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Dedham TGI Friday's has closed

Boston Restaurant Talk reports the TGI Friday's next to the Best Buy is no more, joining Chili's and Applebee's as "fast casual" chains that were ultimately unable to figure out the D-town.

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Comments

Yet another victim of the Centre Street road diet clearly

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Don't break your cheekbones from grinning so hard thinking your wit is funny.

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But yer mom always thinks Kip's jokes are funny. That's because yer mom has always loved Kip best!

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Restaurants like this are a middle segment that's going to go extinct as Baumol effect raises the cost of the service industry relative to wages in general. People will either splurge on something actually fancy, or stay home -- TGI's and Darden's whole slew of similar chains only have a niche if they're sufficiently cheap.

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I was reading some stuff about Howard Johnson's Restaurant and why they slowly closed. Yes alot had to do with Marriott's mismanagement but more so.. the chain had just gone stale.

By the mid 1980s, America's taste for food had changed, and Howard Johnsons didn't keep up with the times and had a stale menu.

Friendly's could also say this has happened to them. (or even the Ground Round)

Let's face it, you didn't go to either place for 'healthy' clean eating. Much of it is grilled or fried foods.

Same is happening with these 'fast casual' chains today and ironically it was these chains that replaced Howard Johnson's. These chains filled a void in the 1980s, grew in the 1990s.. and now are starting to deflate because people's tastes have changed and their menu has not.

People just do not go to these places anymore unless its the only game in town. Here in Boston, we have lots of choice, so no surprise.

It just happens in this business. People's tastes change. I mean.. anyone old enough to remember eating at a Waldorf System or an Automat ? Neither one exists today, although I am surprised the Automat hasn't made a come back with todays 'self service' model.

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Every hot new chain that comes along that replaces the old ones is just a repackaged version of the same old thing, but bigger. Yard house, BJ's (not the store), 110 grill, Tavern in the Square... It's all the same shit as what came before it, and before that, and before that back to the 1970s, like Victoria station, Hillary's, York's. Meat, fries, apps, drinks. The next one is shinier and then the luster fades, repeat cycle

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Steakhouses are a good example. How many different ways can you make a steak and how many different sides are you going to offer?

Bonanza
Ponderosa
York's
Stake & Ale

They all sold steak and sides.

In comes the outback and other newer chains. Same thing.. steak and sides. But the difference is atmosphere. Outback and Texas Roadhouse, its about the place itself, the food is literally the same as the places I list above, except you can get a blooming onion at one and the other eat peanuts and throw the shells on the floor. (although that was a feature of the Ground Round)

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My restaurant owner friends say the typical life of a restaurant is about 10-20 years. Unos, Fridays, etc were getting geriatric at this point.

Menus and decor gets stale but Americans will never give up large quantities of fried comfort food and meat-in-a-bun.

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The new Tavern in the Square in Dedham.

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I would say Yard House and Tavern in the Square keep up with trends a little bit better than, say, Applebees by having a good selection of beer and vegetarian food.

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I ate at them all.

McDonald's makes a lot of effort to avoid this, by renovating their restaurants and changing menu items in-and-out.

They are the exception that proves the rule.

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Thats what keeps McD and BK 'fresh' to the customer.

That and its still cheap(er) food (although McD prices have crept up some in the past 2-3 years)

We can also throw Dunkin in here too. Their core business is coffee & donuts. Yet somehow manage to keep things alive and fresh with new sandwiches, or pastries or coffees.

(vs Krispy Kreme which has had the same menu since 1963.. and people wonder why they don't have a strong presence where there is Dunkin)

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It's been a while, but I've eaten at an Automat.
...and a HoJo's.
...and a Woolworth's.
...and...
Damn! I'm old!

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Was dining at Kmart and hearing a blue light special of interest called out just as you sit down with your Salisbury steak.

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It was a big treat when my grandmother would take us! Who cared about the food quality - as a kid, getting to put in coins and open the little door to get the food was awesome. Someone posted an article on the Automat recently and all my high school classmates waxed nostaligic.

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Most of these restaurants are in places that are only accessible by car for most people, and most people know that they shouldn't have more than one drink if they are driving. That limits how much they serve and cuts profits.

A second factor: these places are often located near places like office park zones. Remote work means people don't go out in large groups for happy hour or social events like they used to. Also cuts the lunch crowd considerably.

