LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,763
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
The point, of course, being that Mr. Slamin never had any illusions of being anything more than what he actually was -- a small-town baker who made small-town donuts for small-town people. He didn't try to get into glossy magazines, he didn't make a big deal about his "locally sourced lard," and he didn't try to create a synthetic "hip" atmosphere about his shop, which was a simple tin-fronted hole-in-the-wall between the First National grocery and a Sherwin-Williams paint store. The most important ingredient in Mr. Slamin's products was sincerity. That and the lard.
Ethan D. Baker, on the other hand, goes out of his way to get profiled in "Maine The Magazine," talks your ear off about his ingredients in hopes you'll think that justifies his jacked-up prices, and decorates his shop to look like it's straight out of Williamsburg because he saw an article in "Vice" talking about how cool Nieuw Brukelyn is. And in the end, his insincere, marketing-focused donut is no better than the one Mr. Slamin used to make.
Ethan D. Baker, on the other hand, goes out of his way to get profiled in "Maine The Magazine," talks your ear off about his ingredients in hopes you'll think that justifies his jacked-up prices, and decorates his shop to look like it's straight out of Williamsburg because he saw an article in "Vice" talking about how cool Nieuw Brukelyn is. And in the end, his insincere, marketing-focused donut is no better than the one Mr. Slamin used to make.