Colonel Sanders: Difference between revisions
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birth_place = [[Henryville, Indiana]], [[USA]] | |
birth_place = [[Henryville, Indiana]], [[USA]] | |
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death_date = [[December 16]], [[1980]] | |
death_date = [[December 16]], [[1980]] | |
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death_place = [[Louisville, Kentucky]], [[USA]] |
death_place = [[Louisville, Kentucky]], [[USA]] | |
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occupation = Founder of [[Kentucky Fried Chicken]] |
occupation = Founder of [[Kentucky Fried Chicken]] |
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Revision as of 00:34, 4 October 2006
Colonel Sanders | |
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Born | September 9, 1890 |
Died | December 16, 1980 |
Occupation | Founder of Kentucky Fried Chicken |
Harland David Sanders, better known as Colonel Sanders (September 9, 1890 – December 16, 1980) was the founder of Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC). His picture appears on their boxes to this day, and a stylized graphic of his face is a trademark of the corporation.
Early life and career
Sanders was born in Henryville, Indiana. His father died when he was six years old, and since his mother worked, he was forced to cook for his family. During his teen years, Sanders worked many jobs, including firefighter, steamboat driver, insurance salesman, and he served as an Army private in Cuba.
More than just a fill-up
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At the age of 40, Sanders made chicken for people who stopped at his service station in Corbin, Kentucky. He didn't have a restaurant then, but served the diners in his living quarters in the service station. Eventually, his local popularity grew, and Sanders moved to a motel and restaurant that seated 142 people and began working as the chef. Over the next nine years, he perfected his method of cooking chicken that used the same eleven herbs and spices that are used today at KFC. He also made use of a pressure cooker that enhanced the flavor and allowed the chicken to be cooked much faster than pan-frying. He was given the honorary title "Kentucky colonel" in 1935 by Governor Ruby Laffoon. Unlike most people who receive this title, Sanders chose to call himself "Colonel" and to dress in a stereotypical "southern gentleman" costume as a way of self-promotion.
Path to global recognition
Sanders was forced to sell his property in order to make way for Interstate 75. Confident of the quality of his fried chicken, the Colonel devoted himself to the chicken franchising business that he started in 1952, the first franchise being setup on 3900 South State Street in South Salt Lake, Utah. He traveled across the country by car from restaurant to restaurant, cooking batches of chicken for restaurant owners and their employees. If the reaction was favorable, he entered into a handshake agreement on a deal that stipulated a payment to him of a nickel for each chicken the restaurant sold. His devoted work turned his small business, Kentucky Fried Chicken, into one of the largest fast food chains in existence. He himself became one of the most recognizable people in the world.
Later career
In 1959, Sanders moved the headquarters of his business to a new location near Shelbyville, Kentucky and in 1964, sold it to a group of investors headed by future Kentucky Governor John Y. Brown, Jr. Sanders, after retiring as a cook, worked as its company spokesman for most of the rest of his life. He appeared in many of his company's television commercials between the 1950s and 1970s (with his and KFC's slogan "Finger-lickin' good"), and remained outspoken about the quality of the KFC product, often with a lively vocabulary. In 1975 a libel lawsuit was filed against Harland Sanders by Kentucky Fried Chicken for his comments, including calling the gravy "sludge" and the mashed potatos "wallpaper paste". The suit was unsuccessful, and he continued to speak out when he felt the quality of the business he founded waned.
He also retained ownership of the headquarters building and soon opened a new restaurant in it. KFC's new owners owned the name Colonel Sanders as it pertained to the restaurant business, so Sanders decided to name his new restaurant "Claudia Sanders' Dinner House" after his wife. As of 2006, this restaurant is still operating and is decorated with many photographs and memorabilia from the Sanders family. (A second Claudia Sanders' Dinner House location was opened in a historic mansion in Bowling Green, Kentucky, but closed in the 1980s).
Death and legacy
Sanders died at age 90 of leukemia. He was buried in his characteristic white suit and black bow tie in Cave Hill Cemetery in Louisville, Kentucky, after lying in state in the rotunda of the Kentucky State Capitol. A later cartoon version of Colonel Sanders (voiced by actor Randy Quaid) has appeared in more recent KFC commercials, and he has an almost-identical impersonator, the latter to the considerable consternation of many in the Sanders family.
To this day, the Colonel's secret recipe of 11 herbs and spices remains one of the best-kept trade secrets in business. According to a profile of KFC done by the Food Network television show Unwrapped, portions of the secret spice mix are made at different locations in the United States, and the only copy of the recipe is kept in a vault in corporate headquarters.
Trivia
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- Neal Stephenson's novel Snow Crash contains a brief passage about the Colonel. He is held in high regard by the citizens and management of the franchised nation-state, Mr Lee's Greater Hong Kong, and his portrait is displayed in many franchise offices. He is revered for his great age, inscrutable smile, and business acumen.
- A cult following of devoted "KFC Bandits" try to devise their own versions of 11 herbs and Spices. Online forums such as New Food Forum and web sites like Top Secret Recipes are devoted to duplicating the secret recipe.
- In a 2006 episode of the popular crime drama CSI: Miami, a video game representative responds to Horatio Caine's demands that he summarize elements of his game with the quote "That's like asking Colonel Sanders for his secret 11 herbs and spices".
