Retail Roundup
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Straight out of San Francisco -- home of, appropriately enough, the
San Francisco treat -- comes Sacred Silks, a company that will save you
some traveling time.
That is, instead of flying the world over to check out beautiful
spiritual sites such as the Washington National Cathedral, St. Patrick’s
Cathedral in New York City, the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris and St.
Paul’s Cathedral in London, you need go no further than your computer.
At https://www.sacredsilks.com, you can buy scarves and ties that
feature, among others, the likeness of the imaginative stained-glass
windows of Notre Dame or those crazy, planet Krypton spires of the nearby
Crystal Cathedral. Of course, expect to pay a steep $95 for a silk scarf
of the latter.
Carl’s Jr. burger doesn’t refill the soda
Carl Karcher Enterprises Inc., just won’t stop promoting that
so-called “Six Dollar Burger” at Carl’s Jr. But they’re doing a pretty
good job at it, even if it proves annoying.
The company boasts that it’s the “first restaurant-style burger
without the restaurant.” As if that’s necessarily a good thing.
After all, what’s great about going out to a sit-down restaurant is
the service. When you get parched, the server drops by and fills up your
beverage or coffee. You don’t need to get up, fill up the carbonated
drink (hoping not to overfill it and get sticky), search around for a lid
that actually fits, find a straw and then find a table.
At a sit-down restaurant, you walk in, a host seats you down, somebody
brings you water, and you order a few things, which should arrive
momentarily. Plus, despite the happy birthday songs, it tends to be more
quiet.
You can’t expect quiet conditions at Carl’s Jr. So, in other words,
that burger better “be a really tasty burger,” like the one at Big Kahuna
Burgers in “Pulp Fiction” or, of course, the In-N-Out burgers they
discuss in “The Big Lebowski.”
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