Gypsy Boy wrote:Dick Portillo, who's in his mid-70s, founded the chain in 1963. That's means he's been working at building and improving it, investing his time, his life, and his money for over fifty years. Don't you think he's entitled to sell it if he wants to? To whoever he wants to? Sure, it's a local institution. Yes, it's disappointing that he's selling to an outside firm. But it's his, not a publicly owned company. He started with a tiny shop and built it into a highly successful major restaurant group. Good for him. I think to accuse him of "selling out" belittles his lifetime of work and isn't fair or accurate.
Gypsy Boy wrote:It's frankly kind of hard to imagine that no one (or no group) locally could be interested.
stevez wrote:Gypsy Boy wrote:It's frankly kind of hard to imagine that no one (or no group) locally could be interested.
Interested is one thing. Being willing to pay a billion dollars for a chain of hot dog stands is another.
kitty wrote:Just trying to even the responses my friend. I'm quite aware of what it is. Is the heat getting to people lately?
spinynorman99 wrote:stevez wrote:Gypsy Boy wrote:It's frankly kind of hard to imagine that no one (or no group) locally could be interested.
Interested is one thing. Being willing to pay a billion dollars for a chain of hot dog stands is another.
$300MM in annual revenue (and $70MM in pretax profits) for hot dog stands ain't hay.
That averages out to more than $8MM in annual revenues per "stand." While those aren't Gibson's revenue dollars their price points are waaaaay below Gibson's, so those figures are pretty impressive.
kitty wrote:Just trying to even the responses my friend. I'm quite aware of what it is. Is the heat getting to people lately?
spinynorman99 wrote: One would assume that there are children there to take over the business, so his aging doesn't really enter into it
Cathy2 wrote:Children are not born to continue their parent's efforts in life.
Ram4 wrote:Cathy2 wrote:Children are not born to continue their parent's efforts in life.
Sometimes they are - thank goodness for Marc Malnati!
Portillo's does a solid Vienna Beef hot dog and a great Italian Beef - definitely worthy of representing what a great Italian Beef sandwich is to the country in the future. Just hope nothing changes for the worse. For instance, they do the fries in beef tallow. Even though they are frozen, they are fine by me. Don't want to see that change. I am wary of what happened to Uno's chain.
deepdish wrote:I absolutely love Portillo's for their Chicago style hot dogs, Italian beefs, burgers, chicken sandwiches, polish sausage, chopped salad, and their famous chocolate cake. I don't think I've ever had a bad meal there at any point in my life. Portillo's runs like a well oiled machine- they are consistently great at every location. Their Italian beef in particular has always be spectacular. Are Portillo's Italian beef and hot dogs as good as Johnnie's Beef or Gene and Jude's? No, but Portillo's makes great examples of both Italian beef and hot dogs in their own right..
Tim wrote:Why doesn't somebody change the title of this discussion?
JoelF wrote:While I've never loved their hot dogs (due mainly to a lack of radioactive-green relish), and their McD's-style fries give me little joy, their Italian Beef is quite good.
If Portillo's national expansion does nothing other than educate the rest of the country (the WORLD!!) about the glories of Italian Beef with hot giardinera, then it's a good thing.
midas wrote:
Or they pull a Uno and ruin the Italian Beef reputation across the country.
stevez wrote:midas wrote:
Or they pull a Uno and ruin the Italian Beef reputation across the country.
I think the Al's Beef franchises have a good head start on that project.
midas wrote:
Is Al's outside the Chicago area yet?