What's Eating Me?
I live in the Culinary Sodoman Gomorrah, or at the very least like the
culinary Lilliput or Brigadoon, where one only has to think of food and one
will be tempted by the fancies and concoctions that have brought a million to
their collective gustatory doom. Some people think I am referring to
New Orleans and their many lively and cantankerous chefs, but this is a place
far more sinister and also cleaner, but therein lies the true threat. Not in
being slightly cleaner, mind you, but in the fact that you would probably be
fooled by that state of seeming immaculacy into thinking that it would be ok
to eat here. You would be wrong. So very wrong.
I am not a foodee, or a gourmand, or whatever the kids like to call it
these days, what is it, ah yes, a fatlard. With cheese. I frequently tell
myself that I do not need to eat "that", where that refers to the copious amounts
of food of varying types that are frequently foisted off on the American consumer.
Usually I am right, although there have been times when I've gotten dizzy and
later awakened with somebody telling me that I do actually need to eat sometimes.
Stupid mortality. Sometimes I hit my head and then I forget things. I want a
pony.
In the olden days, whether you were a pilgrim or a cowboy, you pretty much
only ate one thing. Pilgrims ate turkey and maize, and cowboys ate, well, cows,
with the occasional rattlesnake. This was known as the Atkins diet. Even farther
back than cowboys and pilgrims, people ate whatever they had on hand and so it
was until mankind derailed the natural order with his destructive desire for
variety. That was the day cross country truckers were invented. These noble
and mystical creatures allowed food from places other than your house to be
transported to your house where it will be consumed by you. Unfortunately, as
usual, tampering with nature didn't seem to be all that bad an idea at the time.
It was decided that if new food was good, even more new food was even better.
The imminent danger became more... closer.
Irregardless, the beginning of the end began with a man named Roy Franchise.
Roy, a small boy growing up in Detroit, Idaho, was an Armenian orphan with big dreams.
These enlarged dreams were a serious life-threatening medical condition, for
which he was often mocked by the other children. These dreams also had nothing
to do with his talent for getting other people to sell food for him, which at
the time was completely unheard of, and so they are completely irrelevant to
this story. Some people might call the dreams "super-sized", but that is both
stupid and also out of keeping with the touching nature of this
rags-to-riches-to-morbid-obesity tale and not only that, but also we already moved
on, so shut your stupid face! What Roy started made people believe that they could
pay a fee for a license and then sell food under the guise of a huge, evil, faceless
corporation, thereby discouraging lawsuits through political clout and assassination.
And don't forget that big companies get grade F meat dirt cheap.
Eventually, heavy hitters emerged in the "face stuffing with all kinds of food"
game. Establishing dominance became their single-minded goal in the Fast Food Wars,
a military conflict that would leave its marks on the psyche of the world. The
greats rallied around their mighty generals, be they colonels like Kentucky Fried
Chicken's secretive Ike Sanders or Elvises's evil Lars Parker, ace fighter pilots
like Wendy's Dave Thomas, or even Standard Issue Army Clowns like that Burger King Idiot
but not Ronald McDonald, who was never in the army and may have actually been a draft
dodger. To achieve their ends, a cruel strategy was formed: give people more sub-grade
meat with gristle fillers for their pittance and you steal their hearts. Of course, those
hearts would be enlarged like Roy Franchise's dreams and liable to explode all over you
in splattered cholesterol drippings, but we're not talking about literal hearts anyway.
After years of this "super-sizing", the meals couldn't get any larger and the fast
food powers-that-be faltered. Their mighty conflict ground to a halt, their giant war
machines lay in shambles on the fields. They were simply out of ideas.
In my own home town, restaurant saturation is at maximum capacity. It is well known
that the only pastimes available here involve eating, gnoshing, nibbling, gorging, munching,
gulping, shoveling, and the dreaded "snorkeling". For that very reason, the fast food
corporations use this place for a testing grounds, sending their very best and worst ideas
here to mix in a frothy medley. From experimentally placing a McDonald's inside every
rival restaurant, gas station, and household, to inventing whole new countries from which
to draw ethnic foods for their menus, we get overrun daily with dangerous levels of fast
food madness. Nothing, however, could have predicted the next desperate, horrific turn
that would be taken.
It may have been Hitler who first authorized trained Austrian-Hungarian sadists to
develop something known as "der burstengluten", which roughly translated into German and
then back into English means "death from overeating at some kind of horrific uber buffet
until killed". Flash forward to two months ago, when corporate archeologists unearthed the
findings of these sadists and implemented them in an effort to buoy their flagging industry.
Every restaurant went from a supersized eatery to a mechanized force-feeding trough in under
twelve minutes. For $5.95 you can have your girth rolled into a feeding bin and your own
personal pig farmer will work feverishly to load all of his livestock into the machine that
is lovingly referred to as "Mr. McSlurry", where it will then be prepped and crammed at
high speed into your gullet, compressing non-vital organs and allowing you to achieve "hyper
satiety", otherwise known as "ultimate gastrointestinal transcendence".
In the end, there is no escape. One must fall to Mr. McSlurry one way or another. He's
coming to your town, like some sort of grisly Santa Claus, only with a grinder in place of a
belly like a bowl full of jelly and a long, heavy duty conveyor belt with feeding sluice instead
of a corn cob pipe and button nose. This is only a staging area, and the battle goes badly
for us, the normals. There has been a report of one individual, one of many soon to come, with
body fat exceeding 1200%. Cholesterol levels are now being tabulated by NASA. The challenge
has been issued, to join the Portly Maurauders or be crushed under their raw tonnage. So the
next time you see a delightfully whimsical and yet inscrutably named fast food chain's mascot,
don't resist the urge to kill them. That's right, you can strike a blow for freedom... the
freedom to resist appetite, to wear pants that don't stretch, to wash your back without using a
rag on a stick.