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  1. #1
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    Chelsea Morgensen: 2017 Miss Hooters International

    14 hours ago
    Hooters pageant winner Chelsea Morgensen: It empowers me
    By Stephanie Nolasco, Fox News


    Chelsea Morgensen was crowned 2017 Miss Hooters International (Courtesy of Hooters)

    Chelsea Morgensen is heating things up faster than a plate of wings these days — the reigning 2017 Miss Hooters International is serving up the sizzling 2018 calendar as its new cover girl.

    And it’s for a good cause. Since October, $1 from each calendar goes to Give A Hoot, a campaign supporting breast cancer research.

    Fox News spoke with the Texas native living in Hollywood about appearing in the latest Hooters calendar, how she was hired by the restaurant and the one talent she loves to show off:

    Fox News: Can you describe that moment when you saw yourself on the cover for the first time?

    Chelsea Morgensen: My managers first told me I was going to be doing a TV appearance, but instead they were actually surprising me with my cover. The entire restaurant was chanting my name as I came downstairs. I had no idea what was going on. And then they finally showed me the cover… I loved it. I just really loved my picture! I was so excited, the whole restaurant was cheering for me… But it didn’t actually hit me until… I saw the physical, actual calendar. I just thought, ‘Wow, this actually happened.’



    Fox News: When did you first became involved with Hooters?

    Morgensen: I started working for Hooters in April 2015. I was actually just eating at Hooters because I love their wings and thought, ‘You know, I really need a job. I wonder if they’re hiring.’ I asked the Hooters girl there and she said, ‘Yeah! Stop in tomorrow and meet our manager.’ I went in… They pretty much hired me on the spot. It was pretty exciting. I was a bit overwhelmed, but I am glad that I pursued it. It’s been the best job I’ve ever had.

    Fox News: How has working at Hooters helped you build self-confidence?

    Morgensen: Just having to interact with people every day, especially working in Hollywood, people come from all over the country… I had to open up and talk to everybody. Being outgoing just in the workplace encouraged me to get out more in my regular life.

    Fox News: What’s your relationship like with your customers?

    Morgensen: In Hollywood, we actually have very few regulars… It’s always new customers. But recently — and I’m so excited about this — I actually created two regulars of my own that now frequent the restaurant, which is really cool!



    My relationships with them are very friendly. We talk about work, travel, careers. I’m modeling and acting now, so they’re always really curious about what that’s like and see how I’m doing… If they’re ever having a down day, I try to turn it around for them. I really like having that familiar face come in. And I hope to create more of them.

    Fox News: Have you interacted with any celebrities?

    Morgensen: I personally have not that I know of, but there are some celebrities that come in. I know we had a football player one time who came in and ordered one of everything on the entire menu… We do have some celebrities who come in every now and then.

    Fox News: Some people believe Hooters depicts women in a negative light. How do you respond to the criticism?

    Morgensen: Honestly, I haven’t experienced any incidents of negativity. It has done nothing but empowered me. It has given me so much more confidence. And all the girls that work there are amazing. There are girls going to school to become nurses, become lawyers, to be doctors… I think it’s a great job… It gives you that ability to talk to anybody… I have had nothing, but positive experiences working with Hooters.



    Fox News: Are there any misconceptions you feel people have that just aren’t true?

    Morgensen: I think a lot of people need to visit Hooters and see it for themselves. Hooters is a great family-oriented restaurant. Families bring their kids all the time and they absolutely love it. They have a blast. So if someone has any misconceptions, they just need to come to Hooters and experience it for themselves.

    Fox News: Before Hooters, you were a pageant girl in 2009. What was that like?

    Morgensen: I was a tomboy my whole life… But I was tall and thin, so people would always tell me that I should model. A friend of my mom's told me there was a beauty pageant coming up and I should compete in it. It was part of the Miss Universe organization… It was in my hometown of Texas, so I competed there and ended up winning… I was so surprised, I didn’t know what I had gotten myself into… It actually led me to Hollywood and that’s where I wanted to end up.

