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Kendodd · 13/03/2014 15:28

Is it just because they don't have it very often? Like a cream cake, or ... something else.

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NigellasDealer · 13/03/2014 15:29

i bet you live in Lewes Laurie Grin

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bellablot · 13/03/2014 15:29

Surely, healthy and nutritious should be everyday and naughty stuff should be left for 'treat days'. Happy meals, toy, chicken nuggets and chips. Certainly these things don't get eaten on a normal day in our house.

What adults consider as treats is far different from what children do.

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bellablot · 13/03/2014 15:30

YABU by the way

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GoshAnneGorilla · 13/03/2014 15:30

"The Fat Duck would be a treat"

Ah yes, as a £200 meal is in the reach of most people.


This place is beyond parody sometimes.

OP I'm amazed you need this explained to you, but to those who go to McDonald's, the food there is tasty.

Furthermore, I despise this consent that you either like fast food or "fresh flavoursome food". Many people like both.

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phantomnamechanger · 13/03/2014 15:30

£9 for a sandwich?? Shock what was it, caviar and gold leaf?

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PansBigChainring · 13/03/2014 15:30

DD loves an ocassional McDs and knows it shouldn't be a regular thing.

You're just being an enormous snob.

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MrCabDriver · 13/03/2014 15:31

Because kids like the bright appeal and toys... as you insinuate with it being unhealthy it's not somewhere that people go a lot ... so once in a while is a treat.

But you probably already know that.

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NurseyWursey · 13/03/2014 15:31

the real issue is why do so many NOT think of it as a rare "treat", and consider it acceptable fare several times a week

This.

Children like it. It is fatty and unhealthy, therefore should be considered a treat once every blue moon.

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PuntCuffin · 13/03/2014 15:31

My DC won't eat it. And you won't hear me complaining about that!
(Except when I want to feed them quickly and the only option is the £9 sandwich, at which point I do mutter about it!)

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TalkinPeace · 13/03/2014 15:32

I've just been to lunch in Ikea.
Less than £5 a meal.
Real food (smoked salmon, salad and extra bowl of salad)

the kids meals are even cheaper - and NOT stuffed full of fat, salt and sugar

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LaurieFairyCake · 13/03/2014 15:32

Nope, bog standard club sandwich - bacon/cheese/lettuce.

In Hertfordshire Nigella Grin.

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Iggi101 · 13/03/2014 15:32

Children like it. Some have play areas. There is the chance of a helium balloon. You eat with your fingers.
I like the quickness, and sadly yes it's the cheapest place (bar a supermarket cafe when they do those kids-eat-free deals) I can find.
I treat for ME would be getting to eat "flavoursome food" with no dcs!

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