Eight new Krispy Kremes suppose to come to Chicago area to make a dent in Dunkin Donuts

Armando Arturo
  Krispy Kreme is suppose to come back to the Chicago region in huge numbers after all but disappearing during the recession and this is welcome news for diversity in this area. There are some four hundred Dunkin Donut locations around Chicagoland and the reason they are so successful are variable but the chief one among it is its lack of competition as there are few mom and pop stores in the area making fresh donuts.
 Dunkin Donuts is ninety percent Indian owned in the region and many had complained about the hard working with the process of making fresh donuts at the actual location. Many owners have pooled their resources and make donuts in one ugly huge warehouse in the middle of Bedford park often shipping their product to these hundred of outlets and exposing the flour products to tasty diesel. Krispy Kreme would not follow this business procedure and they would hopefully concentrate on coffee as well to hit into the sales and help bring about some welcome demise of this conglomerate corporate and foreign owned entity that is the Dunkin shippers. These fucks are to lazy even to make the fucking donut at their store. When comparing the number of mom and pop cool independent donut stores one can find in Los Angeles and seeing the monstrous massive mess that is Dunkin Donuts the Northern Illinois region is in need of donut change. This news came out in Jue and I am still waiting for these shops to show up and it made me even wonder why so many went under in the first place while Dunkin thrived. Dunkin Donuts somehow managed a cheaper alternative back then but this shipping process is fairly new development on their part. Perhaps the first expansion of Krispy Kreme was mainly done to get new construction stimulus going and maybe this time they will actually try to sell more coffee and marketing to get their presence felt and desired for the public. Whatever the reason anyplace that makes their donuts onsite and not so dominated by people from two states of the Indian sub-continent is only pleasing to hear.

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