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by venomsnake 4480 days ago
Well a 1000 burgers are 3 years worth of lunch. Also if you are allowed to take a few at a this is great marketing for free - telling all the colleagues - a few burgers are on me in that place. Chances to convert to a regular at least one of them is high.

Probably it is how the awards will be defined. Because kickstarter is not preorder.

Also the Kickstarter community so far has shown to be remarkably supporting. So I doubt that they will abuse the privileges that will be awarded. Also basic rule for the rewards should be that you are overpaying but you like it that way. The 1000 burgers for 1000 GBP is clearly unsustainable. But looking at the KS it seems more like a marketing stunt the high tiers. So it is probably budgeted.

1 comments

It's quite unlikely that someone who orders a 1000 burgers is actually going to eat them. I can't picture myself eating 1000 of the same kind of burger .. or in the same place..

I guess most people would eat 200 burgers (I'd say at the high end..) which would come out to 5GBP per burger. Not bad for the establishment.. I can't think of any average but even 100 sounds high to me.

Did you see the picture of the burger in the article? All this guy has to do is declare that remaining prepaid burgers are non-transferable upon death, and he'll only ever have to make a few hundred per buyer.
Actually the burger in the picture is healthier than you'd think. It's very good quality beef. I have a balanced diet and exercise lots. I also subscribe to the 'fat is not the enemy' school of thought. Maybe I'll take some before and after photos to prove it!
There has been much discussion on this piece of research, and issues raised about the reporting of it. I think the response from the NHS was balanced:

http://www.nhs.uk/news/2014/03March/Pages/high-protein-diet-...

That study is garbage. It doesn't distinguish between processed and unprocessed meat. It is best filed in the circular container on the floor.
I'm coming to London for the first time in a decade this coming week. I'd love to have a burger with the guy who decided to do this.

If you're interested, drop me a note: keith @ op3nvoice.com

That is a good point to raise :D

I had a micro heart attack just by looking at it.

I just looked at the burger in question.

Wow!

I'd totally eat 1,000 of those. But I guess I should start caring about things like not having heart attacks, so I don't know.

My heart says "yes" though.

My advice would be to come to England and eat a hamburger here before committing to a thousand of them, regardless of how good they look in the picture.

I sometimes daydream about importing the cheapest, far-end-of-the-freezer-aisle, just-barely-not-animal-feed grade hamburger patties from the US so that I could sell them here as gourmet burgers for premium prices.

The quality of the beef really is that bad here, as is the process that somehow turns it into the rubbery, filler-laden non-edible Superball of Sadness that gets passed off for burgers here.

That, along with Mexican food, is one of the main reasons I travel back to the states so frequently.

Now, if we could only get English bacon shipped over to America, that might be reason enough to move back.

I can't speak for the rest of England, but there are some amazing burgers in London.

A good starting point: http://www.standard.co.uk/goingout/restaurants/burgeracs-20-...

100% agree about Mexican food though!

There's great Mexican food available in London too, maybe not quite like SoCal but still good