    Fox News: What’s the most outrageous thing you’ve ever had to do for a good photo?

    Morgensen: I was in New York and shooting a summer line for a purse collection. It was about five degrees outside. It was also raining. I was wearing a tank top with strappy heels and little capri pants. I was just wearing that while walking around the street as photos were being taken of the purses. It was so, so cold. I couldn’t feel my body or anything. But that’s how it is in this industry. It’s all over the place, but I love it.



    Fox News: What are some other fun facts our readers should know about you?

    Morgensen: I can sing and talk in a Chipmunk voice! I discovered this talent about five years ago. I’m also a world champion basketball player. I won a major tournament when I was in third grade. And I just love staying active. Whether it’s rock climbing, kickboxing – anything, I just love it.
    Extra points for Chelsea's kickboxing.
    Gene Ching
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  2. #2
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    namemyrestaurant.com



    A new restaurant concept that will feature “skimpy uniforms” is coming to Kansas. Abdul Arif, the businessman behind the idea, created a poll on Facebook to name the restaurants. Options include Shocker Knockers and Busted Bourbons. Abdul Arif via Facebook

    Owner seeks a ‘subtle’ name for his Kansas restaurant. Shocker Knockers is one choice
    BY MAX LONDBERG AND CARRIE RENGERS
    McClatchy

    January 02, 2018 12:56 PM

    Wichita businessman Abdul Arif says he hopes his new restaurant will be “very subtle” but also similar to Hooters or Twin Peaks.

    Shocker Knockers and Perky Jugs are among the names he’s considering.

    Arif says he wants his restaurant to appeal to millennials, who are “much more sensitive to sexual nuances.”

    “The millennials are much more sophisticated,” he said. “They would be repelled by a very overt message.”

    He described his conceptual restaurant as “a sports bar and grill with, ah, skimpy uniforms.

    “We’re still searching for the right name to put on there.”

    To that end, Arif started a poll on Facebook with name proposals. Those who select the winning name will be entered into a drawing for $1,000 and free beer.

    Blonde Bleachers, Cheers Taphouse, Busted Bourbons and Yogies Taphouse are additional proposals. A “yogie” is defined by the Urban Dictionary as someone who eats and sleeps often.

    “The restaurant concept is going wild,” Arif said. “At the end of the day, everybody likes to look at pretty girls and drink beer.”

    See more of namemyrestaurant.com on Facebook



    namemyrestaurant.com
    December 31, 2017 at 7:14am ·
    Vote for your favorite name for a chance to win $1000 and Beer for two for a year! Like our page and vote for your favorite name in the comments and share the post. If you vote for the winning name you will be entered in a drawing for your chance to win.

    NAMES TO VOTE FOR:
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    Winner will be announced Jan. 14th. LIKE, VOTE AND SHARE TODAY!
    “Those names are terrible,” Glenn Bechtel wrote in a comment. “I was thinking Mammary’s. ... Oh wait too overt for the sophisticated palates that go to places like these.”

    As of Tuesday morning, Cheers Taphouse had the most votes, Arif said

    A 2017 survey of 250 women who worked in “breastaurants” found the waitresses suffer from a greater risk of developing eating disorders, anxiety and depression.

    Some restaurants create grading systems to assess the women who work in them, the survey found.

    “We want to raise awareness about the negative impact that these types of restaurant environments may have on female servers,” Dawn Syzmanski, one of two psychology researchers from the University of Tennessee who performed the survey, told USA Today. “We want the public to use this data in personal decisions about whether to support or not support these types of restaurants.”

    When asked whether the survey’s results concerned him, Arif said, “No. No, not really because ... we don’t force anybody to work there.”

    Arif, who is also a lawyer, said that to avoid gender or appearance discrimination in hiring, his servers will be classified as models under what’s known as the bona fide occupational qualification exception — the same exception to discrimination laws that allows casting directors to recruit, say, a white actor to play George Washington, Arif said.

    Since the women at his restaurants will be classified as models, they will earn “well above anything waitresses make.”

