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  3. I keep seeing articles like this, about how people choosing to drink less is hurting bars and restaurants, and it's almost always framed as people, especially younger generations, don't like to drink.

I keep seeing articles like this, about how people choosing to drink less is hurting bars and restaurants, and it's almost always framed as people, especially younger generations, don't like to drink.

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  • mle_online@social.afront.orgM mle_online@social.afront.org

    I keep seeing articles like this, about how people choosing to drink less is hurting bars and restaurants, and it's almost always framed as people, especially younger generations, don't like to drink.

    They never seem to bring up the fact that a cocktail is like $20 now unless you go to a really divey dive bar. It's the same kind of reporting they on how no one goes to the movies anymore. It's always about changing habits, and never that movie tickets just cost a lot now.

    nytimes.com

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    (www.nytimes.com)

    tkissing@mastodon.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
    tkissing@mastodon.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
    tkissing@mastodon.social
    wrote last edited by
    #141

    @MLE_online How dare you not spending 3 hours of pay on a drink! Won't you think of the CEOs in the killing-people-thru-liver-failure industry?

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    • mle_online@social.afront.orgM mle_online@social.afront.org

      I keep seeing articles like this, about how people choosing to drink less is hurting bars and restaurants, and it's almost always framed as people, especially younger generations, don't like to drink.

      They never seem to bring up the fact that a cocktail is like $20 now unless you go to a really divey dive bar. It's the same kind of reporting they on how no one goes to the movies anymore. It's always about changing habits, and never that movie tickets just cost a lot now.

      nytimes.com

      favicon

      (www.nytimes.com)

      S This user is from outside of this forum
      S This user is from outside of this forum
      stonykark@mstdn.ca
      wrote last edited by
      #142

      @MLE_online @blogdiva good, fuck bars. They've been all too happy to churn out drunk drivers for decades.

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      • C clickymcticker@hachyderm.io

        @stiv @MLE_online If your drink was $13, and your food was the same, then your food would have been $16-17 without the drink. Many restaurants, specifically those which offer alcoholic beverages, price their food as a loss leader. With high costs and low prices, food nearly breaks even. All of their profit (and it ain’t much) comes from drinks’ higher margin. Without the lower priced food to bring people in to purchase drinks, people would walk next door.

        It’s the same with desserts, though I haven’t seen those brought up in this thread. I’m sure most of us who skip drinks at dinner due to the price will also be skipping dessert for the same reason. The only different for me is that I grew up skipping dessert because my parents couldn’t afford it. We might have something at home, but (almost) never at a restaurant.

        david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
        david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
        david_chisnall@infosec.exchange
        wrote last edited by
        #143

        @ClickyMcTicker @stiv @MLE_online

        A lot of restaurants sold the food at a bit above cost and made profits on the drinks. When their costs went up, they had to increase the costs of the drinks to cover it, because increasing the price of food would send people to competitors. Unfortunately, this just made people drink less.

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        • mle_online@social.afront.orgM mle_online@social.afront.org

          I keep seeing articles like this, about how people choosing to drink less is hurting bars and restaurants, and it's almost always framed as people, especially younger generations, don't like to drink.

          They never seem to bring up the fact that a cocktail is like $20 now unless you go to a really divey dive bar. It's the same kind of reporting they on how no one goes to the movies anymore. It's always about changing habits, and never that movie tickets just cost a lot now.

          nytimes.com

          favicon

          (www.nytimes.com)

          sidb@mastodon.cloudS This user is from outside of this forum
          sidb@mastodon.cloudS This user is from outside of this forum
          sidb@mastodon.cloud
          wrote last edited by
          #144

          @MLE_online @lisamelton I volunteer at what’s basically a beer co-op that’s open to the public. No one gets paid (not even tips directly, those go to the bartender party fund), no owner takes a cut, no usurious landlord; it’s the cheapest bar in town, largely because there’s no profit motive. Standard beer is $1.25. And I know our numbers because I count and drop the till when we close—they’re very noticeably down since pre-pandemic. It isn’t *only* cost, there’s something bigger.

