And both of them wear clown shoes!Tsukiyumi wrote:
Right. He's Al-Qaeda's version of Ronald McDonald, though not quite as evil.
![Wink :wink:](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
And both of them wear clown shoes!Tsukiyumi wrote:
Right. He's Al-Qaeda's version of Ronald McDonald, though not quite as evil.
Whether or not they'd go over here in the US, I have a feeling a "Mc Falafel" would be terrible.Mikey wrote:I bet bin Laden ain't eating no bacon cheeseburgers!
they're not halal ("kosher") according to the Muslim faith.
That reminds me, I haven't had one in a while. I need to cruise up to Westheimer soon and chow down.Mikey wrote:mmmmm.... falafel....
Houston has something like 10,000 restaurants (not counting chains); you can get pretty much anything here. From Sushi and Dim Sum, to Persian food, Indian cuisine, and the obvious down-home southern stuff (there's one restaurant here called "Just Oxtails"Mikey wrote:Someone actually sells falafel in Texas?
Could it be any wores than the "McRib" or McLobster"?Tsukiyumi wrote:
Whether or not they'd go over here in the US, I have a feeling a "Mc Falafel" would be terrible.
Yeah, Quebec McDick's has poutine and I hear Newfoundland has Newfie Poutine at their McDonalds.sunnyside wrote:For those of you who don't know he isn't kidding about the McLobster. Though I'm not sure if that was their official name.
Actually McDonalds around the world do a lot of different stuff. Croque monsieur varients are popular and if you go in a foreign country it turns out there is frequently something regional.