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cover of episode Listen Now: The Best Idea Yet

Listen Now: The Best Idea Yet

2024/10/15
logo of podcast American History Tellers

American History Tellers

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主持人
专注于电动车和能源领域的播客主持人和内容创作者。
Topics
Nick Martell 和 Jack Crivici-Kramer: 本播客探讨了麦当劳开心乐园餐的起源以及其背后的故事。节目中介绍了危地马拉第一家麦当劳餐厅的老板Yolanda Fernandez de Covino,她对麦当劳的经营模式进行了创新,最终促成了开心乐园餐的诞生。节目还介绍了汉堡大学,这是一个为麦当劳特许经营商提供的培训项目,Yolanda Fernandez de Covino 也曾在那里学习。通过这个故事,节目展现了麦当劳品牌成功的背后,以及特许经营模式的灵活性和创新性。 Yolanda Fernandez de Covino: (虽然没有直接引语,但她的故事贯穿始终,作为危地马拉第一家麦当劳餐厅的老板,她根据当地情况对麦当劳的经营模式进行了创新,最终促成了开心乐园餐的诞生。这体现了她作为企业家的敏锐和创新精神,以及她对当地市场的了解。) Nick Martell 和 Jack Crivici-Kramer: (补充说明) 节目中还提到了其他一些知名产品的起源故事,例如超级玛丽,以及史瑞查酱,这些故事都体现了产品成功的背后,以及企业家们在面对挑战时所展现的勇气和创新精神。

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Chapters
The McDonald's Happy Meal is the best-selling meal of all time. This episode explores the untold origin stories of iconic products and the people who made them go viral.
  • The McDonald's Happy Meal is the best-selling meal of all time.
  • Super Mario exists because Nintendo couldn't get the rights to Popeye.
  • The idea for the Happy Meal came from a mom in Guatemala.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Have you ever wondered how the McDonald's Happy Meal became the best-selling meal of all time or who's really behind that bottle of Sriracha in your fridge?

or why almost every house in America has at least one game of Monopoly. Introducing The Best Idea Yet, a brand new podcast about the untold origin stories of iconic products and the people who made them go viral. Like, did you know that Super Mario, the best-selling video game character of all time, only exists because Nintendo couldn't get the rights to Popeye, or that the idea for the McDonald's Happy Meal first came from a mom in Guatemala?

Every week on The Best Idea Yet, they'll be digging into a product you already know well, but you'll never believe their surprising origin stories. You're about to hear a clip from The Best Idea Yet. While you're listening, follow The Best Idea Yet on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.

It's June 19th, 1974. Guatemala City's historic district. And Yolanda Fernandez de Covino is grinning from ear to ear. Because it's opening day for the very first McDonald's franchise located in Guatemala. And she and her husband, they own it. She's turning 40 next month. And she's feeling excited for this new chapter in her life. Because it's been months since.

of work to get this thing ready, to bring in the supplies, to hire, and then to train 30, 40 employees, all while raising five kids of their own. That's a lot. Now, quick side note, McDonald's Corporation, they don't actually own most of the restaurants. Great point, Jack. That would be the franchisees. Ah.

So Yolanda and her husband are small business owners, and they put up their own money to build the first Guatemalan McDonald's location. Basically, they're paying McD's a licensing fee in exchange for the rights to use the McDonald's brand, the logo, and all those salty sweet recipes. El Mac Mas Grande. Did they call that? Actually, I may want to fact check that. Ha ha ha!

But this is a system that's been in place since even before Ray Kroc, who is the cutthroat entrepreneur and eventually the Mickey D CEO that muscled the McDonald's brothers out of their own company back in 1961. For that story, you can curl up on the couch and watch a movie called The Founder. It's a good airplane movie. I watched that on a flight the other day. But yet he's McDonald's. They started expanding to international markets in the late 60s.

But as of 1974, McDonald's has made a huge dent in Latin America. So as Guatemala's first McDonald's franchisee, Yolanda, or Doña Yoli as she's known locally, is ready to introduce this fast, this affordable, this fantastic new food to her community.

Now, the Covino-Fernandez family, they may own the franchise together, but it's Doña Yoli who really takes charge. She is the fast food trailblazer. Or, as McDonald's employees like to say, she's got ketchup in her veins. What a great expression. Although that can't be good for the blood pressure. I mean, you may want to see a doctor at a certain point, Jack.

But still, doña Yoli, she wants their location in Guatemala to feel like a family-owned restaurant. She does not want this to feel like a chain, but...

There are a lot of hidden steps that go into creating this kind of environment. Like all the details. So many details. You have to nail the soda fountains, the hiring standards, the daily signage. Ensure the sesame seed bun is the same density in Guatemala as it is in Grand Rapids. Yeah, it is. You are literally running a business when you're a franchisee. But since it's a business you didn't found...

You gotta do everything according to the corporate standards. And this is why Doña Yoli ventures 2,700 miles from her home to Elk Grove Village, Illinois. That's right. Doña Yoli is going to Hamburger University. H-U? Nick, I have some questions about this university. Oh, Jack, you may need to apply, but let's get into it, baby. ♪

Hamburger University, which, by the way, should absolutely be a D1 school, is the brainchild of a guy named Fred Turner. Now, Fred, he actually started as a grill man at one of the very first McDonald's franchise locations. But this university he dreams up, it's actually a training program for franchise owners. The very first type of training program like this in the entire world. Jack, this is the Harvard World.

for hamburgers. This is Stanford for fries, man. It's the Cambridge for quarter pounders. And it all starts in the basement of a McDonald's in Elk Grove Village, a suburb not that far from Chicago's O'Hare Airport. Now, the students at Hamburger University, they earn a Bachelor's of Hamburgerology with like a minor in French fries. Jeff,

Jack, would you hang that on your wall? I feel like that's a good diploma to brag about. On my wall? No, but on my brand new McDonald's location. Exactly. Because despite what you may think, Hamburger University, students there are learning everything from supply chain logistics to management to leadership skills. And actually, it is really hard to get into Hamburger University. You ready for some stats, man? Hit me. Okay. Okay.

Today, the Shanghai campus of Hamburger University has a 1% acceptance rate. That's actually lower than Harvard. So I take it back. I will put that diploma on my wall. Yeah, get it framed, Jack. Now, when Donya Yoli attends Hamburger University, she's absorbing everything. But there is one thing that Yolanda learns at Hamburger University that really gets her fired up.

McDonald's is naturally all about delivering a uniform experience for their customers. That was one of the keys to McDonald's explosive growth in the 1950s. Exactly, Jack. But the company's leaders, they don't want to quash the entrepreneurial instincts of their franchisees. Donia Yoli, for example, she knows her community better than corporate does.

especially being nearly 3,000 miles away in Central America. So while corporate wants the fries always fried at a certain temperature and the patties all to be the same weight, they also want a franchise owner to pay attention to their customers, right? Yeah. And if they get a great idea, they want the franchisee to take initiative. Well, that's exactly what Doña Yoli does. She heads back to O'Hare, passes through the same terminal as the McAllister family, and then spends the whole flight to Guatemala City thinking

and she is more energized than ever. Because when she lands, she thinks she's got it. But she has no idea that her brainstorm on that plane is about to make fast food history. You can listen to The Best Idea Yet early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.