- In Scrubs, Colonel Doctor (a doctor who nobody seems to know the name of), gets his nickname from bearing a striking resemblance to Colonel Sanders.
- In January 26, 2006, Kentucky Governor Ernie Fletcher flatly refused Pamela Anderson's PETA-backed demand to remove a statue of Colonel Sanders from the Kentucky Capitol Building.
- The Mel Brooks movie Spaceballs has a character named Colonel Sandurz. When Dark Helmet, the spoof of Darth Vader makes a request to the Colonel and he is too afraid to comply, Dark Helmet replies, "What's the matter, Colonel Sandurz? Chicken?"
- In an episode of The Muppet Show, a picture of Colonel Sanders is used as a dartboard in Camilla's dressing room.
- According to Todd Wilbur's book Top Secret Recipes the "11 herbs and spices" are actually just flour, salt, pepper, and MSG.
- In Adam Sandler's movie The Waterboy, he refers to his biology teacher as Colonel Sanders, due to his appearance which strikingly resembles the Colonel's.
- In an episode of Family Guy, Peter exclaims "You mean I came all the way to Kentucky to get some of your fried chicken and the Colonel's not even working?"
- The King of Town on Homestar Runner dressed up as Colonel Sanders for Halloween 2005, and showed off his secret mixture of eleven herbs and spices. When Homestar makes off with the bag, the King says that the bag he held up only had ten herbs and spices.
- In the 2002 movie Undercover Brother, a former general (played by Billy Dee Williams) passes on a presidential run to set a chain of fried chicken restaurants. Dubbing himself "The General," the brainwashed Williams sold the chicken to black people, who were also brainwashed when they ate the chicken. The restaurant's tagline was "Watch out, Colonel! Here comes the General!"
- Colonel Sanders' famous Popcorn Chicken are often used in the TV sitcom The Simpsons as a running gag
- In the 2005 film remake of The Longest Yard, Paul "Wrecking" Crewe (played by Adam Sandler) sees someone who looks like Colonel Sanders eating chicken, and comments, "Hey look, it's the Colonel eating his own chicken!"
- In the Little House on the Prairie episode "Wave of the Future" a man with a striking resemblance to Colonel Sanders offers Mrs. Oleson a chance to get into the fried chicken business. His name was not mentioned.
- In an episode of the anime "The Slayers," one of the villains dresses up as Colonel Sanders. He holds a fried chicken deep in a cave, designed to lure Lina and Gourry into a trap, but ends up getting trampled as they hungrily grab the chicken.
- In a later episode of Oh! Super Milk-chan, Milk watches a program in which its hostess interviews the owner of a pork-leg processing plant, who resembles the Colonel. The product goes into one of Milk's favorite treats, Gentucky's Pork Leg Barrel.
- His portrait is hung in some KFC restaurants.
- In MTV's Celebrity Deathmatch Colonel Sanders fights Dave Thomas from Wendy's.
- A figure resembling Colonel Sanders holding a bucket of chicken appears in the Japanese manga Ranma 1/2
- He appeared on the December 1, 1963 episode (pretaped November 3) of the game show What's My Line? as a contestant. A panel of celebrities had to guess the line of work contestants were involved in. There were celebrity mystery guests on the show, but at the time, Sanders was not well known, and appeared with the panel un-blindfolded, and signed in as "Colonel Sanders". His job was given as "Head of Southern Fried Chicken Company", and the panel did not guess his line (though the host flipped 4 cards over when Sanders accidentally gave away that his product was eaten). He would also later appear as a mystery guest on the syndicated revival of the same program.
- He also appeared on an episode of What's My Line's sister show, I've Got A Secret. His secret was that he started his own business at the age of 65 with his $105 social security check. Before his game, he showed off the multi-million dollar check (or a copy of it) which he received for selling KFC.
- In the first episode of the anime Higurashi no Naku Koro ni Rena intends to retrieve an abandoned Colonel Sanders statue from a trash dump.
- A United States Colonel called Sanders who bears a striking resemblance appears in the science fiction manga Planetes.
- In Barnyard, The Original Party Animals, some chickens in the barn are throwing darts at a photo of Colonel Sanders.
- In a 2006 episode of Late Night with Conan O'Brien during his usual monologue, a ghost of Colonel Sanders appears after O'Brien mentions that Pamela Anderson is going to sue KFC for cruelty to chickens. The ghost then proceeds to make sexual jokes about Anderson that relate to fried chicken (i.e. 'battering those breasts with my special recipe').
- In the 1987 film Good Morning Vietnam, Armed Forces Radio Saigon DJ Adrian Cronauer made a reference that "Ho Chi Minh and Colonel Sanders are the same person, you be the judge".
- In Big Brother: All-Stars, the contestant "Chicken" George Boswell was forced to eat "Big Brother Slop" for almost two months as a penalty for winning the Power of Veto. Host Julie Chen promised George that, should he ever get evicted, the producers will have fried chicken waiting for him. On August 31, George was evicted, and a man dressed as Sanders was waiting for him with a bucket of Kentucky Fried Chicken.
External links
- Kentucky Governor refuses PETA's statue-removal demand.
- Claudia Sanders' Dinner House (restaurant started by Sanders after selling KFC)