    He estimated they’ll earn between $700 and $1,000 per week including tips, and he added that a tuition reimbursement program will be granted to employees who earn B’s and above in college.

    “We want to encourage these ladies to enhance their full potential,” he said.

    He added that he is a “a capitalist to the core, but a capitalist with a social conscience,” and that he’s a founding member of a nonprofit, the Mayflower Clinic, that pays medical expenses for the uninsured.

    Arif said he’s not ready to create a restaurant that caters to female clientele rather than men.

    “I just don’t think Wichita’s ready for something like that, or there’s not enough segment here maybe,” Arif says. “Of course, we don’t want to be partial, but I just don’t know yet if I’m brave enough to do something like that.”

    Arif says he wants women and children to be comfortable coming to his restaurant, regardless of its future name.

    “Otherwise, it would look like a strip club, and we don’t want that.”

    Look for results of the naming contest by Jan. 15.
    No name announce yet. I'm eager with anticipation...
    Gene Ching
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  3. #3
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    Hooters delivery?

    Hooters as we know it looks like a thing of the past — the restaurant’s latest move to compete is proof
    Matt Naham, January 15, 2018 11:35 am

    The wings restaurant with a reputation as a “breastaurant” known as Hooters is exploring new business initiatives as it realizes it will be impossible to remain competitive hoping that people will walk through its front doors.

    Hooters as we know it is becoming Hooters as we knew it, as the chain emphasizes food delivery services without bombshell staffers being involved.

    Chief Executive Terry Marks, the New York Post reported, talked up food delivery services at the ICR Retail conference in Orlando and acknowledged that many people wouldn’t be caught dead in a Hooters but would still eat the food.

    Marks said that the company is focusing on delivery and pick-up orders and, as a result, has solved its polarizing branding issue.

    “Many people wouldn’t step foot in our restaurants, but they want our product,” Marks said. “Delivery [solves] the polarizing issue the brand has had.”

    That’s why the restaurant has gone from having delivery or take out at seven locations to 96 in a year. We’ve talked about the Hooters-specific brand issue as it relates to industry-wide trends that show decline in dining out.

    Between 2012 and 2016, Hooters lost 7 percent of its locations due to stagnating sales, according to a Business Insider report.

    While the lack of appeal for Hooters may have something to do with a dip in interest in breast-related content among a younger crowd, a decline in dining out across the industry compounded the problem and forced the company to explore other options.

    Food Newsfeed delved deeper into this problem in an article from 2016 headlined “Are We Witnessing the Death of Casual Dining?” In that piece, the plight of “mid-scale” casual dining establishments is explored.

    Victor Fernandez, who tracks insights in the food industry for TDn2K, said that it’s obvious the “percentage of brands that are positive is shrinking.”

    “When you think about from recession until now, it’s all been negative traffic growth every year,” he says. “It’s less and less guest occasions than what we had the previous year, so that’s the main concern for the chain restaurant industry.”

    Fernandez said that since the recession these types of restaurants have been struggling to compete with others that have quicker service.

    “Quick service has been doing much better, and it has been doing much better for the last year or two. They’re able to drive some positive [comparable restaurant] numbers for both sales and traffic, so they’re in a much better spot,” he said. “Full-service has been struggling a bit more, and within that, casual dining is really the sub-segment that is struggling the most. If you drill down a little bit more, it’s the bar and grill sector that’s really having the most trouble.”


    .(Photo: Flickr Creative Commons/BemLoira BemDevassa)

    Hooters as we know it looks like a thing of the past — the restaurant’s latest move to compete is proof Flickr Creative Commons/BemLoira BemDevassa

    About the author:
    Matt Naham, Rare Staff
    Matt Naham is the Weekend Editor for Rare. Follow him on Twitter @matt_naham.
    Honestly now, who goes to Hooters for the food? The food is not that good.
    Gene Ching
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  4. #4
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    Braised Sister

    Jan 26
    Busty babe in ultra-short shorts helps Taiwanese snack vendor quadruple sales
    We think she’s found her calling

    [IMG]https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*iT1fYTybSCpwCf8wu-tZqQ.jpeg[/IMG]

    Looking to draw in a couple more customers, a braised meat vendor in Taiwan decided to hand over the management of his stall for one night to a cleavage-bearing woman wielding a cleaver.

