scholarly journals McDonaldisasi Melalui Praktik Jurnalisme Hibrida di Kompasiana

2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Formas Juitan Lase

Abstract: This article discusses the development of new media jurnalistic in Indonesia that seem to mix online media and social media as a practise of hybrid jurnalism. Hybrid jurnalism gives a complete picture of how media business is currently runned by the logic of Mcdonaldization as the principle of fast food restaurants. Consequently, it generates the homogenization of content, decreases the quality of jurnalism and misuses the concept of citizen journalism.Abstrak: Artikel ini membahas perkembangan jurnalistik pada media baru di Indonesia yang kini membaurkan media online dengan media sosial dalam praktik jurnalisme hibrida. Praktik jurnalisme hibrida memberikan gambaran utuh bagaimana bisnis media saat ini dikelola berdasarkan logika Mcdonaldisasi, yang merupakan prinsip dasar restoran cepat saji. Konsekuensinya, jurnalisme media baru di Indonesia dipenuhi oleh homogenisasi konten, penurunan kualitas jurnalistik, dan penyalahgunaan konsep jurnalisme warga.

2017 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 1506-1522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sahana Udupa

On the rapidly expanding social media in India, online users are witness to a routine exchange of abusive terms and accusations with choicest swearwords hurled even for the seemingly non-inflammatory political debates. This article draws upon anthropology of insult to uncover the distinctness, if at all, of online abuse as a means for political participation as well as for the encumbering it provokes and relations of domination it reproduces as a result. In so doing, the article critiques the conception of ludic as anti-hegemonic in the Bakhtin tradition, and develops an emic term “gaali” to signal the blurred boundaries between comedy, insult, shame, and abuse emerging on online media, which also incite gendered forms of intimidation. Gaali, it argues, is best conceptualized through the metaphor of “sound” as distinct from what recent new media studies theorize as “voice.”


Author(s):  
Gudelia C. Saporna ◽  
Ryan A. Claveria

Service quality is the key to a successful restaurant. When customers are satisfied with the services offered, the likelihood of customers returning to the restaurant is high. The quality of food, prices and the service itself seem to be the salient factors for customers to dine in. Thus, identifying which factor in the service quality dimensions is most important for the customer is primarily the focus of this paper. In this study, the researchers made use of descriptive correlational research design utilising 250 local and 250 international students in Malaysia as subjects. Convenience sampling was used in the selection of respondents. The study shows that customers have satisfactory perceptions on the prices and quality of food served by fast food restaurants in Malaysia. Further, results indicate that cleanliness is the most important predictor of customer satisfaction. It was found out also that ambience and food greatly influenced the behavioural intentions of the respondents. Lastly, the study shows also that no significant differences were seen in the customers' perceptions and satisfaction on the service quality.


Author(s):  
Lisa Poirier ◽  
Lucia Flores ◽  
Ivonne Rivera ◽  
Christine St. Pierre ◽  
Julia Wolfson ◽  
...  

Americans spend the majority of their food dollars at restaurants and other prepared food sources, including quick-service and fast-food restaurants (PFS); independent small restaurants make up 66% of all PFS in the US. In this feasibility study, 5 independent and Latino-owned PFS in the Washington DC metro area worked with academic partners to start offering healthy combo meals with bottled water and promote these using on-site, community, and social media advertising. The number of healthy combos sold was collected weekly, showing that the new combos sold, and customers in all 5 sites were surveyed as they exited the PFS (n=50): >85% had noticed the combo meals; 100% thought it was a good idea to offer it, 68% had ordered the combo (of these, >94% of customers responded that they liked it).  Results suggest that it is feasible to work with independent Latino-owned restaurants to promote healthy combos and collect data.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 25-30
Author(s):  
Very Andrianingsih

Product quality and service affect the progress of a restaurant. The rise of business competition requires businesses to continue to innovate so as not to compete. Restaurant business owners must always maintain and improve the quality of their products and services. The quality of products and services is a means to compete with competitors. Quality products and services will help restaurant business owners to get a strategic market position. This study aims to find out how the quality of Toby’s Fried Chicken products and services in Sumenep Regency. The sampling technique in this study used Purposive Sampling by determining key informants as many as 1 person, 2 main informants, supporting informants as many as 5 people and using data collection techniques, including observation, interviews, and documentation. The results of this study indicate that Toby’s Fried Chicken products in the latest Fried Chicken products are still undercooked, Toby’s Fried Chicken has not released a variety of new products with a steady innovation. The service of Toby’s Fried Chicken is quite good with the good attitude shown by the waiter, but for the arrangement of the place there is no attractive design to be enjoyed by customers. Toby’s Fried Chicken continues to maintain and improve its quality, both in terms of products and services to be able to compete with fast-food restaurants like Toby's.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Junxiu Liu ◽  
Colin Rehm ◽  
Renata Micha ◽  
Dariush Mozaffarian

