£7 for a meal is 'surprisingly expensive', is it
― thomp, Monday, 25 April 2011 11:36 (fifteen years ago)
i would quite like it if the tesco on stokes croft quietly went bust. how big is it? 3000 transactions in a week doesn't really sound like a lot, i have to say.
― thomp, Monday, 25 April 2011 11:38 (fifteen years ago)
for chicken burger and chips i think it is. esp when its not much better than yer local kfc ripoff joint that'll probably serve you the same for three or so quid?
― Republicans voiced concern about young pages hearing the word uterus (stevie), Monday, 25 April 2011 11:53 (fifteen years ago)
i went to nandos last week for the first time in ages, because i was out w/a veggie friend and they do good veggie stuff appara, and i thought the chicken was dry and tasteless and the chips weird. a couple of nights later my other half and i ate at one of the many, many, many turkish places on green lanes and it was cheaper and much, much better.
but i have no problem with nandos being there, no problem with some chain stores on church street - i mean, i'd hate to see it go totally uniform chain store, but tbh a helluva lot of the boutique-y places there seem crazy overpriced and snobbish and unfriendly, but that's prob just my own vibes. a coupla years ago i'd have had more faith in nandos than some turkish resto i'd never eaten in and knew nothing about. i know betterer now tho.
― Republicans voiced concern about young pages hearing the word uterus (stevie), Monday, 25 April 2011 11:57 (fifteen years ago)
The NIMBY thing about Tesco isn't quite right though - not wanting what is usually ANOTHER Tesco to open in you area is more about protecting local businesses because the act of having ANOTHER Tesco in the area is a deliberate attempt by Tesco to kill off local businesses. Being snobby about a Nando's opening is another thing.
― Craiger Lazer (Craigo Boingo), Monday, 25 April 2011 12:01 (fifteen years ago)
how much do you think it costs to eat at a beefeater, say? or a burger king?
― thomp, Monday, 25 April 2011 12:02 (fifteen years ago)
Tesco don't kill businesses, shoppers do
― A Zed and Two Nults (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 April 2011 12:03 (fifteen years ago)
also yeah BK is pretty freakin expensive but the Texican Whopper is worth it
― A Zed and Two Nults (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 April 2011 12:04 (fifteen years ago)
burger king meal i had at waterloo a coupla days ago qwas just a shade over a fiver? with drink included? nando's meal, w/drink, last week, about a tenner?
as for beefeater, why the fuck would i ever eat at a beefeater. you might as well ask me how much it costs to eat from an open fucking sewer.
― Republicans voiced concern about young pages hearing the word uterus (stevie), Monday, 25 April 2011 12:06 (fifteen years ago)
ps craig bongo otm. tesco will own us all one day.
― Republicans voiced concern about young pages hearing the word uterus (stevie), Monday, 25 April 2011 12:07 (fifteen years ago)
Thomp, I have no idea why you're trolling with examples of shitty, overpriced fast/tourist food. What's more, I'm not sure you know why you're trolling either.
As an aside, BK hasn't had my money since forever.
Tesco does do the crowd and close thing that Starbuck's got slated and boycotted for, which is one good reason amongst many not to spend money there (and I've never been to Starbuck's, yo).
― a modest broposal (suzy), Monday, 25 April 2011 12:11 (fifteen years ago)
rereading this thread, i have entirely been eating too much junk food lately
― Republicans voiced concern about young pages hearing the word uterus (stevie), Monday, 25 April 2011 12:12 (fifteen years ago)
because i honestly do not understand why anyone would profess surprise that a meal at a chain restaurant costs about seven pounds
― thomp, Monday, 25 April 2011 12:21 (fifteen years ago)
are they overpriced? yes probably that is the point of them, that they are overpriced
― thomp, Monday, 25 April 2011 12:22 (fifteen years ago)
I'm not surprised, but generally you get more squid for your quid at other chains nearby.
― a modest broposal (suzy), Monday, 25 April 2011 12:25 (fifteen years ago)
didn't we already do the nandos debate somewhere else on here? it's not the cheapest or best but it's reliable, unpretentious + quick.
― the square root of minus one is i something uhh (tpp), Monday, 25 April 2011 12:31 (fifteen years ago)
same goes for tescos i guess?
― the square root of minus one is i something uhh (tpp), Monday, 25 April 2011 12:38 (fifteen years ago)
was the debate resolved? who won?