    This turns out to have been a rather good business decision on his part. The vendor told Taiwanese media that with “Little Peach” (小桃子) at the helm his stall’s sales quadrupled as a long lines of curious customers stretched out into the road at a Taichung night market.

    [IMG]https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*UdNCtVDSrTZ0SpSms3ZQ-A.jpeg[/IMG]
    [IMG]https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*3vvWTtq0JCLvtH120AgMeA.jpeg[/IMG]
    [IMG]https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*ZjljPM3Lt_pwN_ky3LKrQw.jpeg[/IMG]

    Afterward, the model posted images of herself working at the braised snack stall onto Facebook, creating an even bigger stir online. The images show “Little Peach” in a low-cut sweater and a pair of extremely short shorts.

    [IMG]https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*6wb1YiETzAtraSP-iPtJvg.jpeg[/IMG]
    [IMG]https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*CVpVIIT8D7QskKX3_uV0-g.jpeg[/IMG]
    [IMG]https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*9WaDE1Ra6Q0B_iR0c-w9dQ.jpeg[/IMG]

    According to Taiwan News, the woman has thusly earned herself the title of “Braised Sister.” When she’s not holding down things at the stall, she can be found wearing even less for her day job.

    [IMG]https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*_F7DACzMq283n-eMb5SWTA.jpeg[/IMG]
    [IMG]https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*fnK5kIsU2zNLhp-z4n6-9w.jpeg[/IMG]
    [IMG]https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*T309cA_fFFJCvAIItOQioA.jpeg[/IMG]

    This “Braised Sister” falls in a long line of Taiwanese vendors whose sales have been helped by their sex appeal, including Taipei’s “Pork Princess.”

    [IMG]https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*kpNRP4GFOi-vhg7O_Tskmw.jpeg[/IMG]

    And “Taiwan’s hottest bean curd seller.”

    [IMG]https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*NYMWLI9j7ceOYycfW3r84Q.jpeg[/IMG]
    "pork princess"?
    Gene Ching
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  5. #5
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    Sex Mex

    Interesting take on this. I suppose if an Asian-themed breastaurant opened, I'd have similar issues. But I just got to say - the Mexican beer posters is see in all the taquerias that I frequent are some of the sexiest beer posters of all.


    Spicing things up at El Hefe. Benjamin Leatherman

    'Sex Mex' Is Trendy, but Using Sex to Sell Tacos Is Hardly New
    PATRICIA ESCÁRCEGA | FEBRUARY 2, 2018 | 7:00AM

    On a recent Friday night, throngs of 20-somethings were packed inside El Hefe, the “super macho taquería” in downtown Scottsdale that’s probably best known for two things: kiddie-pool-size adult beverages called Beergaritas, and the “Hefe Girls,” the restaurant’s crew of young, scantily clad female servers and bartenders, who regularly take turns dancing on the bar, Coyote Ugly-style.

    On this night, the Beergaritas were flowing, the wordless thump of EDM vibrated in the air, and as promised, a couple of Hefe Girls danced on the bar. One of the women, gyrating in hot pants and a low-cut tank top, poured a waterfall of tequila, straight from the bottle, into the gaping mouth of a young bearded dude. His friends slapped him on the back in approval, and his face took on the glow of someone who had just taken communion.

    El Hefe, especially on nights like these, is a conspicuous example of a certain type of modern Mexican restaurant: loud, style-conscious, and not shy about using sex appeal to sell tacos and tequila.

    “Hmmm, how can we describe El Hefe?” the restaurant’s website reads. “Think Dia de Los Muertos — but with style (and great-looking servers!)”