Add in all the people shopping online because malls suck and I can see why these places are dropping out in a suburban box zone. Massachusetts also has plenty of home grown places that fill this niche with better food and better tap lists.

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reminds me of a friend who moved from SF to Eastern Texas.

He could not believe the "town bar" was Applebee's. It made everything else around it close. Now its the only one left.

But yes... Alcohol drives sales. Fridays and Applebees are well known for having a full service bar inside and offer drink specials*

* except in Massachusetts, cuz we're lame

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...but possibly only if combined with food? Anyway there's a place near me that has a $15 special on a half pound burger and fries and any draft beer (and they're good beers). It's very popular, and since the special only includes a single beer, no one can claim that people are using this to get smashed.

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I think this is a great idea - gets people to eat something when they drink and lowers the tab for the combo.

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A restaurant can discount drinks, but I think the price has to stay that way during all of their serving hours for a minimum of 2 weeks. So in theory you can have a 2 for 1 special, but in reality no place is going to really slash their prices for booze during peak hours.

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unable to figure out the D-town.

Or some other D, F, M, N and S towns.
https://www.boston25news.com/news/local/several-tgi-fridays-locations-ma...

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Magoo hungry hungry hippo. Magoo need nom noms. Feed Magoo. Magoo.

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The hottest trend of this decade is corporate greed being rebranded as inflation.

TGIFrydaze, Bertooochys, Unoz... all these restaurants gotta go. They are massive chains with the single goal of making as much money. Selling overpriced plates of low-quality frozen food cooked and served by people being underpaid and overworked by is lame. Greedy mega corporations are lame. Perrriod.

Consumers don't want to spend $30 a plate for cafeteria food when they can spend that same $30 for something of higher quality from a local restaurant.

More of this. Shop local. 86 massive chain restaurants.

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...at how few people realize that no actual cooking takes place in these "restaurants". It's all removing food-like items from packaging, throwing them in either the microwave or the fryolator, plating them and dumping sugary sauces on top.

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In my experience, people are well aware that the food at Applebees etc is not exactly fine dining, they're eating there because they like the taste/cost/atmosphere/etc regardless of how the food is prepared.

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I say this about McDonald's

People don't go to McDonald's for a gourmet hamburger, they go to McDonald's because its McDonald's. It has a certain taste and appeal.

Same with Pizza Hut.. The pizza by comparison to Dominos is.. meh. But people go because its Pizza Hut and it has a certain taste and appeal.

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Same with Pizza Hut.. The pizza by comparison to Dominos is.. meh.

WOW.

It's been a long, long time since I ate at a Pizza Hut...but I did get a pizza from Domino's a couple months ago, when it was absolutely the only food option available. It was very nearly inedible. I cannot imagine a pizza so bad that Domino's makes it meh by comparison.

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I'll say it again

Domino's in Boston SUCKS.

I've ordered from 3 seperate locations and its always gross as fuck. Always undercooked, greasy, rubbery yuck.

But I've been to NYC and Philly and London and Atlanta in recent years and ordered Dominos and it was absolutely delicious. Perfectly cooked, non greasy.. it was decent.

I don't get it. I don't know if its a local franchise thing (bad training) or something else. Ironically Papa John's is the same here (after living in ATL in the 1990s when it was actually decent pizza), absolutely nothing like the way it was back then.

Tbh, out of the three.. I'd go for PIzza Hut again (the one in Everett won't deliver to me :( ). At least its consistent and the same as it was in the 1980s.

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Everything at Friday's is (was) straight out of the freezer. Agreed. Bertucci's stuff is mainly made fresh. I'd even say that the majority of Uno's food is freshly made.

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The "casual dining" model is one where the food is crappy, the staff underpaid and treated like shit, but the "experience" is one where they're trained and required to pretend to be my friend.

To hell with that. Let's have restaurants where the quality of the food its commensurate with the prices on the menu, the cooks' wages are commensurate with the prices on the menu, the waiters don't have to pretend they now me from Adam, and they have access to dental care.

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Kelly’s roast beef will be the next to close.

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I thought that was the likes of Chipotle and Five Guys, being a step up from "regular" fast food but not quite at the level of sit down dining.

As one who has spent way too much time staring at that TGI Fridays from another "fast casual" spot- Panera Bread- I'm not too surprised that it is closing, as it looked closed when I was across the street for a long time.