― cherry blossom, Monday, 25 April 2011 12:40 (fifteen years ago)
I feel like the thing with Tescos opening is that it financially ruins specific and often locally-liked people - like overnight all your local grocer's accumulated business resources of goodwill and local knowledge and etc become worthless because they no longer have a profitable business, and there's nothing to do but sell up. Like, I shop at Morrisons (lol Brecon) rather than my local grocer because I don't care about food really, but if my local grocer asked me to write a postcard against the opening of another one nearer us I 100% would - it's just much more important to me that this actual-person-I-sort-of-know not be ruined than that I save 20 minutes a week in walking from A to B?
Complaining about opening a Nandos OTOH is 100% incomprehensible to me.
― Gravel Puzzleworth, Monday, 25 April 2011 12:42 (fifteen years ago)
xxxpost KFC isn't that cheap really, last time I went I ended up saying "oh, go on then" to the extra piedce of chicken with my burger and a sauce and before I knew it I had spent £6.
― ha ha ha ha jack my swag (boxedjoy), Monday, 25 April 2011 12:49 (fifteen years ago)
me too, but i was new to stokey and its "unique ambience" at the time. i grew up in tooting so what did i know?
― Republicans voiced concern about young pages hearing the word uterus (stevie), Monday, 25 April 2011 13:01 (fifteen years ago)
it's just much more important to me that this actual-person-I-sort-of-know not be ruined
but isn't the only way to achieve that by people going to his shop and buying stuff? which if they prefer to go somewhere else, well hey, THAT'S BUSINESS SUNSHINE. don't remember many shopkeepers being virulently socialist when the mining and manufacturing industries were being decimated
― A Zed and Two Nults (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 April 2011 13:02 (fifteen years ago)
NV - that's kind of an interesting idea actually - I intentionally prefaced it by saying that I never go to his shop anyway - as if to say, y'know, it's not incompatible not to patronize a business and to wish it success? But like possibly in thinking like that I am screwing over of people I don't know who would actually really benefit from a shorter walk?
isn't the only way to achieve that by people going to his shop and buying stuffBut that's what'd be exciting about writing a postcard to the council - I could do something to help without buying lettuce that I don't actually want!
― Gravel Puzzleworth, Monday, 25 April 2011 13:10 (fifteen years ago)
This is the whole thing tho, pitting local people against other local people, 'well u never cared when i was going out of business' and its understandable but to the detriment of a place over time. But do agree with your point in regard that businesses have to survive based on their merits not being a museum piece
But, that said there's a short/long term aspect to this imo. A big store comes in and wipes out all the competition because people decided to shop at the new place because it was cheaper but then the other places die out and then one day the big store isn't so cheap after all and actually they're not carrying so much stock now either.
― colby, Monday, 25 April 2011 13:12 (fifteen years ago)
the South Park ep on Walmart was pretty accurate in its depiction of nobody wanting the store there and everybody using it
― A Zed and Two Nults (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 April 2011 13:12 (fifteen years ago)
god knows the Free Market is a laughable lie but i don't think when we live in a barren wasteland populated only by giant supermarkets and charity shops the supermarkets will start jacking the prices up, cos a) they are competing with each other and b) if they tried this, people wd start small businesses to undercut them and ze circle of life continuez
― A Zed and Two Nults (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 April 2011 13:14 (fifteen years ago)
But then the steelworkers union didn't exactly support the miners when they were being decimated so i dunno should we bothered about them either
― colby, Monday, 25 April 2011 13:15 (fifteen years ago)
not rly cuz then the supermarkets would immediately undercut them! they have a pricing point elasticity that small shopkeepers will never enjoy xp
― Some other race (nakhchivan), Monday, 25 April 2011 13:16 (fifteen years ago)
i don't think that's especially true or an ish. i'm not saying "where were they?" i'm saying shopkeepers on the whole are some flavour of little Tory and have little room to complain at being gamed by the system they presumably favour
― A Zed and Two Nults (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 April 2011 13:17 (fifteen years ago)
xp
if they tried this, people wd start small businesses to undercut them and ze circle of life continuez
Is this really possible? A supermarket can run a loss in a particular place all day long - can certainly hold their breath a lot longer than any local store could even dream about
― colby, Monday, 25 April 2011 13:17 (fifteen years ago)
i don't think it's fair to cast our nation of shopkeepers as conniving lil nazis, and i can sympathize with some of their perennial complaints wrt regulation and taxes cuz running a little shop seems like a lot of work
― Some other race (nakhchivan), Monday, 25 April 2011 13:19 (fifteen years ago)
i mean a lot of this comes down to should we support this particular place or that particular industry or this other store and maybe there's no particular obligation for any particular one, but cumulatively i think actually it does come down to ending up with a barren wasteland populated only by giant supermarkets and charity shops and empty buildings
― colby, Monday, 25 April 2011 13:20 (fifteen years ago)
but how much did people moan about the passing of the blacksmith and other suddenly irrelevant businesses? also the mega supermarkets are pretty good at running imitation gouging-corner-shop businesses on they own, right?
