Michael Mitchell and Nick Wiger Dough boys don't see a need for Rallies and Checkers fast food joints

Chuck Woodruff
Nick Wiger and Michael Mitchel love to smoke a joint but hanging and eating a burger and fries at the two corporate franchises otherwise known as Checkers and rallies is not the place to be. The two Doughboys had a guest recently and they tore apart what is generally a gross and ditsy fast food eatery of Checkers. Wiger and Mitchell gave a brief history of the two combined chains and reviewed the fast food national chain giving these seedy joints it a seething review.
Wiger said the burgers tasted like shit and something one would expect from a low-cost supermarket and Mitchell couldn't believe how a franchise and food business with french fries this tasteless would ever expand past the initial store and pass a test for more construction and planting of new business and given allowances by villages to locate this franchise.Mitchell also complained of the soggy fries as he has never seen such soggy fries and he had to go to their bathroom and rinse his hillbilly beard clean stepping in the urine of the joint that is never looked cleaned.  Checkers and Rallies were literally torn apart by
 these two tremendously popular YouTube super stars and podcasters with millions of views. The stock prices of Checkers and Rallies took a major hit the days after the Doughboys reviewed these stinkers and Nick said there are a million better burrito places people can fill thier hunger and tummies with instead of eating out a this chain and gaining a further hatred for the old-fashion hamburger as Checkers/Rallies gets it done wrong.
This food is not even worthy to be given out free for the many thousands of homeless people in Wiger and Mitchell's hometown of LA. They don't understand why there are still two names for this race themed and checker flag franchise and in reality with other fast food places of much better quality and service the Doughboys wonder if there is a need for these franchises and why Checkers/Rallies even exist as a corporate national chain.

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