Click More http://www.Stupid123.com http://www.Stupid123.com/StoreSignSpellings/SonicDriveInSmooty.html Sonic Drive In Fat Free Peach Smooty is one of the new things on the menu. I wonder how different a smooty is from a Smoothy or a real life Maybe it gives a big smoot with each smooty Or maybe the color of it is black because it is sooty or souty. I guess you are supposed to eat the Smooty or Smoothie or what ever it is supposed to be even if you spelled it wrong. I looked up smooty on the net and found it to be a skinny girl. IT said a smooty was a Smooty is made of felt and has an appliqued wing and embroidered little face. He's two inches across with a silver pin on the back.
This video is not about the Spelling of Peaches Funny Misspellings of smoothies or a smoothie king where there is a Sign Fast Food. This Sonic Employee manages the wordings for signs in Houston Sign Spell each word as if it was a very important part of our vocabulary. This lesson took place on Dairy Ashford in Houston between Memorial Drive and I-10 on Dairy Ashford. . BrianNelson123 Intelligence Funny Fast Food. Employee Smoothy Smoothie Spelling Peaches
History
Troy Smith opened the first Sonic Drive-In in Shawnee, Oklahoma, in 1953, calling it the Top Hat.[2] The Top Hat was originally a small root beer stand. Customers would park anywhere on the gravel lot. On a trip to Louisiana, Smith saw a drive-in that utilized speakers for ordering and realized that he could increase his sales if he could control the parking and have the customers order from speakers at their cars with carhops to deliver the food. He borrowed several cars from a friend who owned a used car lot to establish a layout for controlled parking. He had some "juke box boys" come in to wire up an intercom system. His sales tripled immediately and his little root beer stand was a huge success. Grocery store operator Charles Pappe stopped by chance at the Shawnee drive-in and was very impressed. He got out of his car and began to take measurements of the stalls, trying to figure out why they were not all the same size, assuming that it was an essential ingredient of the business plan. Smith came out and introduced himself and explained that the stalls were different sizes simply because different-sized cars had been used when he laid everything out. The two men hit it off and negotiated the first franchise location in Woodward, Oklahoma, in 1956.
By 1958, two more drive-ins were built in Enid, OK, and Stillwater, OK. Troy Smith and Charlie Pappe then learned that the Top Hat name was already trademarked, so they changed the name to Sonic from their slogan "Service with the Speed of Sound". After the name change, the first Sonic sign was installed at the former Top-Hat Drive-In in Stillwater, Oklahoma, therefore that location can be considered the first Sonic Drive-In. That original sign can still be seen in Stillwater. Troy and Charlie were being asked to help open new franchise locations but they had no royalty plan. Finally they decided to have their paper company charge an extra penny for each Sonic label hamburger bag they sold, half for Troy and half for Charlie and the first franchise contracts under this plan were drawn up by Troy's landlord, lawyer O.K. Winterringer. There was no joint marketing plan or standardized menu and few operating requirements.
Sonic grew into a regional phenomenon in the 1960s and 1970s. Located mainly in small towns in Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas, New Mexico, Missouri and Arkansas, the Sonic Drive-in was often the most popular gathering place for young people in those small towns. The exterior of a fairly typical Sonic from this period (the one located in Marfa, Texas) can be seen briefly in the 1985 Kevin Costner film Fandango (1985 film). In the 1960s, Sonic meals were always accompanied by a peppermint candy and small colored plastic animals called zoo-picks hanging on the side of drink cups. In small, southwest U.S. towns it was common to see these Sonic zoo-pick collections on customers' dashboards and rear-view mirrors until they were outlawed by consumer product safety laws as a choking hazard. The traditional peppermint candy is still served with Sonic meals today. n
Sonic's founders formed Sonic Supply in the 1960s under Troy Smith, Marvin Jirous and Matt Kinslow. In 1973, this became Sonic Industries which sold franchisees the equipment and building plans and provided some basic operational instruction. For a brief time in 1977, there was a Sonic school under Jim Winterringer. Most of the drive-ins were operated by franchisees who often made the manager a partner, and that is still often the case today. Since there were at that time no strict procedures and few recipes in place, franchisees or franchise groups often developed their own recipes for different menu items or regional specialties.One group would use "krinkle" cut french fries, others would use shoestring fries. Test
I wanna smooty lol I love making smooties too lol only thing is I don't know what smooty is lol
borgfeldt 3 years ago
A SMOOTY TURNS YOU ON AND MAKEs YOU want to give someone a smooch. It is in the ice cream. It is a new invention sort of like viagra. Brian nelsonIdeas dot c.
BrianNelson123 3 years ago