All of you coffee drinkers out there, enjoy a little rambling from Jackie Mason.
A Dissent on Starbucks by Jackie Mason > > Starbucks is the best example of a phony status symbol that > means nothing, but people will still pay 10x as much for because there > are French words all over the place. You want coffee in a coffee > shop, that's 60 cents. But at Starbucks, Cafe Latte: $3.50. Cafe Cremier: > > $4.50. Cafe Suisse: $9.50. For each French word, another four > dollars. > Why does a little cream in coffee make it worth $3.50? Go > into any coffee shop; they'll give you all the cream you want until you're > blue in the face. Forty million people are walking around in coffee > shops with jars of cream: "Here's all the cream you want!" And it's > still 60 cents. You know why? Because it's called "coffee." > If it's Cafe Latte - $4.50. You want cinnamon in your coffee? Ask for > cinnamon in a coffee shop; they'll give you all the cinnamon you want. > Do they ask you for more money because it's cinnamon? It's the same > price for cinnamon in your coffee as for coffee without cinnamon - 60 > cents, that's it. But not in Starbucks. Over there, it's Cinnamonnier > $9.50. > > You want a refill in a regular coffee shop, they'll give you > all the refills you want until you drop dead. You can come in when you're > 27 and keep drinking coffee until you're 98. And they'll start begging > you: > > "Here, you want more coffee, you want more, you want more?" Do you > know that you can't get a refill at Starbucks? A refill is a dollar fifty. > Two refills, $4.50. Three refills, $19.50. So, for four cups of > coffee - $350. > > And it's burnt coffee. It's burnt coffee at Starbucks, let's > be honest about it. If you get burnt coffee in a coffee shop, you call a > cop. You say, "It's the bottom of the pot. I don't drink from the > bottom of the pot.? But when it's burnt at Starbucks, they say, "Oh, > it's a blend. It's a blend." It's a special bean from > Argentina....." > > The bean is in your head. > And there're no chairs in those Starbucks. Instead, they have > these high stools. You ever see these stools? You haven't been on a > chair that high since you were two. Seventy-three year old Jews are > climbing and climbing to get to the top of the chair. And when they > get to the top, they can't even drink the coffee because there's 12 people > around one little table, and everybody's saying, "Excuse me, excuse > me, excuse me, excuse me....." > > Then they can't get off the chair. Old Jews are begging > Gentiles, "Mister, could you get me off this?" > Do you remember what a cafeteria was? In poor neighborhoods > all over this country, they went to a cafeteria because there were no > waiters and no service. And so poor people could save money on a tip. > Cafeterias didn't have regular tables or chairs either. They gave > coffee to you in a cardboard cup. So because of that you paid less for the > coffee. You got less, so you paid less. > It's all the same as Starbucks - no chairs, no service, a > cardboard cup for your coffee - except in Starbucks, the less you get, > the more it costs. By the time they give you nothing, it's worth four > times as much. Am I exaggerating? Did you ever try to buy a cookie in > Starbucks? But a cookie in a regular coffee shop. You can tear down a > building with that cookie. And the whole cookie is 60 cents. At > Starbucks, you're going to have to hire a detective to find that > cookie, and it's $9.50. And you can't put butter on it because they want > extra. > > Do you know that if you buy a bagel, you pay extra for cream > cheese in Starbucks? Cream cheese, another 60 cents. A knife to put > it on, 32 cents. If it reaches the bagel, 48 cents. That bagel costs you > $312. And they don't give you the butter or the cream cheese. They > don't give it to you. They tell you where it is. "Oh, you want butter? > It's over there. Cream cheese? Over here. Sugar? Sugar is here." Now > you become your own waiter. You walk around with a tray. "I'll take the > cookie. Where's the butter? The butter's here. Where's the cream > cheese? The cream cheese is there." You walked around for an hour and a half selecting items, and then the guy at the cash register has a glass > in front of him that says "Tips." You're waiting on tables for ah > hour, and you owe him money. > Then there's a sign that says please clean it up when you're finished. They don't give you a waiter or a busboy. Now you've become the janitor. Now you have to start cleaning up the place. Old Jews are walking around cleaning up Starbucks. "Oh, he's got dirt too? Wait, > I'll clean this up." They clean up the place for an hour and a half. > If I said to you, "I have a great idea for a business. I'll > open a whole new type of a coffee shop. A whole new type. Instead of > 60 cents for coffee I'll charge $2.50, $3.50, $4.50, and $5.50. Not only > that, I'll have no tables, no chairs, no water, no busboy, and you'll > clean it up for 20 minutes after you're finished." > Would you say to me, "That's the greatest idea for a business > ever heard! We can open a chain of these all over the world!" No, you > would put me right into a sanitarium. Starbucks can only get away with > it because they have French titles for everything, Nazi bastard > son-of-a-bitches. And I say this with the highest respect, because I > don't like to talk about people. |