Back in the 80s and early 90s we several cross-country trips, and for west of the Missouri
M and Pizza Hut were fairly decent and consistent. In Kansas it seemed like every or every other town had a Pizza Hut.
We just lost Angie. Angela's Pizza is a hallmark here, though not in the touristy way. Blue collar all the way, and the alt.franchise best around here. She always kept the price down and the quality up.
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That's the problem with the good independents... You get so used to em that they're part of the furniture... But eventually they get old, or die some way, and their particular genius just passes into the ether.
Give me a good mom and pop pizza parlor any day.
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We used to Round Table regulars, but their cook quality control at the one near us got really inconsistent. We switched to a local place that had several stores in Campbell and the Peninsula, and then to a family-owned Italian restaurant that also does pizza. Much. Better.
A family that had operated two restaurants in Sunnyvale and Santa Clara (neighboring cities) for 2 or 3 generations decided to close their stores. They didn't give reasons, but I suspect they're tired and the business climate is not great.
A lot of restaurants are going under now.
I wonder if the new California law was the breaking point for them?
Cost to much to operate there and it may have affected those in other states.
As posted by @catfish1957 , the margins aren't that great, for any restaurant or fast food place.
For stores in California they had already been struggling for a couple of years to adjust to
Bidenflation. A year and a half ago (well before the minimum wage bump) a couple that manages a chain fast-food store spoke about how some other f-f chain stores had had to bump prices 20%-25%, while their chain just 11%, but with another increase being considered. Good chains like In-n-Out and CfA were already paying their employees more than the minimum wage, even those starting. The moronic $20/hour bump was like a second, steel-toed, kick in the teeth for all f-f restaurants, and the effects are bubbling up to other restaurants and places that start people at or near minimum wage. So, yeah, the last-straw effect for a lot of businesses.
Something like a decade ago I read that up to 1/3 of Yelp reviews are phony - people trying to hype a restaurant or trying to torpedo a competitor. Reviews can be useful, but have to be taken with a block of salt. Looking for details that mean the reviewer might actually have gone to the reviewed place can help.