90 points
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No offence intended but it´s old news to the world that a lot of Americans consume horrible trash food and drinks every day until they become morbidly obese and worse. It´s in fact one of the most commonly known stereotypes about the USA. So there is really nothing on the picture a euro mind could not comprehend, more like the contrary.

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29 points
*

Behold, the Euroslave, uncomprehending of what real freedom looks like.

I bet they would object to all the unnecessary preservatives that enhance the flavor, too.

/S

I had to add the /s because there are clearly people that don’t understand humorous statements around here. Six of them at the moment.

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31 points

Real freedom is dying of a heart attack at 30

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14 points

You haven’t really lived though until you’ve survived at least one heart attack and live with debt collectors at your back for all the medical debt you’ve incurred. THIS is the real American dream. Also diabetes.

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7 points
*

… while rolling coal

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4 points

Live fast die hard 🦅

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-35 points

I automatically downvote any comment with /s because it shows the person doesn’t understand how sarcasm works.

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16 points

That is a reasonable attitude. /s

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16 points

Ok. /s

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18 points

Obesity rates in Europe are catching up. Especially in Britain. California is leaner than most of Europe. It’s definitely not all skinny in Europe and all fatties in USA. It’s regional.

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6 points

Obesity rates in Europe are catching up

Yes, thanks to americanisation and food imports from the US

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17 points

That’s on you. If you don’t want it, don’t buy it.

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1 point

Lol this has to be the silliest take I’ve seen.

“The Americans made us fat!” Like there’s an American sitting behind you with a riot stick, tapping their hand with it menacingly…“eat this shitty food you imported and no one forced you to buy, or else I’ll whack you in the head!”

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4 points

“Catching up” in the same sense that a baby is “catching up” to Usain Bolt when it learns to walk.

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2 points

Europe Britain

bad good news buddy

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9 points
*

There are still some things to unwind here. Breakfast pizza, dirt cheap “meal”, advertising “mega” for what appears to be a normal sized slice.

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14 points

4$ for a slice of pizza and a drink is dirt cheap ? I get the whole pizza for twice that in eu excuse me wtf

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18 points

Yes but do you get a gallon of delicious corn syrup drink?

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2 points

This appears to be a Casey’s gas station. Caseys is known for having pretty decent pizza and being in every tiny town dotted across America (plus being open very late/early if not 24 hours). By memory the pizza is priced at $3-4 per slice. Sure you can buy a $3 frozen Jacks pizza but it won’t be as good.

It’s worth remembering that fountain sodas cost next to nothing for businesses. It’s just flavoring syrup, water and a big bottle of CO2 to carbonate the water packaged up in a semi-automated self-serve machine

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3 points

So what’s England’s excuse, then?

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10 points
*

Excuse for what, their “food”? That stuff is a war crime and can not be excused.

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3 points
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Idk, maybe that most of the western food supply is owned by a select few conglomerates that have an interest in getting you to buy a ton of product and make it as addictive as possible? That’s my guess.

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3 points

My visit to London a few years back showed me that Englishmen eat bad food, but not unhealthy food. Did I miss something or is it just London?

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1 point

They’ve got a lot of obese people over there too.

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1 point

Scottland and Northerners love anything greasy, from what I know. Even deepfried butter.

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2 points

They eat beans on toast for breakfast. They have no say in this matter.

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60 points

Everyone is focusing on the pizza, but how on earth is that a medium drink?

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18 points

It’s s medium FOUNTAIN. That I can see

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15 points

Right? It’s almost the size of a car!

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1 point

It needs ro be at least… three times smaller!

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10 points

And what sort of monster drinks pop in the morning?

Earliest I can bring myself to drink pop is like, 11:30 maybe

It’s more of an afternoon type drink, no?

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I drink energy drinks (basically soda) instead of coffee because coffee gives me super severe stomach cramps, and I still want caffeine in the morning.

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0 points

Drink green tea, it has more caffeine than coffee.

