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Choosing our religion

March 2, 2007 5:36:38 PM

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Those snazzy “America Runs on Dunkin’” ads, with the irksomely catchy jingles by Lincoln, Massachusetts’s own They Might Be Giants, are happy to reinforce the distinction. The themes are laid bare: work, being productive, getting out. Doing stuff. Not sitting around some sybaritic café poking desultorily at a laptop. Another spot skewers an un-named coffee shop’s Continental pretensions: “My mouth can’t form these words. Is it French? Or is it Italian? Perhaps Fritalian.”

070302_dunks_main4
CULTURAL DETRITUS: Dunkin’ Donuts, it seems, is everywhere.
“Starbucks, roughly, trades as female,” says Simon. “There’s something, to many people, sort of effete about it. One of the things you see in these ads is reaffirming the male values of [Dunkin’ Donuts].” Hiring schlubby good-guy John Goodman to do the voiceovers is another masterstroke for burnishing Dunkin’s everyman bona fides — even if one questions the wisdom of a donut chain picking a guy who’s pushing 400 pounds to be its pitchman.

Another indication of Dunkin’s homespun appeal: it’s a rare corporation indeed that can inspire an affectionate nickname. The Canadian donut chain Tim Horton’s — which is pursuing a downward expansion into Dunkin’ Donuts territory, but is treading cautiously in Massachusetts — has one. It’s “sort of woven in the myth of Canadian culture,” Simon says, “of people getting up in the morning, taking their kids to hockey holding a cup of Timmy’s.”

And in Boston, in New England, there is none other. Dunkin’. Dunks. D-and-D. Dunkies. The place is beloved, with a seemingly unshakable grip on the Yankee psyche. Can Starbucks claim a nickname? No indeed. “Starbucks is like the guy who introduces himself to you as Alexander,” says Simon. “It doesn’t want its name shortened. And anyway, what are you gonna call it, Bucky’s?”

Grand ole donuts
As Dunkin’ Donuts pushes westward and southward, however, it’s getting a bit more experimental in terms of catering to different tastes — and going beyond breakfast. If adding the French Toast Twist this fall was a minor revelation to a region reared on Munchkins and the old-fashioned cake donut, consider Sarasota, Florida, just one of the prototype Dunkin’ stores offering flatbread sandwiches and “Grab-N-Go Pizza.” (Lest you think they’re getting too fancy-pants, rest assured that one sandwich was renamed a “stuffed melt” after customers griped that the word “panini” was a mite dandy.)

One Dunkin’ Donuts franchisee who’s boldly going where no man has gone before — well, Tennessee — is Joe Rando. His story is a remarkable one, and it’s illustrative of the almost trance-inducing hold a lifelong love of Dunkin’ Donuts can have on a man.

Growing up in Lewiston, Maine, Rando was inculcated early on. “Dunkin’ Donuts was the treat. Stop by and get a dozen donuts. It’s the most vivid memory I have of a treat growing up.” Later, when he enrolled at Tufts, the caffeine took hold. “They’re everywhere. I lived near one. They’re on either side of the campus. Any T station you get off at.” He patronized them all. After graduation, it was more of the same. “I was a self-proclaimed three-or-four-times-a-day guy. I used to get one [cup] on the way to the T to go downtown. There was one at South Station, so I got one there. And there was one right outside Faneuil Hall, so I’d get one on the way into my office. And usually once more during the day. It really becomes a way of life.”

In 2004, a job transfer took Joe Rando to Nashville. It wasn’t long before, to his horror, he realized that there was nary a Dunkin’ Donuts to be found in Music City, USA. It was a soul-shaking revelation. “I joke with my wife,” he says. “ ‘How did we miss this?’ I would have never moved here if I had known.”

So he called Dunkin’ Donuts to ask what gives. Nashville, he contended, was the perfect city for an expansion. He argued, it would appear, fairly convincingly. “One phone call led to another, led to another,” he says. Next thing he knew, Joe Rando was quitting his job, “signing on the dotted line to be what they call a large-area developer, committing to build stores all over middle Tennessee.”

