Wednesday 18 January 2012

Regarding the differences in community between London and Hong Kong by looking at their McDonalds

In both places, the fast food chain is an import, but I feel that in either case they are well integrated, and different to the ones in America. 
 
I was in Hong Kong couple of weeks back, for a couple of weeks, lived near Sha Tin. Its McDonald's is in the mall that grew around the transport hub, between glassy retail units. Hong Kong is a land of malls with glassy retail units. I was there a few times, where the breakfasts are Fillet'O Fish and some sort of macaroni in soup. The restaurant is where kids study do their mountains of homework, and where the elderly read their morning papers. I saw a girl painting a card (Pink with Hello Kitty). 
 
Where do kids in London do their homework anyway? The underlying tone of the place seemed to be productivity and community.  
 
Last weekend, I was back to the McDonald's at Walthamstow, at the edge of London. It was a Sunday early noon, the place was still half empty. There were kids running around. Kids here appear in public to be either livelier or more feral to the kids in Hong Kong, depending. I was concerned with the family next to me: across them a strange elderly man splitting and making airplane noises. A lonely harmless crazy, something that tends to stay hidden in Hong Kong. 

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