Energy drinks are not basically soda, they contain, well, a ton of taurine and, well, caffeine, and are even more terrible (in fact, order of magnitude so) for your health, especially cardiovascular system.

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3 points
*

I don’t drink coffee so soda is how my body gets it’s daily intake of caffeine.

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3 points

Being raised Mormon like this gave me bad teeth.

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1 point

In some parts of the US is fairly common.

Dr. Pepper instead of coffee in the morning is a thing in Texas.

Like, not everyone does it, but no one bats an eye at it either.

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1 point

What the fuck.

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8 points
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37 points

Why is this petrol station so big? I could park 2 tanks between the petrol pumps.

Why would you eat pizza for breakfast?

Why would you drink so much cola (this looks like 1l-1.5l to me)?

How is this so cheap? They charge 4€ at my local petrol station for 0.5l of pepsi alone.

What kind of pizza is this?

Is midwest some kind of common marketing?

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42 points
*

Okay, i’ll bite and try to answer these. Without knowing any details of which chain and where exactly this station is located (in a city/town or right off a motorway/interstate?)

A lot of “truck stop” type stations are this big to accommodate large vehicles and potential larger trailers they might be towing. Like a 3/4ton pickup with a huge 5th wheel trailer. Or even Class A/C motorhomes and RVs. These pumps likely have diesel and petrol so even large box trucks will pull in the fuel up. There are usually different areas for full tractor-trailer (lorries) but those pumps are for those trucks only. Further, the gap is three vehicles wide so a vehicle can be on a pump on either side and someone arriving or leaving can fit between them- especially if there is a case of 3 pumps in a row.

Pizza for breakfast? Judging by the picture and the title, this looks like actual Breakfast Pizza. Eggs, sausage, etc are the toppings. Had this a lot growing up just at home. And pizza style is common “grab and go” type food from gas stations since it’s easy to eat, even while driving.

Now, a cola with/for breakfast…naah. I’m with you there. That’s a bit off. But otherwise, the size is normal for a truck stop. Fountain drinks are a lot cheaper than canned or bottled of the same drink. For example 24oz bottle for $2-3 or a 48-64oz fountain for the same price or less. People are traveling when they come through here, or stopping by to grab stuff on their way to work for the whole day. So the idea is the drink is to have on hand for hours if not most of the day. The styrofoam cups are junk but a lot of people transfer to a more practical container, or some stations chains would sell their own fancy insulated cups and allow discounted refills in their cup.

How is this so cheap? Gas station food, man! Doesn’t mean it’s any good! I just covered the soda portion for pricing and a slice of pizza (breakfast or normal pepperoni) is usually only like $2. So the pricing advertised here makes sense.

Midwest is a kind of marketing thing with many layers or points. The midwest region of the States is the massive, wide-open middle section where there’s usually cattle ranching, farming and a lot of nothing. So this can be spun in a lot of ways- farmers/ranchers allegedly eat big (unhealthy) food and drinks, the midwest is big, things are cheap because nothing and no one is out there, etc. Also this gas station is likely located in the midwest and targeted towards people that are traveling through, so it’s got that “tourist” hook to it.

I think that about covers it?

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16 points
*

The gas station is Casey’s, I’d recognize their breakfast pizza anywhere. It’s the best I’ve ever had.

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2 points

How… many… different… breakfast pizzas did you have so far?

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3 points
*

There are a few bits wrong here. First off, the Midwest is not simply a massive wide open cattle ranching area with little else around. That’s really the Great Plains area, which is partially in the Midwest but also partially in the West and Southwest. The Midwest is not mostly made up of ranchers or farmers. There are definitely some in various parts, but other parts have none at all.

Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota are all part of the Midwest, and your summary doesn’t really describe them well at all. I think you may be doing what I see a lot of coastal Americans do which is to confuse the Midwest with the West or the Southwest because the names are much less intuitive than they seem. These terms rose to prominence in the 19th century before “manifest destiny” colonized the entire continent, so they’re all incredibly East coast-centric. The Midwest is in the mideast, the South is in the southeast, the Southwest is in the south, and the West is the whole western half of the country.

