Chick-fil-A rated as politest chain

A survey that just came out rates Chick-fil-A as the politest restaurant chain in the nation.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddrink/restaurantsandnews/chick-fil-a-is-americas-most-polite-restaurant-chain/ar-BBx8R2w

I’m not crazy about some of their policies, but I have to agree: for a fast food chain, they’re very polite (friendly, even). They will fill your drink while you’re at your table, they bring the food to you when they’re busy so there’s no huge back-up at the counter. And their chocolate chunk cookies (oatmeal inside) are magnificent. The peach shakes, too, when in season.

Peach shakes! I’ve never patronized the place, but that sounds good!

Only downside is the “in season” and I’ll bet we’re past it.

And, of course, they were the ones who took food service to the site of the Orlando shooting, and AFAIK still have not officially acknowledged that they did so.

Their homophobia at some levels is repulsive… but maybe it’s all a good example that everyone and everything has multiple facets.

Yes, sadly, by about a month. They are good. There are chunks of peaches in the shake, as well, but they need bigger diameter straws for easier sucking. :wink:

They are closed on Sundays, though.
ETA: I did not know about the Orlando food delivery.

They’re even polite to the smug douchebags who film themselves at the drive-thru windows harassing the cashiers about the management’s anti-gay policies, and then uploading their bravery onto YouTube.

As if the cashiers had anything to do with what management does.

I have only ever gone through the drive-through, never inside, but every time, at every store I have visited, they say “it’s my pleasure” when they take your order. They repeat it when they hand you your food. I’m sure they are nice kids but when everyone uses the same polite line, is it politeness or policy?

Aren’t they basically the same thing? Are your kids polite on their own or because, way back when, you set policy? Besides, when you deviate from the script, who knows what may happen?

If your crew can deviate from the script and still be called polite then you know you’re successful. If they can sound polite while on script, then maybe.
Damn, I’m going to want Chick Fil A lemonade tomorrow and they will be closed.:frowning:

When you eventually get one of them peach shakes, you’ll forget all about the lemonade. Closed on Sundays does kinda suck, though.

I’m just pleased they make the effort; Mickey D’s has been a bit hostile the last couple of visits.

I went to a Popeye’s recently with my mother. The sass they gave her!

I was never really hardcore against Chic-Fil-A. The owner supported a campaign to deny gays the right to marry, which I disagreed with, but there’s no evidence (that I know of) that he’s a horrible human being and the company itself seems pretty reasonable, and their food good.

One thing I can add to the comments here: as a teacher at the local high school, I have a fairly good idea of which students we have are naturally polite and friendly. Of the local fast food joints (we have Wendy’s, Zaxby’s, Hwy 55 Burgers, Kentucky Fried Chicken, Taco Bell, Chick-fil-A and Mc Donald’s here in “town”), the one that consistently hires those students who are naturally polite and friendly is Chick-fil-A. So, while they are definitely saying certain phrases “on script,” they are also quite polite and friendly when not following that script. :slight_smile:

Yeah, I love Popeye’s chicken, but their hiring practices…

I’m all in favor of what used to be called “Hire the handicapped” programs, but you don’t staff the front of a fast food joint with people without social skills or the back of one with people who can’t count. (The last three times I went into a Popeyes, I was told they “were out of chicken”. All chicken. But they’d have more in 30 minutes if I wanted to wait. How can you consistently run out of chicken at a chicken joint just at the start of the dinner service?)

And most of the time when I’d gotten it home, the order was wrong, or it was all wings and backs or they wouldn’t have fastened the gravy carton correctly, etc.

Ha! My mother, the model of civic politeness, went into a Popeye’s probably 30 years ago now, and was so rudely treated that she went out to her car, fumed a few minutes, then threw all the chicken and gravy at the front window, and drove off.

I fail to see how a hit piece on the ownership of the business about his personal opinion constitutes fear.

I thought “I’m not homophobic, I don’t fear gay people” had died long ago…

It’s well established that homophobic means prejudiced against gays, not fearful of gays.

It’s actually not unusual for great companies that are otherwise well thought of to get into conflict with progressives. Two others are Hobby Lobby for the birth control mandate, and Whole Foods for the CEO’s staunch libertarianism.

What some people don’t get is that it’s their sincere beliefs that make them great businessmen who care about customers and employees, rather than cold businessmen(like Donald Trump) who are just looking for the most efficient way to make a buck.

We want people with principles to own businesses, and we want them to run their businesses in accordance with their principles.

I’d also note that I spent a day working a temp job at Georgia Pacific, the largest holding of the Kochs. The relentless positivity of the employees was striking. I also did a job at Mayo clinic, and they were almost all bitter assholes.

It did. But some people are so fond of their knee-jerk rhetoric that they just can’t let it go, like survivors of the Titanic clinging to it on the way under.

Have you not read any news for the last couple of years? “Homophobia” == “dislike/hatred of gays” is pretty much the universal usage and has been for a while.

Phobias can be intense dislike of something as well as outright “fear.”