― A Zed and Two Nults (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 April 2011 13:21 (fifteen years ago)
ie as long as there is a market for people who can't get to a big out of town store to buy bog roll or emergency 3 in the morning munchies there will be somebody willing to overcharge them for it
― A Zed and Two Nults (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 April 2011 13:22 (fifteen years ago)
sympathy purchasing seems like a dreadful idea and will only inculcate resentment, or the unrealistic expectation that small businesses will be 'mes que un shop' and rush to give their customers unsolicited beejes in exchange for buying overpriced groceries
― Some other race (nakhchivan), Monday, 25 April 2011 13:22 (fifteen years ago)
With the issue of space I'm not saying it'll get like the US, but gutted towns with out-of-town boxstore complexes that need a car to get to I just don't see anything good about...shall we go to the suburbs thread?
― colby, Monday, 25 April 2011 13:24 (fifteen years ago)
i wd buy overpriced groceries for unsolicited beejays.
again, i'm not saying all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds, i'm just saying that big businesses eating small ones is part of a bigger, nastier picture in which i have little concern for the small sharks just cos they small
― A Zed and Two Nults (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 April 2011 13:24 (fifteen years ago)
but how much did people moan about the passing of the blacksmith and other suddenly irrelevant businesses?
don't really see why the fact that people didn't bemoan this at the time should mean people shouldn't do it now - maybe people, in the 21st century landscape of corporations and chain stores, have more of a sense of what they're missing? maybe history doesn't just blindly repeat itself after all?
also not sure how a nation of shopkeepers is worse than a nation of minimum wage employees of vast corporations that do their best to evade taxes and regulation at every point.
― Republicans voiced concern about young pages hearing the word uterus (stevie), Monday, 25 April 2011 13:25 (fifteen years ago)
just saying that big businesses eating small ones is part of a bigger, nastier picture in which i have little concern for the small sharks just cos they small
think it really does come down to the 1 tyrant 3000 miles away vs 3000 tyrants 1 mile away thing with this, but...
not saying sympathy for any particular small shark is good but a) to me, seeing local businesses as sharks is sort of a divide-and-conquer type tactic, blame the people around you rather than those in power stuff and b) towns with the small sharks gone can get bad real quick
― colby, Monday, 25 April 2011 13:29 (fifteen years ago)
Also a side issue not really mentioned (and this is more to do with out-of-town superstores more so than the tesco express or nandos type thing really) is the function that local shops play other than just providing goods. If mixed usage is a sign of health of a town or neighbourhood then once local stores are pushed out of business and there's a decline in the actual number of functioning stores, it really makes a place not just less cohesive but gradually more unsafe (obviously this isn't whats happening in stoke newington but the removing the shopping function from the high street has more effects than just small shops going out of business or loss of 'character' or 'realness')
― colby, Monday, 25 April 2011 13:54 (fifteen years ago)
Somebody asked how big the Tesco in question is, it's a metro/express thing, whatever the smallest size was. Some other local facts about this particular one and some of the events surrounding the riot:
It was a supermarket about 7 or 8 years ago (Bi-Lo) before it got taken over by the guy who turned it into Jesters comedy club. He then declared himself bankrupt in order to let his partner finance the move of Jesters over the road to eventually become Metropolis, in the building that had been a Wetherspoons. It lay derelict for well over a year, maybe 18 months?
One of the campaigners used to run a fruit and veg shop nearby, and is using it shutting down as an example of why supermarkets shouldn't be allowed in as they put people like him out of business. Actually, there were three things that put him out of business - the fine for benefit fraud after the DSS found out he was claiming disability benefit because allegedly he couldn't walk without sticks, the fine for keeping an unsatitary property after he was caught selling peast-infected produce, and the proportion of his profits he was injecting (although he's clean now).
The local general store type shopkeepers are currently being investigated on two counts by the council - one of price fixing between them, and secondly for keeping some goods unpriced so they can charge you what they like depending on how desperate they think you are. The remainder are organic "£15 a jar of honey" type places (3, I think) and an Italian deli that's only open on certain days.
The three written objections by the protesters, which they can't understand why the council didn't support, to the Tesco planning permission were that it was Tesco, that they'd lower the price of booze and attract alkies (to which Tesco promised to use their overall policy in the store, and didn't point out the White Lightning for £1.99 in the local stores) and that their refrigerated cabinet would be too loud and would spoil the area.
A condition of the Tesco development was that they would fund some affordable social housing in the area to save the council money, and would deliberately divert some of their vouchers for schools thing to a local primary.
