Beware of the chili bandits
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Michael Arnold Glueck and Thomas R. Damiani
Who says the Daily Pilot and its readers do no investigative
journalism?
This team went under the coffee grounds for the story.
Call it the Chili-Scene Investigation, the Chili-Scam
Investigation, the Chili-Serving Investigation or the Chili-Size
Indigestion. Whatever we call it, it is a noble form of CSI (Crime
Scene Investigators).
As part of the ongoing Newport-Mesa coffee-klatch story, we have
noted that a popular fast-food hamburger establishment in Costa Mesa
served chili in two sizes: small for a buck and large for two bucks.
One member of the eat-witness team suggested that the large cup
contained little more than the small. Others thought not. Their
identities are being kept classified and confidential in case of
further under-the-counter-top investigations. Now mind you, at this
place the chili is terrific, and tomato sauce is considered good for
your health -- this week.
We bought one large and one small chili to go. At the coffee lab
next door, we poured out the small size chili and found that the
contents of the large-size serving filled the small cup only 1 1/3
times! (What? Thirty-three percent more grub for 100% increase in gelt? Don’t you usually get more value with the larger size?
Note, there is nothing illegal in all this and that. On an
absolute scale, the chili is a bargain no matter what size is
purchased. The manager and service people are the nicest. If asked,
the manager would probably tell you that that this large “downsizing”
is in response to others “supersizing.” This chain is probably just
looking out for our health.
We thought maybe our eyes were playing tricks, so we measured and
weighed the contents of both cups. Contents of the large cup measured
350 milliliters and weighed 13.5 ounces while the contents of the
small cup measured 250 milliliters and weighed 10 ounces.
So, our eyes had not lied. We had been chili-con-carned. Not as
serious as the Enron, Arthur Andersen, Adelphia, or Martha Stewart
scandals or the con dejours of the legal profession.
Now Corporation X could solve this by increasing the size or
decreasing the price of the large cup. Or -- ye gads -- by
smaller-sizing the small cup.
Or, we hungry Newport-Mesans could just order two small cups for a
buck each.
Leave the large cups to loaf.
As a local contest we would like to ask some of the area
accountants to do a bean count for us on both chili cup sizes to
verify our findings.
So in sum, large is not necessarily a better value. Beware of the
chili bandits.
Is it time to demand more moo in our chew? Considering the number
of obese adults and children in our community, maybe it is -- or
maybe it isn’t.
* MICHAEL ARNOLD GLUECK is a Newport Beach physician, writer,
author and a member of the Board of Orange County Citizens Against
Lawsuit abuse. THOMAS R. DAMIANI of Newport Beach is a business
consultant.
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