    In late January, Scottsdale’s nightlife district welcomed another stylish and “sexy” Mexican restaurant to the neighborhood: Casa Amigos, from Scottsdale-based Evening Entertainment Group, described in a recent press release as “a spicy, sexy Mexican restaurant.”

    Evening Entertainment Group declined to be interviewed for this piece, providing instead a short written statement about the group’s design philosophy and commitment to “top-notch” food and drink. Riot Hospitality Group, who owns El Hefe, also declined to be interviewed.

    El Hefe and Casa Amigos aren’t the only restaurants putting “sexy” at the center of their brand, of course. Hooters brought the “breastaurant” into the American dining mainstream in the 1980s and 1990s. Similar concepts have followed suit, replicating the boobs-and-booze formula to the tune of more than $1 billion in annual sales, according to several reports.

    But there’s also a whole subgenre of these kinds of restaurants — call them “Sex Mex,” if you want — that appears to be growing. There’s the Florida restaurant that describes its menu as “sexy Mexican food and craft cocktails.” The San Antonio Mexican restaurant where the all-female wait staff wear lingerie and swimwear. The Harlem taco shop, Sexy Taco/Dirty Cash, whose logo features a pinup model straddling a hard shell taco with one hand while balancing a margarita in the other.

    All of which begs the question: Is Sex Mex a new trend in Mexican dining? More to the point, should it be?


    Art at Casa Amigos in Scottsdale. Benjamin Leatherman

    “Sexy, spicy — those are the kinds of words that have historically been used to stereotype Latinas,” says Dr. Meredith Abarca, an English professor at the University of Texas at El Paso.

    Abarca has written extensively about the intersection of class, gender, and Mexican foodways. She’s not sure what to think about a restaurant that markets itself as “sexy” and “spicy.”

    “Spicy, in the context of chiles and Mexican food history, that makes sense to me,” she says. “But when you add the word sexy, it raises a lot of questions.”

    “The first thing that comes to mind is ‘hot tamale.’ The old stereotype of Latinas as hot, sizzling things.”

    Hot tamale. Spicy señorita. The words invoke a dark-haired, red-lipped, hypersexual Latina woman. It’s one of the oldest and most persistent Latina stereotypes in the book.


    Mexican film actress Lupe Velez was sometimes marketed as “The Hot Pepper."Courtesy of Cine Mundial

    Spicy is what Mexican film actress Lupe Velez, star of the “Mexican spitfire” silent film series, was called in turn-of-the-century Hollywood (Velez was sometimes marketed as “The Hot Pepper”). Spicy is “exotic” Carmen Miranda donning blood-red lipstick, a sequined bra, and pineapple headdress. Spicy is Sofía Vergara playing an archetypically loud, sexy Latina bombshell, well into the 21st century on ABC’s Modern Family.

    Spicy suggests someone who is alluring, but also tempestuous and childlike. To be spicy is to be a person who cannot be taken entirely seriously, and possibly shouldn’t be trusted.

    It might seem like a harmless, even flattering, cliché. But tell that to Josefa Loaiza, the Gold Rush-era Californian with the dubious distinction of being what many historians believe is the only woman to be lynched and hanged in the state of California. Her crime: stabbing a man who broke into her house. Reports from the era describe her as a hot-blooded beauty. From her saga, it’s easy to imagine the terrible ways that “spicy” and “hot-blooded” can be transmuted into “crazy” — or “dangerous.”


    Gustavo Arellano Larry D. Moore

    How does the “spicy Latina” trope intersect with the food world, though? I asked Gustavo Arellano, whose book Taco USA: How Mexican Food Conquered America charts the intriguing trajectory of Mexican cooking in the U.S.

    Arellano, famous for gleefully imploding racist stereotypes in his popular long-running syndicated column “Ask a Mexican,” says that the “spicy Latina” is a very old trope that played a big part in popularizing Mexican food in the U.S.

    “It goes back all the way to the first famous Mexican restaurateurs, when they were known as chili queens in San Antonio,” he says.