And just like that, Joe Rando had given his life over to Dunkin’ Donuts. Even though Nashville “is a big Southern Krispy Kreme market, and some people cautioned me,” he forged ahead. The first day, one store sold 7800 donuts in five hours. There were lines out the door for weeks. “There were just so many loyal Dunkin’ Donuts fanatics here,” says Rando. A good many of them, he says, were transplanted New Englanders who’d been waiting for a decade or more. “The pent-up demand for Dunkin’ Donuts was just phenomenal.”

For Rando, this massive life change, all the toil and sweat he’s put into opening several franchises, was well worth it. The measures were extreme, but the end justified the means. It was a “way to get my coffee.”


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COMMENTS

This was really funny and sooooo true. I don't drink coffee myself and according to one online quiz it made me less of a Bostonian/Massachusetts (ite?). Because I missed the coffee questions, I only scored 84%. 84% for a total native!

POSTED BY bostonmaggie AT 03/01/07 8:48 AM
Intersting story and pretty true. I'm from a middle class Boston family and I can't recall a time when we weren't tagging along with my mom or dad to hit a dunkies. Shit, 2 of my brothers worked at a store for awhile. I am the black sheep of the family however. I can barely gag down a dunkie regulah - all cream and sugar, blech. Do you even taste any coffee? And those dunkie girls and boys love pouring in milk and cream. Just try to get a dark, you practically have to yell at them and then 1/2 the time they still put in too much. Yes, I am a Starbuck's man now, but the rest of my Irish clan swear by Dunkie's and still question my sexuality because I order a vente americano when I get my coffee.

POSTED BY sisyphus00 AT 03/01/07 12:00 PM
I remember a fairly recent photo with Bush Junior at Dunkin. You know, the common guy sort of crap. Come to find out Daddy Senior Bush had just bought into the company!

POSTED BY dave navarro AT 03/02/07 7:24 PM
I remember heading to the D&D on Hancock Street near Neponset after the paper route on Sundays back in the early seventies. That must have been one of the first ones. A couple dozen doughnuts provided breakfast for the whole family and whoever happened to straggle in. The Dunkin’ Doughnuts franchise has never been about health and fitness. As an adult I rarely drink it, though on a job a few years back, D&D trips were a big bonding activity, so I started enjoying a medium ‘regulahh’ and a bagel or doughnut each morning with the group. Needless to say, within 3 months I put on 15 lbs. The big difference I would guess between D&D and other franchises is the number of bolts required to hold up the chairs.

POSTED BY Patrick AT 03/03/07 2:50 PM
I have to admit, this article irked me. I don't ascribe to the way the media in Boston loves to bash Starbucks and how evil it is. Is Dunkin' Donuts really for the working person? What kind of benifits do employees at the precious Dunkies get? Anything? Nothing at all. Starbucks, on the other hand, cares about their employees: everybody who works at least 20 hours a week is eligible for benefits. I've worked at Starbucks for almost 3 years, and I have no complaints. I feel respected as an employee, unlike the other customer service jobs I've had. And what about the customer service at Dunkin' Donuts? Most of the time when I go in there, they screw up my order. I have to taste it before I leave to make sure it's right. Is it that difficult to get a hazelnut coffee very light with no sugar correct? I understand that Dunkin Donuts is a New England institution, but it's not as glorified and wonderful as this article portrays it to be. And customers at Starbucks aren't all zombies staring into their computers: a lot of them do have real lives.

POSTED BY zarinasnow AT 03/04/07 12:42 PM
Dunkin' Donuts is still strange to me. I was born and raised in Los Angles. Long Beach was spotlighted as having the second most doughnut shops per capita in Men's Heath Mag behind Fort Worth, so I don't have a emotional connection to doughnuts. I wonder what the equivalent would be. I guess Macdonald's would be the closest thing we have to a famous export with brand loyalty. Macdonald's has that working man's feel. Bill Clinton famously loves their fries. Now living in Philadelphia, I have to admit that the coffee at DD isn't that great. The coffee at Wendy's is better. You can't really compare Starbucks and DD. I remember my first visit to Dunkin' Donuts. She asked if I took it with cream and sugar. I said yes expecting her to leave room for the two. She should have asked if I wanted coffee with my cream and sugar.