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I do a solid rotation of all the bars/restaurants in that area and TJIF was always in the rotation. Sometimes by myself, sometimes with the wife, sometimes with the family....

This was a popular black restaurant/bar for adults and families and really one of the only places left with half decent prices. I think Chili's (in Walpole) is really the only other one and that isn't "in the area" of Dedham/WR/HP where this TJIF is. 99 has good prices but that's also out of the way.

Anyway I know this is separate from the pharmacy/Roxbury topic, but finding a solid dining out experience for a family of 5 (with 2 alcoholic drinks for 2 adults) is almost impossible to find for under $100. TJIF was able to provide that service. Closing this is another blow for many residents of the City.

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finding a solid dining out experience for a family of 5 (with 2 alcoholic drinks for 2 adults) is almost impossible to find for under $100.

Relative to what people earn, this was always the case. I grew up in a family of 7 (5 kids), and there was never any expectation that we would have a "solid dining out experience" on anything like a regular basis. It was an occasional-to-rare treat.

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Now if you want to go anywhere you are looking at $125 for the family instead of $75 (for pretty much the same quality). Closing TJIF there means there is zero options for these families unless they want to go to Chilis (out in Walpole).

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Closing TJIF there means there is zero options for these families unless they want to go to Chilis (out in Walpole).

"Zero options" meaning they can't eat out ever? Or simply that they can't eat out two or three times a week?

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That is all.

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"Family Style Dining"

That is what made Howard Johnson's so popular. It was family friend fare at cheap prices.

Later Applebee's and TGIFridays filled the gap.

Even for me in my poor 20s, I ate alot of Applebees in Malden because it was nearby, you could smoke inside (hey this was a bonus!), and a table of four adults could eat there for

Fewer and fewer places are filling that "family style' dining. Yes Applebees and TGIF fill the gap but they really are geared toward adults, not kids. Vs Howard Johnsons and Big Boy (Abdow's) had a special kids menu that had a variety of things. It was geared toward the kids.

And of course it was reasonably priced. We're just seeing less and less of this style place these days.

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In college, going to the Friday's on Exeter St was a big deal. You'd go and wait in a slow line. The menu was huge....not unlike the size of the one at Cheesecake Factory. The place was buzzing and the waitresses all had funny pins all over their shirts.

The last time we went to the Dedham Friday's, the place was quiet but they still made us wait for a table. The food was right out of the freezer. We vowed never again.

I hope a 99 goes in there. They would do well.

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But that could be more of a rent issue.

I dunno maybe the place has become just too saturated. But you are correct that the staffing and wait times at the TJIF there have been kinda crappy.

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Open 24 hours, everywhere that they exist. Bring them on.

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I lived at the WaHo at the end of my street when I lived in Atlanta. I could not get enough of it

But I am not so sure that Waffle House would do well in the Northeast, outside of nostalgia.

Boston, and lesser, New England as a whole is very health conscious when it comes to food and where we eat. Its why many chains struggle here because alot of it is just isn't that healthy. Waffle House exists in places where local food is deep fried anything with a side of velveeta and gravy.

I mean look at this way. We *had* 24hr breakfast places for decades, they just all closed up. Bickford's, IHOP, to name a few. And independant ones don't last long as a 24hr establishment. Add our crappy blue laws that many towns won't allow 24hr service. There just isn't a market for them up here.

You could argue and say that the few places that are open after 1am are busy would dictate a need. But I think the costs to run such a business 24 hours a day, 7 days a week would outweigh the income earned by being open during slow times, especially on the overnight during the week.

Then of course, you're faced with competition from other nearby Waffle Houses. Remember where they have stores, they are EVERYWHERE. Often two on either side of a highway exit all the way up and down the highway.

And.. AND Fwiw.. Not all Waffle Houses are 24hours. If you have two near each other, only one will stay open and the other will close at 11pm.

(awaits the influx of replies...)

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How long were you there?

We were there (well, halfway between Tucker and Stone Mountain) from Jan 1990 until October 1997.

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Jan 96 to Jan 99. I moved here to Boston about six months after that (august 99)

I lived everywhere down there.. I was a vagabond 18-22 year old went the way the wind blew that day couch surfer.

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...we overlapped there for almost 2 years.

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I wonder if we knew each other :p

Ever go to burks or blakes or the swinging richards?

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