And while cola for breakfast might seem a bit off even to most Americans, it’s not at all uncommon in the Midwest, but what’s weird is that it’s Pepsi in this ad because almost all prefer coke in the Midwest. When I moved out of the Midwest, it took me a while to break the disgusting coke for breakfast habit, but it definitely rings true to me to be characteristic of a Midwest breakfast.

Also, this looks like a regular sized gas station anywhere in the central US. It’s definitely not an area for truckers to fill up their big rigs because there is clearly unleaded at those pumps.

And to back it all up, here is the location map for Casey’s (that made this ad) where it’s clear that they are mostly in the Midwest states I mentioned as well as the Great Plains Midwest states of the Dakotas, Nebraska, and Kansas.

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3 points

Yeah, makes sense.

However, where I live everything at gas stations is really expensive (like 3 times the super market price), because they don’t make a lot of profit with gasoline. Most of their profits likely come from car services and selling stuff 24/7. I don’t know how it’s in the states, but most shops here open at 7-8am and close at 7-8pm and are closed on sundays, so if you need something late at night or on sun-/holidays you drive to the gas station.

Tbh, the only things I ever buy there when every shop is closed are alcohol and tabacco (and some times paper and filters for weed)

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5 points

However, where I live everything at gas stations is really expensive (like 3 times the super market price)

There’s been some brilliant competition in the US by some gas station chains to raise the bar for quality and lower prices inside the convenience stores, to the point where some regional chains have become part of the regional identity as they’re actually worth stopping into

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1 point

Midwest is much more corn and bean farming, not cattle ranching. That’s more west rather than Midwest. There’s some dairy farms, but those are more north usually.

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3 points

Why is this petrol station so big? I could park 2 tanks between the petrol pumps.

People drive large vehicles here, and are often bad at it. It’s necessary.

Why would you eat pizza for breakfast?

It doesn’t require utensils, can be eaten while driving to work; It somewhere between 2 and 4 different food groups. Lots of advantages.

Why would you drink so much cola (this looks like 1l-1.5l to me)?

That’s kinda weird, gotta admit. I much prefer coffee in the morning. It is probably the 32oz, which is a little under a liter.

How is this so cheap? They charge 4€ at my local petrol station for 0.5l of pepsi alone.

Things are cheaper in the US in general. In the Midwest especially so.

What kind of pizza is this?

There’s 3 variants of the Casey’s Breakfast Pizza. See for more info.

Is midwest some kind of common marketing?

In the US, anything can be marketing. Midwest is common enough that it doesn’t really stand out.

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1 point

I think you lost the link you were intending to link

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2 points

If I go in to edit, it’s there, but it doesn’t show up. Weird.

https://www.caseys.com/menu/pizza/c/breakfast-pizza

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3 points

Why is this petrol station so big? I could park 2 tanks between the petrol pumps.

Caseys has gas stations in extremely small towns so something they have to space the pumps for is farmers coming to fill up their tractors. It is also common practice 'round here to put 3 car widths of space between pumps to allow vehicles to drive between those that are filling. Obviously in larger cities where land is a premium they’ll have fewer pumps closer together

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3 points
*

Ill answer all of your questions by order.

Its so big for trucks trailers, and even RVs and Semis(Lories?) this is probably a gas station by a freeway. A lot of local stations are smaller, atleast where I am.

Because its cheap as shit.

You’ll usually get one and drink it over the day, especially if my freeway gas station hypothesis is correct, there are a long stretches of american highway with fuck all.

Their probably banking on you grabbing one or two more items to help even out the loss and turn it into a profit. Also government subsidies may be a factor.

I cant Identify what type of pizza that is, maybe cheese if not IDFK.

This station is probably is in the midwest and their taking the piss a bit. Ive personally come across “middle of nowhere lunch” advertisements while driving through eastern Nevada so I assume this is a similar situation.