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          • mle_online@social.afront.orgM mle_online@social.afront.org

            I keep seeing articles like this, about how people choosing to drink less is hurting bars and restaurants, and it's almost always framed as people, especially younger generations, don't like to drink.

            They never seem to bring up the fact that a cocktail is like $20 now unless you go to a really divey dive bar. It's the same kind of reporting they on how no one goes to the movies anymore. It's always about changing habits, and never that movie tickets just cost a lot now.

            nytimes.com

            favicon

            (www.nytimes.com)

            malducin@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
            malducin@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
            malducin@mastodon.social
            wrote last edited by
            #145

            @MLE_online well ticket prices would be bearable if it weren't for all the people that now take their phones out all the time and talk all through the movies. And movie theaters don't do anything about it. Usually it also doesn't come up in that reporting as well

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            • misternineham@mastodon.socialM misternineham@mastodon.social

              @MLE_online some multinational restaurant conglomerate executive is drafting a memo right now titled "stop thinking of our cocktails as 'expensive poison' and start thinking of them as "bicycles for your inhibitions'"

              davebauerart@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
              davebauerart@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
              davebauerart@mastodon.social
              wrote last edited by
              #146

              @misternineham @MLE_online I wanted an inhibition skateboard.

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              • liquidlamp@hachyderm.ioL liquidlamp@hachyderm.io

                @Mungencakes @MLE_online
                Thats just standard disparagement when the working class ever stands up for itself though the ages:

                Link Preview Image
                solaris@social.anoxinon.deS This user is from outside of this forum
                solaris@social.anoxinon.deS This user is from outside of this forum
                solaris@social.anoxinon.de
                wrote last edited by
                #147

                @liquidlamp @Mungencakes @MLE_online
                Great work !!

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                • mle_online@social.afront.orgM mle_online@social.afront.org

                  I keep seeing articles like this, about how people choosing to drink less is hurting bars and restaurants, and it's almost always framed as people, especially younger generations, don't like to drink.

                  They never seem to bring up the fact that a cocktail is like $20 now unless you go to a really divey dive bar. It's the same kind of reporting they on how no one goes to the movies anymore. It's always about changing habits, and never that movie tickets just cost a lot now.

                  nytimes.com

                  favicon

                  (www.nytimes.com)

                  firn@scholar.socialF This user is from outside of this forum
                  firn@scholar.socialF This user is from outside of this forum
                  firn@scholar.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #148

                  @MLE_online alcohol is, in many cases, probably more expensive than other recreational drugs now. Lits of them around. Kids still like to party.

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                  • mle_online@social.afront.orgM mle_online@social.afront.org

                    I keep seeing articles like this, about how people choosing to drink less is hurting bars and restaurants, and it's almost always framed as people, especially younger generations, don't like to drink.

                    They never seem to bring up the fact that a cocktail is like $20 now unless you go to a really divey dive bar. It's the same kind of reporting they on how no one goes to the movies anymore. It's always about changing habits, and never that movie tickets just cost a lot now.

                    nytimes.com

                    favicon

                    (www.nytimes.com)

                    wintergr33n@lingo.lolW This user is from outside of this forum
                    wintergr33n@lingo.lolW This user is from outside of this forum
                    wintergr33n@lingo.lol
                    wrote last edited by
                    #149

                    @MLE_online

                    Drinks, even when they're affordable, are scam levels of expensive.

                    A quarter keg of bud light costs a little over $100. Then you charge people $3 a drink. There's over a hundred drinks in a keg.

                    Then, you charge people for a fountain drink of cola for 8 bucks at a theater? It's like a keg of syrup that you mix with water. It's a bazillion drinks that you're gouging people for.

                    Give me a stripped down non-divey place to go out to that has a weekly open mic night and I'm good.

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