Worst McDonald's in the state. Longest wait times out of any "fast food" joint. The people are extremely rude consistently. Sunday mornings when they have older adults working you can actually feel comfortable knowing you won't be sitting in the drive through for 47 minutes (i have dash cam footage and not exaggerating) for two regular cheeseburgers. Its gotten to the point where I'll drive all the way to the next town if i need anything. The younger manager is incompetent as well. I once ordered two large fries and two fountain sodas only to wait 20 minutes to get to the window in which they asked me to pull ahead so they could give me fresh fries. ( "sure whatever") well after another 15 minutes I went inside and waited. The fries i got were disgusting. Soft, mushy and cold. I asked for fresh fries and the manager insisted they were straight out of the fryer. Definitely was not true. We argued for about 5 minutes and he finally gave me fresh fries. His excuse was they were fresh when he put them in the bag 30 minutes or so ago. anyways i can go.on and on about all the ridiculous encounters from this particular McDonald's in poynette, bit i would just suggest going anywhere else. Literally anywhere. Ive never had an order right. I don't order any special things like no onions or add this or that. Just order a number whatever with a coke. This place is a joke and honestly it should be shut down and turned into something else. If its a franchise the owners should...
Read moreFast service; cheap food. What else can be said? Well, quite a bit actually. I feel as though McDonald’s is quite representative of the American Dream, and am prepared to defend my thesis within this reviews character limit.
First and foremost, we must address the elephant in the room: the Big Mac. Three delicious sesame buns cuddle two juicy all-American beef patties. Based on this descriptor alone, the Big Mac draws eerie parallels to wage gap in America. The three sesame buns represent the three core pillars of America’s one percent, those being industry, finance, and extravagance. Those three pillars cushion the bedrock of America, those being the working class and middle class, positioned safely between the buns. Without these strong, absorbent, buns, to absorb the dirty run off juices of the patties, the entire burger would become soaked in the toxic run off of the patties, disparaging the entire experience. What the one percent offers is stability and fidelity in the American Dream, one that continues to string along the working and middle class into pushing forward towards an unreachable goal. America thrives on such inequality, creating a dichotomy between our fantastical vision of this country and its limitations with the truthfully despaired reality, hidden under a facade of truth, justice, and the American way.
I also...
Read moreI wish I could give this a 0 star. We pulled off to grab something quick to eat and while I was standing there trying to order my food the girl taking my order cut me off and started talking to a customer next to me that goes there all the time even though they had someone already waiting on them, she was not listening to what I was ordering. Then when she finally paid attention to me she didn't catch my whole order so when I looked at my receipt I told her she charged me for the wrong thing and then she tried arguing with me saying she heard me say something else. how could she hear what I was saying when she was talking to the other customer? She was very rude and then told her manager she had to handle me. We all went to get drinks and all of the soda were clear and flat, we told them the sodas were out and the manager rudely told us she could get soda from the drive thru dispenser and then asked us "I take it you guys aren't from around here" What does that have to do with your sodas needing to be replaced?! The soda from the drive thru tasted carbonated and stocked. Them having to refill the sodas in the dining area had nothing to do with us not living in the area. they were extremely rude and had very poor...
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