Abstract Objectives Meals from full-service restaurants (FS) and fast-food restaurants (FF) are major contributors to US diets. Yet, their overall healthfulness, trends, and disparities are unknown. We sought to evaluate trends in FS and FF diet quality in US adults, and disparities by key subgroups. Methods We used data from 7 NHANES cycles 2003–2016, totaling 35,015 adults aged 20 + y. Percent of energy (%E) and meal settings (breakfast, etc.) from FS and FF were examined. Diet quality was based on the validated American Heart Association (AHA) 2020 primary diet score (components: fruits/vegetables, whole grains, fish/shellfish, sugar-sweetened beverages, sodium; range 0–50) and secondary score (adding nuts/seeds/legumes (NSL), processed meat, saturated fat; range 0–80). Analyses utilized survey-weight with energy adjusted to 2000 kcal/d. Results Between 2003–16, US adults consumed ∼9%E from FS (8.5% in 2003–04; 9.5% in 2015–16, p trend = 0.38) and ∼12%E from FF (10.5%; 13.4%; p trend = 0.31). Over this period, increasing FF meals were eaten for breakfast (4.4% to 7.6%) (p trend < 0.001). In 2015–16, diet quality of both FS and FF were low: mean primary AHA score of 17.3 and 14.7 (out of 50), respectively; and secondary AHA score of 31.6 and 27.6 (out of 80). Between 2003–16, diet quality of FS was unchanged; while FF quality was unchanged per the primary score and modestly improved per the secondary score (improvement of 4.2%; p trend < 0.001), largely due to changes in NSL and saturated fat. The % of FF meals with poor quality (<40% adherence to the AHA secondary score) declined from 74.6% to 69.8%, while the % with intermediate quality (40–79.9% adherence) increased from 25.4% to 30.2% (both p trend < 0.001) (Figure). FS meals with poor (∼50%) and intermediate (∼50%) quality were stable over time. Notably, < 0.1% of consumed FS or FF meals met ideal quality ( > 80% adherence). Disparities in FS and FF meal quality were observed by race/ethnicity, income, and education, which generally worsened over time. Conclusions FF and FS meals provide 1 in 5 calories in US adults. Modest improvements in quality were observed in FF, but not FS; average quality for both remained low, with growing disparities. These findings highlight specific challenges and opportunities for improving quality of restaurant meals in the US. Funding Sources AHA, NIH/NHLBI. Supporting Tables, Images and/or Graphs


2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (11) ◽  
pp. 2117-2127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jackie Soo ◽  
Jennifer L Harris ◽  
Kirsten K Davison ◽  
David R Williams ◽  
Christina A Roberto

AbstractObjectiveTo examine the nutritional quality of menu items promoted in four (US) fast-food restaurant chains (McDonald’s, Burger King, Wendy’s, Taco Bell) in 2010 and 2013.DesignMenu items pictured on signs and menu boards were recorded at 400 fast-food restaurants across the USA. The Nutrient Profile Index (NPI) was used to calculate overall nutrition scores for items (higher scores indicate greater nutritional quality) and was dichotomized to denote healthierv.less healthy items. Changes over time in NPI scores and energy of promoted foods and beverages were analysed using linear regression.SettingFour hundred fast-food restaurants (McDonald’s, Burger King, Wendy’s, Taco Bell; 100 locations per chain).SubjectsNPI of fast-food items marketed at fast-food restaurants.ResultsPromoted foods and beverages on general menu boards and signs remained below the ‘healthier’ cut-off at both time points. On general menu boards, pictured items became modestly healthier from 2010 to 2013, increasing (mean (se)) by 3·08 (0·16) NPI score points (P<0·001) and decreasing (mean (se)) by 130 (15) kJ (31·1 (3·65) kcal;P<0·001). This pattern was evident in all chains except Taco Bell, where pictured items increased in energy. Foods and beverages pictured on the kids’ section showed the greatest nutritional improvements. Although promoted foods on general menu boards and signs improved in nutritional quality, beverages remained the same or became worse.ConclusionsFoods, and to a lesser extent, beverages, promoted on menu boards and signs in fast-food restaurants showed limited improvements in nutritional quality in 2013v.2010.


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