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7 points

Man those long stretches of nothing sound amazing. Where I live towns bleed into one another pretty much. You gotta really move a lot to find somewhere relatively untouched.

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11 points
*

Loads of north America is just fuckin empty. Canada’s population density is around 4 people per km², and 99% of us are crammed up against the 49th parallel(the border) as most of the rest of the country is a frozen wasteland.
When I was living in London, my wife and I decided to rent a car and drive up to Edinburgh for our yearly visit to her friends. Told my coworkers that we were driving and they couldn’t believe it.
ISN’T THAT LIKE A 7 HOUR DRIVE?!
Motherfucker, back home you do a 7hr drive to go camping on a regular weekend…

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3 points

It can be pretty neat during the day, but man does it fuck with your senses at night. If youre lucky youll have the full moon and/or the milky way. Also it can be anxiety inducing if you didnt realize how big itd be and youre gas starts getting uncomfortably low.

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1 point

Empty doesn’t necessarily mean untouched. Replace towns bleeding into each other with industrial farms.

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3 points
*

In America, sometimes you have to park two tanks.

Pizza slices are easy to shove into your face while you drive for an hour to your job.

Driving is boring and sipping on a huge soft drink gets some people through it.

It is cheap because over the years the government had bailed out farmers/producers making corn, cheese, wheat, etc very cheap.

It is a breakfast pizza, I’m guessing a crap load of ‘cheese’ with some specks of something that could have once been called Ham. Maybe some egg product mixed in.

Generally, things are cheaper in the Midwest, but I wouldn’t be surprised if this ad came from the deep south.

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0 points

I’m guessing a crap load of ‘cheese’ with some specks of something that could have once been called Ham. Maybe some egg product mixed in.

You’re guessing wrong.

It’s usually loaded with bacon, sausage, veggies or some combination of those. And not “egg product,” just scrambled eggs. It’s breakfast on a flatbread. I’m not sure why that’s so hard to comprehend for so many people.

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2 points

Why would you eat pizza for breakfast

???

Please tell me this isn’t an Americans-only thing. I don’t understand how it could be. Do you mean to tell me when you have leftover pizza in your fridge you don’t sneak a piece in the morning? What do you do? Save it for later? I don’t believe you. You’ve never, out of curiosity, just taken a bite straight out of the fridge? At which point you’d have discovered that it is positively sublime?

Cold pizza for breakfast is one of my favorite parts about eating pizza for dinner. If this is somehow not a thing outside America, it needs to be. For once this isn’t something fatter or grosser, it’s just eating it at a different time of day and at a different temperature and it’s life changing.

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1 point

I personaly don’t do it, but it’s probably not that unusual

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1 point

There’s no way that medium is 1-1.5L.

I’d say 32oz. 48oz at most.

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4 points

32oz is about 1l and 48oz should be like 1.4l, not that far off I think

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3 points

That was hilarious. “No way it’s 1-1.5L!” -> proceeds to list extremely similar amounts in freedom units.

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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1 point

It’s what the people want. Mega slices of pizza and giant medium sized sodas for breakfast for 4 bucks.

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31 points

Everything wrong with this:

  • “Breakfast Pizza”
  • Pepsi for breakfast
  • “Medium” 64 oz drink
  • $4 for not a lot of value
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5 points

Nothing like spiking your blood glucose first thing in the morning.

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3 points

What did breakfast pizza do to you! It’s delicious!

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1 point

It’s also a monstrosity which should only be enjoyed as leftovers from dinner pizza.

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The pizza-thing is fine, but gaving pepsi for breakfast is pretty vile.

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5 points

How about Fanta, it’s oranges right?.. I have no idea if this sort of place would serve Fanta.

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If you’re gonna have orange and bubbles for breakfast it better be a mimosa than a fanta.

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3 points

I think Fanta in the US is just soda, no orange juice. Different from Europe.

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2 points

Orangina for me, please.

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2 points

In the US fanta is just fake orange flavor and corn syrup though.

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