Not just eats out, but eats out at places in which the food is neither good nor good for you...Having eaten at all the 16 locations for which I answered correctly, I feel the same way.
I used to think so when I was a kid and Little Ceasar's was the new fad. But... then they changed the way they made it or something and it's not nearly as good as it used to be.
@GeckoIX, we used to have Burger King in Australia as well as Hungry Jacks (no 'A', not the country Hungary), they were tied with Taco Bell. I got 7/20, and got Denny's because of The Santa Clause - I watch it every Christmas!:)
@katytheelf, i eat at Culver's all the time. there's one in my city. I believe that the butterburger simply means they cook it in butter or put butter on the grill and cook it in that.
Only knew it because my daughter lived in California for a time. Wikipedia says they have 300 locations in the southwest in southern California, Arizona, Utah, Nevada, and Texas.
When I was in high school in California, kids would take the In-N-Out Burger bumper stickers and scrape off the B and r so the sticker would say In-N-Out urge (sexual innuendo). LOL. So juvenile and stupid but it still makes me laugh to think about it.
I live right next to a Culver's. I've even met Craig Culver, founder of the company, since I live close to the headquarters. It also has 502 restaurant locations.
I've been to America three times and I still haven't heard of or seen some of these. Guess it depends on where you're at, some seem to be local to a few areas. Anyway... You don't have to necessarily be from America or have ever visited for knowing some. Especially the international ones.
Damn you Chili's, one of us is spelling your name wrong, and, well, I kinda think it's you! (How can you be a Mexican restaurant and not spell it "Chile's"??) EVERY TIME.
Wikipedia concurs. "The dish, under the name Awesome Blossom, was also a very popular part of the Chili's menu until it was removed in 2001." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blooming_onion
Just a cultural observation about the comments, obviously I'm not American our native speaker, not sure which one it is: though technically correct, I wouldn't call grabbing something at a fast food place "eating out", or eating in a restaurant.
Many of these restaurants aren't even fast food: Olive Garden, Red Lobster, (debatably) Chili's, and Outback Steakhouse, for example. Outback and Red Lobster are pretty expensive, if that's what you are going by.
I'm from Minnesota, used to work at culver's for many years, very delicious and legitimately fresh beef and real ingredients and such :) still eat there all the time although I don't get the discount anymore.
Fresh - never frozen - meat that is hand patted and seasoned and cooked to order, served on a lightly buttered, grilled bun. What's not to love? I don't think their fried cheese curds would fit the bill for healthy food, though.
As I started answering I thought this was fast food, then I saw Olive Garden and realized it includes very, very long time to get anything to eat food too.
Thanks for accepting Hardee's for Carl's Jr and Rally's for Checker's! I couldn't remember Carl's Jr & Checker's offhand since I grew up in the Midwest.
USA baby
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In-N-Out_Burger
They're in Utah now too.