Sunday, April 19, 2020
Mcdonalization Essays - McDonalds, George Ritzer,
  Mcdonalization    Is Mcdonaldization Inevitable?  George Ritzer's, Mcdonaldization of Society, is a critical analysis of the impact on  social structural change on human interaction and identity. According to Ritzer,  Mcdonaldization ?is the process by which the principles of the fast-food restaurant are  coming to dominate more and more sectors of American society as well as rest of the world?  (Ritzer, 1). Ritzer focuses on four foundations of Mcdonaldization: efficiency, calculability,  predictability, and control. These are the commandments of any rationalized corporation.   However, they are not carried out from the point of view of the consumer. Efficiency, for  example, may entail the placing of great inconveniences upon a consumer for the sake of  efficient management. Calculability may involve hiding certain information from the  consumer. Predictability and control may involve a company's ability to predict and control  consumer behavior, not the consumer's ability to predict what kind of product or control what  kind of service he gets. Ritzer calls such breakdowns the irrationality of rationalization.   Ritzer points out the irrationality of rationality, as all of the supposed benefits of  Mcdonaldized systems backfire: waiting in long lines, suspect quality, little or no customer  service, little or no customer service, the illusion of large quantities for low prices, and  severely limited selection of choice.   Throughout Mcdonaldization of Society, Ritzer describes Mcdonaldization as largely  negative and often destructive. While Mcdonaldization is rapidly taking over American  society and spreading to the rest of the globe, it is not something unjustly imposed on the  American people. The consumerist culture of America has groomed the public to seek  efficiency, calculability, predictability, and control. These principles grow in importance and  value in contemporary America. Even when given the choice to avoid a Mcdonaldized  establishment or product, people will flock to it. I agree with Ritzer's analysis of a  Mcdonaldized society, but I feel that Ritzer has failed to provide any real solutions to the  Mcdonaldization process. I will support Ritzer's analysis of the Mcdonaldization process, but  also show that it is inevitable and essential in the American society to have a rationalized  system.   Ritzer stresses that ?Mcdonaldization? does not just refer to robotlike assembly of  food. Rather, this process, occurring throughout society, is transforming our lives. ?In the  1980s and 1990s Mcdonaldization has extended its reach into more and more regions of  society, and those areas are increasingly remote from the heart of the fast-food business?  (Ritzer, 137). Shopping malls are controlled environments of approved design, logo, colors,  and opening and closing hours. ?For those people who wish to see Europe, a package tour  rationalizes the package. People can efficiently see, in a rigidly controlled manner, many  sights while traveling in conveyances, staying in hotels, and eating in fast-food restaurants  just like those at home? (Ritzer, 21). ?USA Today? produces the same bland, instant news- in  short, unanalytic pieces that can be read between gulps of the Mcshake or the Mcburger. Is  this all bad? Not necessarily. Efficiency does bring reduced prices. But at a cost, a loss of  something difficult to define or quantify, a quality of life washed away by rationalization.  When I travel, for example, had I taken a packaged tour, I never would have had the  opportunity to have all the unique experiences that I've had. However, the costs may be even  simpler than that. For example, just recently I was ordering food through the drive-thru  during lunch hour. The employee at the window was already stressed from trying to work too  fast, gave me large cokes in a flimsy cardboard container. The coke went from the window  onto to my car seat. Later it was established that the lids weren't even properly placed on the  glasses. This is also and example of the irrationality of rational systems. The lines at the  fast-food restaurants can be very long, and waiting to get through the drive-thru can even take  longer than going inside.   In addition, Ritzer explains that in Mcdonaldization establishes control through the  substitution of nonhuman for human technology. He explains that ?...these two elements are  closely linked. Specifically, replacement of human by nonhuman technology is often oriented  towards greater control. The great source of uncertainty and unpredictability in a  rationalizing system are people-either the people who work within those systems or the  people who are served by them? (Ritzer, 148). For example, in my telemarketing job,  individuality is frowned upon. The idea is to read the screen and deviate as little as possible.   The human employee is not required to think, just follow the instructions and push    
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