Those Year-End Lists We Love to Hate
Food isn’t like music or movies. The hospitality business doesn’t obsess over every restaurant or bistro or pub that opens during any particular year; it doesn’t base its overall health on the success or failure of the newbies coming into the market. Restaurants, young and old, must complete against each other. In some ways, the older restaurants have it easier: They may already have a loyal clientele that doesn’t require expensive marketing to lure them back to the place.
I say all this as prologue. You don’t see as many Year in Food lists as you do lists for movies and music. And when you do see them, they tend to be trend oriented, like the one Chow posted earlier this month. Now come two more:
- Howard Mortman at D.C. Examiner has put together his “top ten food-related presidential campaign stories from 2008.”
- Robyn Mincher at Express Night Out has collected a few “Snapshots in D.C. Food.”
Photo by Flickr user mediajorgenyc.
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Linked From: December 26th, 2008Another Year-End List That Says Something About Us - Young & Hungry - Washington City Paper
12:48 pm[...] Eats, one of my daily go-to sites about food and culture, has jumped head-first into the year-end list business. The site has counted down its Top 10 blog posts of the year. I’m not sure what it says about [...]






