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First McDonald's opens in Mexico City

By TERESA KRAMER

MEXICO CITY -- More than a week after the first McDonald's restaurant opened in Mexico, long lines spilled into the street as people patiently awaited the taste of their first Mexican-made Big Mac.

Cars waiting to enter the packed McDonald's parking lot or pass through the novel drive-through window caused mammoth traffic jams along the Perifico Sur, the most important thoroughfare in southern Mexico City.

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'It's been the same from 10 o'clock in the morning until the hour we close, and I believe it will continue like this for another two weeks,' said Saul Kahan, president of Fast Food Systems, venture partner with the U.S. McDonald's company.

Kahan attributed the instant popularity to McDonald's fame among Mexicans who have visited the United States, and to 'curiosity' about the new style of fast-food service.

Employee Juan Carlos Cabeza said McDonald's was an instant success because it was a symbol of American culture. Mexican traditional fast foods are tacos from a corner stand.

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'It's American, that's the reason,' said Cabeza, 19, who has been cooking and serving McDonald's hamburgers since opening day Oct. 29.

'Most people ask for a Big Mac or a Quarter Pounder with cheese because they're tasty, and because you can only find them here,' Cabeza said.

The only complaints he has heard were references to the lengthy waiting lines outside the restaurant.

Two policemen stood guard at the front door, granting entrance to families as McDonald's managers gave the OK. All exits were guarded to make sure no one slipped in another door.

Marta Zetina and her three sons said the waiting line moved quickly, even though it averaged 100 people and extended out into the street. At peak hours, the line stretched halfway around the block.

'It was definitely worth the wait,' Zetina said.

She said her family travels frequently to the United States, and eats at McDonald's on each visit.

'We came here to see if it was the same,' she said. Her teenage sons ageeed the hamburgers were 'very similar' to those in American McDonald's.

'The only thing that was missing was the cherry pie,' said Julio Zetina, who visited the new McDonald's four times in its first week of operation.

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He predicted the waiting lines would not diminish for another month and even then the restaurant would be overcrowded.

'They have to open more McDonald's, that's the only answer,' he said.

Kahan said plans are underway for several restaurants throughout the city, the next one could be inaugurated as early as February.

Although Mexico has a number of fast-food restaurants, none of them carried the same name as American ones until McDonald's opened.

The American firm had not ventured into Mexico previously because the company could not obtain guarantees they could acquire the same quality of meat as is used in the United States. Once that problem was solved they sought Mexican investors to open franchises.

The company took out full-page advertisements in Mexico City newspapers to publicize the opening of the fast-food restaurant and received additional publicity when Mexican media treated the inauguration as news.

Zetina said she read about the McDonald's opening on the front page of a newspaper and heard about it from friends.

'The whole world knew,' she said.

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