    Arellano devotes a chapter in his book to the story of the chili queens. These were the Mexican female cooks who set up makeshift restaurants at night in the plazas of 19th-century San Antonio. The food — which included chile con carne and tamales dished out of big pots placed over open fires — attracted curious tourists drawn to the “exotic” local dishes.

    They were drawn not only by the novelty of the food, but by the “coquettish señoritas” serving it, which is how writer O. Henry describes the women in his short story “The Enchanted Kiss.”

    “They were literally the first spicy señoritas,” says Arellano. “And whether they did it purposely or not, a lot of their appeal was their sex appeal.”

    The chili queens may have faded from the plazas of San Antonio decades ago, but the idea of “coquettish señoritas” lives on to this day.

    Before there were overtly sexual breastaurants, Mexican restaurants were adept at highlighting female sexuality, albeit in slightly more subtle ways than today’s Hefe Girls.

    Like other “ethnic” cuisines angling for the American mainstream, Mexican restaurants in the latter half of the 20th century often played up the romance of exoticism, in this case the romance of “Old Mexico.” Portraying Mexican women in a certain light was a big part of that romantic image.
    continued next post
    Gene Ching
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  6. #6
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    Continued from previous post


    China poblanaKaren Apricot / Flickr

    Arelleno points to the china poblana costume — a sometimes low-cut peasant dress often worn by female servers — which became a hallmark of higher-end Mexican restaurants in the latter half of the 20th century. The costume was a tangible marker that placed Latinas as exotic, sensual, and decorative.

    The china poblana costume has largely been retired from contemporary Mexican restaurants. But in cities like metro Phoenix, Arellano says, Sex Mex continues in at least two different veins.

    “You have the restaurants for the Scottsdale crowd, but you also have restaurants for the Mexican immigrant crowd,” he says. “And where you really see it is in the marisquerías.”

    If the Scottsdale crowds have places like El Hefe, then the Mexican immigrant crowd has places like Mariscos Hector, a sexed-up Sinaloan marisquería (seafood restaurant) that’s become a mainstay of the Orange County Mexican food scene.

    Mariscos Hector proudly bills itself as the “Mexican Hooters.” Unlike other breastaurants, which downplay charges of sexism by talking up the quality of their chicken wings or burgers, Mariscos Hector feels more like an oversexed bar that happens to serve seafood. The restaurant’s female servers, a curvaceous crew that serves aguachile platters with a side of earsplitting banda music, are shamelessly plugged as the restaurant’s feature attraction. (Mariscos Hector did not respond to New Times’ request for an interview.)

    This type of Mexican restaurant, geared toward Mexican immigrant men, doesn’t play on racial stereotypes to appeal to a non-Mexican dining public. It relies, instead, on good old-fashioned Mexican machismo.

    In the end, El Hefe and Mariscos Hector, two restaurants that ostensibly seem worlds apart, feel a little like kindred spirits. Beneath Hector’s thunderous banda music, and El Hefe’s thumping EDM soundtrack, you can hear both speaking the universal language of sexism.


    Getting spicy at El Hefe. Benjamin Leatherman

    These days, when restaurants boast about sex appeal, it’s often intended to convey things like tufted leather booths, or pricey, showstopper bars.

    “Sexy” has become a popular — and, arguably, overused and confused — marketing and design term, a catchall for anything meant to be understood as youthful, deluxe, or stylish. I suspect that’s what places like Casa Amigos have in mind when they talk about a “spicy, sexy” Mexican restaurant.

    But sexy, when it’s expressly describing a sexually charged restaurant environment — well, that can be problematic, Abarca tells me.

    Hyper-sexualized work environments, like those found in some restaurants, shape the “bigger picture” of society, she says. They reflect the balance of power in the world — one that often belongs to powerful men.

    “With all these accusations we keep hearing about ... men who feel like they can do whatever they want — this is just another way in which, systematically, women are stereotyped and objectified,” she says.

