• Krauerking@lemy.lol
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    1 hour ago

    Is that like a crab cake as a burger? What’s up with the giant chunks of cucumber? That sweet and sour sauce running down it is gonna make that so messy and the bun is gonna be sliding off in both sides and soaked through.

    Christ that is more cursed a burger than an A&W burger could ever be.

  • Critical_Thinker@lemm.ee
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    2 hours ago

    I’m gonna move the goal posts here and say smaller burgers are inherently better. I don’t want to chew on a giant pile of ground beef.

  • sexual_tomato@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 hours ago

    I see this repeated all the time and I’m sure there’s some truth to it, but A&W burgers are also disgusting and more expensive than their competitors. So there’s that.

  • Gammelfisch@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    There are three countries using the ass backwards Imperial measurement system. USA, Liberia and Myanmar…WTF???

  • TimewornTraveler@lemm.ee
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    4 hours ago

    Maybe the problem is that nasty pointy cucumber on the bottom of it. Wait, it’s that a veggie burger? Who the hell puts pointy cucumber on a veggie burger?

  • pulsewidth@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Should have sold it as a 2/6ths burger.
    The maths teachers wouldn’t have been happy, but apparently the buyers would have.

    Woah, 2/6 is waayyyy bigger than 1/4, not like that teensy 1/3 burger they used to have

  • CannedYeet@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    [VINCENT]

    And you know what they call a Quarter Pounder with Cheese in Paris?

    [JULES]

    They don’t call it a Quarter Pounder with Cheese?

    [VINCENT]

    No, they don’t have fractions, they wouldn’t know what the fuck a Quarter is.

    [JULES]

    Then what do they call it?

    [VINCENT]

    They call it Royale with Cheese.

    • Lord Wiggle@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      No, they don’t have fractions, they wouldn’t know what the fuck a Quarter is.

      “No they have the metric system, they don’t know what the fuck a quarter pounder is”

      Fractions aren’t imperial, fractions are fractions, everyone has them. It’s the ‘pound’ that’s imperial and normal people don’t use.

      Movie clip

      • reattach@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        How could OP have transcribed the movie clip so wrong, but still made an absurdist joke? Thanks for clearing it up.

        I’ve been a victim of Poe’s Law, but there has to be some threshold where it’s not ambiguous.

  • jsomae@lemmy.ml
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    14 hours ago

    metric system

    Is this one of those intentionally-obviously-wrong comments designed to encourage people to comment on the meme?

        • Decq@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          Eh that’s regional still, like in dutch we’ve changed the meaning of old imperial words to be equal to metric quantities, though probably used more common by older people. So 1 ons (ounce) = 100g and a pond (pound) is half a kg. But this is mostly used at a butcher. For other stuff we mostly just use the metric nomenclature.

        • A Wild Mimic appears!@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          5 hours ago

          especially in the context of foodstuffs the decagramm (or just deka in common language) is getting used in Austria, don’t know if it’s the same in germany, so it would be a 25 deka burger

    • Nariom@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      well they do, but since it’s metric it’s always 1/10 1/100 … and they have their own name so no math needed

      • somethingsomethingidk@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        Fractions still work the same way. The thing is Americans would think the 1/100 is bigger than 1/2, because 100>2. Doesn’t matter what unit you start with

        Edit: I see what you’re saying with the names. But do you think the average american knows that a quarter pounder is less than a third pounder?

        • Nariom@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          I don’t think they’re significantly stupider than anywhere else. I don’t know if there even are statistics on that, I should probably check. Plenty of people are terrible at math over here in Europe too.

        • SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          9 hours ago

          The average American literally works in random-ass fractions all the time and doesn’t rely on everything being base ten.

          I really want to believe that, as an American. I really, really do. How would a legitimate way of testing that go? There’s no feasible way to test EVERYBODY, so you’d have to consult the statistics people, who I am not.

          I was about to start looking into median ages and education rates and literacy, but I really don’t care that much about this as I lay in bed and am about to go to sleep, so I asked chatgpt, which then gave me a long answer with this at the end:

          Yes, the average American probably knows that 1/3 is greater than 1/4, but a noticeable percentage—especially among adults with lower educational attainment or math anxiety—may hesitate or answer incorrectly, especially outside of a clear, direct question.

          And my intuition tells me this is likely right on.

          • lime!@feddit.nu
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            9 hours ago

            one way to test it is if a major corporation active all over the country introduces a product with a fraction in the name, meant as a competitor to another product with a smaller fraction. the sales numbers would roughly reflect the result.

            • SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              8 hours ago

              Mmmmm… Doubt.

              I grew up with a mcds and an a&w nearby in the 90s and 00s. A&W is kinda like Wendy’s: their food just kinda sucks. I don’t look at value that closely unless all other things are equal. So saying “nobody bought our burger because they all can’t read numbers” is kind’ve a petulant behavior unless it’s proven imo… it’s like making excuses for your failures.

              People just LIKE McDonald’s. And and brand loyalty is real.

                • Corn@lemmy.ml
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                  17 minutes ago

                  Here in Japan, it’s one of the few restaurants that’s often open at 4 AM and has free wifi and phone charging, and is the same across the country. Kinda like wafflehouse, I rarely eat there, but it’s nice as a last resort.

                  The food is still mid, and kinda expensive at 2/3 or less the cost in the US.

                • SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                  7 hours ago

                  People all over the world like McDonald’s for different reasons. That’s not a serious question.

                  Can this not be Reddit? Please? Reddit culture sucked and I left there for good reason. It doesn’t have to be funny or clever anymore. It’s just real people having real discussion, intelligently, on a real level, yeah?

                  Most Americans are educated, but it’s a really diverse country with lots of issues. There are plenty of people in countries that use metric that don’t even understand metric or fractions, too, as most people are the exact goddamn same, especially now with the internet. A&W burgers were a specific type and I don’t remember them being very good. I think that’s why they failed, not because people couldn’t maximize the value. If anything, I think it was a death spiral in a company known for putting soft serve and soda together, not 1/12th of a pound of shitty beef.

                  They probably weren’t making much money, had to cut back, shitty employees cutting quality because they don’t care and bad leadership, and people stopped going even more, and then leadership blamed literacy instead of their own repeated fuckups and that nobody really liked them anymore.

  • 9point6@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    Had they adopted the metric system

    Or at least had an education system capable of teaching basic maths