POSTED BY shatbox AT 03/04/07 7:08 PM
Sadly I moved from New England (big mistake) to Nevada, Las Vegas to be precise alas they have no Dunkin Donuts here. Instead they have Starbucks the most disgusting brew I have ever had. I WANT MY DUNKIN DONUTS BACK. I have a list of things I wish to do once I'm back on the home sod: 1: Kowloons 2: Jevelis 3: Dunkin Donuts Its true they have the BEST coffee I have ever tasted from Europe to America West nothing compares...

POSTED BY snappa45 AT 03/05/07 2:10 AM
Screw'em both. I wish there were more Honey Dews around.

POSTED BY adamrobert12 AT 03/05/07 4:09 PM
According to Joe Biden you have to have an Indian accent to work in a Dunkin Donuts.

POSTED BY fft AT 03/05/07 10:23 PM
Twenty five years ago, the only place you could get a bad cup of Dunkin coffee was in Lowell (because of the water). Unfortunately, thats no longer the case. As a life long client of DD (We would stop at the original location every Sunday after playing football as teenagers to get doughnuts while walking home), I have to say they have some issues. 1) The coffee is not as good as it used to be. Period. 2) The coffee is inconsistent from location to location. 3) Too many of the clerks do not understand enough english to serve the menu and/or have a hard time with basic math skills. 4) The doughnuts are no longer fresh. How could they be given that they are not made onsite. 5) DD's last couple of owners have changed focus from the coffee to sugary junk filled childrens drinks. 6) At most locations, they refuse to put cream cheese on a bagel when you ask them to. (not very convenient to try to spread the cream cheese while driving) I have had DD as far away as Chiang Mai Thailand. I want DD to be good (again). I want to support the company instead of the over roasted competitor. Please don't make it so hard to continue doing so.

POSTED BY Edso AT 03/06/07 12:16 PM
Great job on the article I now have my 15 minutes of fame. Gus

POSTED BY Gus Dettore AT 03/09/07 8:58 AM
I'm not from New England, but I've lived here since 1985. Dunkin' Dounts was one of the first things "New England" that I was introduced to as a student (that, and Steve's Ice Cream). I've been drinking Dunks ever since. It really is mellow, but rich coffee, and the buzz is warm, not harsh or jittery. The other appeal to me is apparent: New Englanders like to just 'get on with their business'. They just humbly (for the most part) push through their daily routines with a work ethic that probably rivals anyplace in the U.S., and the steaming hot coffee, with the heaping 'regular' spoonfuls of sugar to jolt them awake, is just the thing to keep them going. No time to sit on a stuffed leather chair, next to the cozy fireplace, listening to the Muzak of John Mayer or Dave Matthews, and reading Emily Bronte! No siree, we've got to keep moving, make our hard-earned dollah. Here's to having more Dunks every three blocks! As with most articles, this one was about 2 or 3 pages too long. Most of what needed to be said was in the first 2 pages. But it was enjoyable enough.

POSTED BY Spradlinnn' AT 03/09/07 5:35 PM

POSTED BY Winsome Hudson AT 03/09/07 8:56 PM
They must really put something in Dunkin Donuts coffee for how else could you explain why I who come from and live in Blue Mountain coffee country sometimes fantasise about operating a Dunkin Donut franchise in Jamaica. Used to live in Boston and have relocated some 12 years and still miss a-on-th-e way to work stop for a coffee and a cranberry orange muffin. By the way, was in Boston in January and no cranberry orange muffins was available in none of two stops at Dunkin Donuts. Whaa gwan?( that's Jamaican for what's happening?) Long live Dunkin Donuts and Boston Phoenix; hadn't stopped in at Boston Phoenix for about eight years and so very nice to see you still around. One Love Former Bostonian WH

POSTED BY Winsome Hudson AT 03/09/07 9:05 PM
Dunkin Donuts burns its coffee by brewing it at too high of a temperature in order to brew it quickly. It ruins the taste of the coffee leaving it bitter.