    No matter what is meant by using the word “sexy,” though, using sex appeal to sell Mexican food, even on the broadest terms, inevitably evokes more than a century of racist and sexist stereotypes — cue the hot tamales, hot-blooded chicas, and loud, vapid bombshells.

    And it’s worth noting that cheerfully branding Mexican food as “sexy” or “fun” or “spicy” exoticizes a food culture that is not exotic. Mexican food, in case you haven’t noticed, has been around these parts for quite a while. It’s as American as apple pie, or Taco Bell.

    “Mexican food now is so popular,” Arellano tells me. “You really don’t need sex appeal to sell it anymore.”

    That kind of clear-eyed assessment still seems lost on some restaurateurs, though, who continue to lean on hackneyed concepts to sell food and drink. Why not, instead, focus that energy on making great food?

    It’s hard to ignore, too, how disingenuous, tone-deaf, and unwelcoming these kinds of restaurants can feel.

    Proclaiming that your Mexican restaurant is like Dia de Los Muertos, for instance — but with more style and great-looking servers — underlines a fixation with style over substance, and a lack of respect for the culture that’s helping put dollars in your pocket. And hiring only “sexy chicas” to serve food? It’s a surefire way to shut out a big part of the dining public.

    “Sex and food, that’s not a new connection,” says Abarca. “But it’s interesting that it’s being used so boldly by restaurants.

    “The question remains, who are they hoping to attract?”
    I do luv tacos...
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
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  7. #7
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    フーターズ

    Tokyo Hooters now offers rental work spaces, and they’re free for students
    Casey Baseel yesterday



    Service is perfect for mobile workers who don’t need to go to the office but do need to be around breasts.

    Walk into just about any Starbucks in the Tokyo area on a weekday afternoon, and you’re likely to see at least one mobile professional with a laptop who’s simultaneously hard at work and sipping on a relaxing cup of coffee. But what if you don’t like coffee, or even delicious Japan-exclusive Frappuccinos? What if you prefer, say, breasts?

    Then you’ll be happy to know that as of this month, you can also telecommute from the Hooters branch in Tokyo’s Ginza neighborhood. The restaurant chain, which professedly chaste regulars insist serves really tasty chicken wings, has teamed up with Spacee, a Japanese company which partners with Tokyo eateries to offer rentable work areas during the restaurants’ downtime.

    Since March 23, the Ginza Hooters has designated 20 seats as Spacee works paces, which can be used in 30-minutes blocks for just 50 yen (US$0.47) as long as you’re registered with Spacee. The work spaces are available daily from 1 to 7 p.m., and while you’re under no obligation to order anything, but Spacee users who are feeling thirsty do receive discounts on selected beverages from the menu, which are, of course, served by Hooters waitresses wearing the chain’s traditional attire.



    In touting the service, Spacee boasts that “Working in a different environment from an ordinary office can boost productivity, and well as promote the development of new ideas.” Several of those ideas are likely to be breast-related, but that might not really be a problem, considering that breasts are practically their own subsector of the Japanese economy.

    The Hooters workspaces (which look to be primarily a desk and Internet access, so you’ll need to bring your own laptop) are available on a first-come, first-served basis, with no reservation required. Users will have to register with Spacee ahead of time, though, which can be done here, but there are no sign-up or membership fees.

    Oh, and about the 50-yen fee for 30 minutes of work space time? It’s waived for students, who can study at them for free. Spacee users under the age of 18 must be accompanied by a guardian, though, so we might see some Tokyo fathers suddenly taking an active interest in their children’s education by volunteering to take them to Hooters to cram for upcoming tests.

    Restaurant information
    Hooters (Ginza branch) / フーターズ(銀座店)
    Address: Tokyo-to, Chuo-ku, Ginza 8-5, Ginza Nine Building 1 2nd floor
    東京都中央区銀座8-5 銀座ナイン1号館2階
    Open 11 a.m.-11:30 p.m. (Monday-Tursday, Sunday, holidays), 11 a.m.-4 a.m. (Friday-Saturday)
    Website
    Today, I learned that Hooters in Japanese is Fūtāzu.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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