This store isn't even in Stokes Croft, it's in Montpelier. The main street in Stokes Croft has two really obvious brothels on it, which the protesters don't seem too bothered about.
The rioters who have been in court aren't even from the area, except the one with No Fixed Abode who could be from a local squat. One's from Easton (2-3 miles, and across the motorway), one's from St George (3-4 miles, and across the motorway) and one's from Filton (5-6 miles, not even in Bristol).
2500 postcards got sent by 'locals' protesting the opening. According to Bristol councils stats, circa 1500 live in Stokes Croft. There's a large number of people, such as in the flats at Kingsdown just behind, who are living on benefits and I'm betting £1.00 carrots aren't on their 'local' shopping list. Maybe why they weren't consulted on the protest postcards or the survey that proved people were against it is because they can't afford to eat and drink in The Canteen.
Gloucester Road is a pretty fair comparison - there's a Sainsbury's Local, a Co-op and a Tesco Express within about half a mile of each other, but there's also handful of local grocery stores, a bread store, a couple of butchers, a fishmongers... they all meet different needs and manage to co-exist.
― 4, 5, 6, The monkey's got a hockey stick (aldo), Monday, 25 April 2011 14:15 (fifteen years ago)
Also, you should crosspost that in the latest Guardian thread.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/apr/25/stokes-croft-tesco-bristol
― Alba, Monday, 25 April 2011 16:14 (fifteen years ago)
i'm saying shopkeepers on the whole are some flavour of little Tory and have little room to complain at being gamed by the system they presumably favour
This seems like a truly grotesque generalisation that I can't help but resent. I am certianly not any flavour of little tory - as I grow older I'm turning more into some horrible hybrid of little makhno x little lenin - and was not so at any point during the years I ran my little shop in South Shields. I don't recall any of the shopkeepers who were my neighbours being so either. The main memory I have of little shop vs big shed shop is that no matter what I did, if B&Q started selling something I sold, it just stopped selling out of my shop, one line I sold for a while till the big shop wiped me out, they had it in for three times the price I sold it for, and still they took all my sales away, fucking hopeless, man. It kind of felt like not so much a level playing field as a vertical wall with them at the top and you at the bottom., ugh too annoyed to even be coherent about it.
― Letzte Tage - Letzte Pächmina (Pashmina), Monday, 25 April 2011 22:30 (fifteen years ago)
v. sorry Pash, always make mental exceptions to my smash the system ramblings for people i like. but point took.
― A Zed and Two Nults (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 April 2011 22:32 (fifteen years ago)
also mrs v. is opening a shop for the charity she works for, so what kind of double hypocrite bullshitter does that make me?
― A Zed and Two Nults (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 April 2011 22:34 (fifteen years ago)
^^^ had forgotten that earlier
― A Zed and Two Nults (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 April 2011 22:35 (fifteen years ago)
that sounds crazy depressing pash
even disregarding political arguments, that every fucking town in england looks like
what is bromsgrove?
is immensely dispiriting
― Some other race (nakhchivan), Monday, 25 April 2011 22:42 (fifteen years ago)
what kind of double hypocrite bullshitter does that make me?
Oh, you're a terrible, terrible man, for sure ;)
Probably a cliche to even relate it - when we took on the shop in Dean Road, in IDK 1980 or thereabouts, there was a butcher shop, 2 greengrocers, baker shop, fishmonger all in the area of 3 blocks, every one of them got ground out of business as the big supermarkets expanded into the town. Now the street is the archetype of a small town shopping street - all charity shops, shortlived hairdresser shops, a bunch of shuttered up shops. Pretty fucking sad for a whole bunch of reasons beyond sentimentality or archetypal guardian readerish hand-wringing (which I am prone to admittedly, being an archetypal guardian & all that)
― Letzte Tage - Letzte Pächmina (Pashmina), Tuesday, 26 April 2011 00:58 (fifteen years ago)
thanks for all that info aldo - interesting, definitely good to hear from someone on the ground rather than falling into the automatic "protesters GOOD tesco BAD" mindset that so many do.
in other news MARINA HYDE IS BACK! omfg can we ensure she never gets pregnant again, can't take this long without her again. bitch still has it obv.
Being prime minister is rather like being able to play the fantasy dinner party game for real, so the fact that Tony Blair could have rifled through a near-limitless Rolodex of fascinating public figures, yet plumped for Vernon Kay, speaks volumes about his character (were further volumes in any way required). That Vernon should once again find himself at our nation's high table says more about Where We Are At than any number of dystopian social treatises, and we can only await the Boltonian Zelig's next state appearance with infinite resignation.
these sentences are perfect <3
― lex pretend, Tuesday, 26 April 2011 07:50 (fifteen years ago)