POSTED BY dbvader AT 03/10/07 4:01 PM
All I know is that when I go into any Dunkin Donuts, (except the one in Penn Station, they won't add sugar for some reason), I can say Large Regular and I get the same amount of cream and sugar and good tasting coffee. And that's what matters to me. I work in a building with a Cafe La France and their coffee leaves a bitter after taste in my mouth. So I have a coffee maker in my office and I buy Dunkin Donuts ground regular coffee by the pound. I have it home as well. And every cup of coffee is as good as the one before. To me, the mark of a really good cup of coffee is how it taste and DD's coffee tastes good. I was raised in the DC area and I the one thing I hate about going home is the lack of DD's. There's one several miles from my sister's house and it takes a bit of finageling to get her to swing by there some time during my trip. I take the train to San Francisco once a year and I bring a coffee maker and my DD ground coffee with me to make coffee in my sleeper. It's worth it.

POSTED BY April in PVD AT 03/11/07 9:08 AM
I just saw this article today via a link from an online article on Yahoo! It was great but omitted one important element in the expansion of Dunkin' Donuts' influence -- Boston author Robert B. Parker. Until I read the article, I thought his detective Spenser's obsession with Dunkin' Donuts was just a literary device to round out the character. Now I know the truth: it's the only way to make him a believable local. Boston PI + time on his hands + regular interactions with cops = Dunkin' Donuts. End of story.

POSTED BY Chicago Kathy AT 06/01/07 2:01 PM
Im a Boston native now living in DC. Dunkin Donuts may be successfully expanding south, but they aren't teaching these southerners how to make a real coffee! When I come back to Boston for holidays, my first stop isn't mom's house, it's Dunkin Donuts. Can you please send someone down here to teach these people how to make a decent iced coffee?? Please?!?!?

POSTED BY JF AT 06/05/07 2:08 PM
For those of you who are sworn against the Dunkin Donuts, I believe you may have had bad experiences but to judge every store is ludicrous. I have been working at Dunkins' since 2005. I have worked for two different locations, one in Mass and one in NH. For those who say that crew members don't understand English, I believe that's a huge generalization. I'm American. I know english. I don't believe that the hiring requirements are "must speak a different language." However, it is true that some have lots of foreigners. This is mostly in part due to the owners. Both of the owners I have worked for are Portugese. They hire family members, friends, etc when the place is first opened. This is because of the convenience. It also happens that the majority of their friends are of the same ethnicity. However, these people for the most part understand and can speak perfect English. As for the coffee messups, I believe that there is a little ignorance on your part. New people are hired alot, so that accounts for some mistakes. As for others, sometimes the machines do not work correctly so we do not notice that you didn't get your full flavor of hazelnut or that the cream is letting out too much or too little. Sometimes, the headsets don't work properly work when it rains out so we hear incorrectly. We repeat it back ,and big surprise- the majority just says 'yes' so they can drive up or finish their conversation on their cell phone. Then they see their coffee and complain. We're too busy juggling every single customer who comes in all at once. And with the brewers burning the coffee? Very few stores do this. Each store should be testing and maintaining the heat of the burners-however some don't. But alot do. Credit should be given to those. Customer Service depends on where you go, although I'll say that Londonderry Donuts Donuts on Mohawk has the best service I've ever seen ANYWHERE. As for Starbucks? Where I live, the closest Starbucks is in Boston. Which is a good 45 minutes away. Now people may complain about the price of DD(supply and demand) but Starbucks is through the roof. And when you order all your special drinks at Starbucks, it has come to my attention that alot of it already has the ingredients in it and it isn't much work. Starbucks has better working conditions probably because they rake in so much damn money. DD is for high school students typically, and it would be nice to have more benefits-but hey dare to dream. sorry, just had to get that out. :)

POSTED BY renee AT 06/08/07 9:03 AM
The author missed a major point. DD coffee tastes WAY BETTER than Starbucks. I don't subscribe to all this marketing and class crap, I like DD cause it has GOOD COFFEE. Same reason I go to Tim Horton's in Canada.

POSTED BY jpatti AT 07/07/07 3:37 PM

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