murpho999 wrote: » £2 for a full breakfast would make me not want to eat it. Something that cheap cannot be good.
0ph0rce0 wrote: » For the same reason i never will never eat the shíte that comes out of lidl or aldi
freshface2 wrote: » The company does not like Ireland, so unlikely to have any pubs
Deedsie wrote: » I just hope they don't have those horrible "fruity machines"... Not sure how well a chain of pubs would work here. They are kinda horrid in the UK. I have been to five different walkabout pubs throughout the UK over the years and every time it's the exact same, 50 TV screens screaming at you, a hose to spray soft drinks is a bit manky. The novelty fruity/punching machines. It would def have a niche here but not for me. If they bring down the price of a pint throughout the city they would have to be welcomed. €5.20 for a pint where I live. That's mental stuff. They are not pubs though, franchise sports bars. About as satisfying or enjoyable as a trip to McDonalds or Pizza Hut
johnnyskeleton wrote: » Funny the amount of people who think that cheap is a bad thing. When people talk about Ireland being a rip off they shouldn't blame the publicans/shop owners, they should blame themselves. If Irish people want to pay €5-6 for a pint of heinkien when they can get a pint of an interesting and better made ale for €3-4, then it's their fault we get ripped off
murpho999 wrote: » A Weatherspoon's breakfast composed of many parts and being cooked by staff must be composed of cheap and low quality food to be sold for £2.
ScumLord wrote: » I've never seen a £2 breakfast, unless it's basically just a sausage samwidge. I've had the breakfast in witherspoons and it's certainly not the worst. I had a read of their own magazine at the time. They claim they buy direct from farms, with the size of them I'd believe it. Witherspoons have buying power and that would allow them to offer meals quite cheaply. I'm not saying it's great food but for the price of a mcdonalds meal you can get something pretty decent and fairly healthy in witherspoons.
diomed wrote: » ROI? We didn't all cram into the GPO to be called ROI.
Ruubot2 wrote: » How does Southern Ireland or Eire work for you then? Fussy!
dd972 wrote: » Imagine what a Wetherspoons on Eden Quay or Talbot St would be like! I'm sure such a company does their homework on catchment areas and clientele though.
johnnyskeleton wrote: » . If Irish people want to pay €5-6 for a pint of heinkien when they can get a pint of an interesting and better made ale for €3-4, then it's their fault we get ripped off
Sunglasses Ron wrote: » My ****ing arse. If you served Budweiser to a beer snob out of an unmarked tap in a craft bar and told him on the menu it was a smooth, crisp beer brewed since 1892 in a Slovak monastery, the dopey hipster prick would be raving about it whilst simultaneously badmouthing Bud as commercial crap.
Seaneh wrote: » No, they wouldn't. So stop talking ****ing nonsense.
Sunglasses Ron wrote: » My ****ing arse. If you served Budweiser to a beer snob out of an unmarked tap in a craft bar and told him on the menu it was a smooth, crisp beer brewed since 1892 in a Slovak monastery, the dopey hipster prick would be raving about it whilst simultaneously badmouthing Bud as commercial crap. I remember n article a while back when they gave critics Tesco branded wine and gave them another Tesco wine but with a fake label the critics slated the branded wine and raved about the unmarked Tesco wine.
Sunglasses Ron wrote: » Of course they would. Budvar is a highly regarded Czech beer. Bud is regarded as yank toilet water. Apart from the fact Budvar has slightly more of a kick to the taste due to its slightly higher alcohol volume Budweiser and Budvar taste nearly identical. Try telling that to a beer snob. You'd have more chance of getting blowjob off the pope.