Friday, May 31, 2019

Boston Fried Chicken: Brockton Grand Opening

Boston Fried Chicken & Burritos had their grand opening in Brockton recently.

No expense was spared. BFC is expanding from their successful effort in Dorchester. They are a Halal restaurant, which means that they adhere to some Islamic/kosher thing about how the chickens are slaughtered. It's in the Koran, so Allah himself has passed down this recipe, presumably through Mohammed. If you have Kareem Abdul-Jabbar over, you can take him to BFC with good conscience.

I'm not sure if Colonel Sanders prepares his chicken according to the teachings of Islam, even accidentally. The Colonel most likely resents BFC biting his style. The Boston Fried Chicken name is basically like opening a hamburger joint and calling it "McDaniel's." I would have capitalized on the Koran stuff and named it "Chicken Jihad" or something.


We stumbled on BFC while in the City Of Champions taking pictures for some other insipid article. We had actually just eaten breakfast in Bridgewater, it was 9 AM and none of us were hungry. However, one of the first things they teach you in journalism school is to never pass up chicken prepared in accordance to Islamic culinary law. I went in with the kid, Mom stayed in the car.

While we were familiarizing ourselves with the menu, there was some street person in there trying to get some chicken fronted. "I'll go home and get the money after," he said. The manager declined that proposition.

BFC seems to be an urban phenomenon, as the need for Islamic culinary law in places like Cohasset and Chatham isn't enough to lure in the franchise.

They aren't upfront about the Halal angle, so BFC basically looks like a B- Kentucky Fried Chicken... with burritos. Both KFC and Taco Bell were losers in the fast food game until they joined forces. Now, the KFC/Taco Bell conglomerate has a larger market share than BK or Wendy's.

BFC answers lightweight liberal complaints about feeding oil fried chicken to kids in a nation with Obesity issues by offering fruit. You have to make a conscious decision to fatten yourself. Either that, or the fruit is decorative.


Our chicken was juicy and tasty, although it looks here like Dino Flintstone having a Triceratops from the rear.


Colonel Sanders is just down the road, watching carefully.

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Massachusetts Town Names That Tourists Can't Pronounce


Scituate

Sort of like "sit chew it," but not really.

New Bedford

No worries... New Bedford is also known as New Betty, New Beddy, New Beffuh and both Beige and New Beige. I'm pretty sure that New Beffuh is white trash articulation, while various forms of Beige are pure Portuguese patois. After a while, it just sort of became one of the names.

Each of these names are used extensively, especially by me.

Leicester

"Molester" without the first name of the slap-happy Stooge. Remember, the "r" is non-rhotic.


Billerica

Silent "e," and "rica" is pronounced like My Friend Flicka.


Gloucester

The people who make the Gorton's Of Gloucester commercials pronounce it wrong. It's actually sort of like "Gloss Stir"... if you pronounce that last R, that is.


Worcester

I was a security guard at the Worcester Centrum one year, and I saw Charlie Daniels botch this one. "Me and the boys travel across the land, but we always love it when we come back to War Chester." Someone up front shouted the proper word, causing Daniels to make a confused face and say, a bit more properly, something that sounds somewhat like Rooster. The town is sometimes pronounced like the steak sauce, and vice-versa.


Somerville

The best way I can explain this without maxing out the syllable-syllable-syllable thing is to say that the Beach Boys or the Heat Miser should live here. Ironically, this is where Winter Hill is.


Leominster

Lemon-stir, quite possibly named so that people with a jar of water and some sugar would never forget how to make lemonade. Bree Sisson, the WBZ newsie from Jacksonville, always stumbles over this one. I forgive her.


Chicopee

Sort of like "chicory," but not really. This mostly just fools foreigners, but it fools them badly.



Sandwich

One thing that I discovered when I moved to Cape Cod is that about 20% of the people I know pronounce this as "Sammich." It goes up to 35% if the town name is dropped mid-sentence.


Tyngsborough

"Ting," not "Tying." Also, note the over-lettering of what should be "boro." Many towns, including Middleboro and Foxboro, refuse to use the ugh ending. No, none of these town names end in a way that rhymes with "cough."


Rehoboth

People who write dictionaries- who may just have one guy who specializes in the little ruh-hoe-buth parts of dictionaries- know how to tell you how to pronounce this. I can't do it, at least not in print.


Cataumet, Waqouit, Weqauquet, etc...

Cape Cod's town names are easy, but they make up for it by having impossible village names.


Woburn

The "o" is pronounced exactly like the "u" is pronounced in "tuba," because... well, f*ck you.


Haverhill

More "shave" than "have." A rare pronounced R sound in a Massachusetts town name.


Cotuit

"O" as "uh," then the last part of "Do it to it." Yes, the "o" is a "u" sound and the "u" is an "o" sound. We may one day be invaded by a foreign power, but they will not sneak up on us if they have to talk at all.


Fairhaven

You'd think that "fair" is in this word, but you'd be wrong. The "ir" was put in that word just to fool the British. The remainder of the prefix is pronounced like a longer way to run... provided that The Sound Of Music is set in Mission Hill.



Duxbury

Childe Stephen made a relatively quick leap from Dorchester to Quincy to Duxbury in the 1970s. Duxbury is about where, after Busing, the Boston accent runs into the more clipped Cape Cod accent. I spent 4th and 5th grade being removed from regular class for Speech Therapy, and all of it was me, over and over, having to say words like "farther" and "carnivore" as they exorcised my Southie accent like I was Regan MacNeil. As for pronouncing Duxbury, some people pronounce the end like Miss Sisson's first name, some say it sort of like "berry," and some say it sort of like the last part of Kitty Purry. The first part is like "Ducks," and not at all like Frank Dux from Bloodsport.


Tyringham

"Tier," not Tie."


Cochituate

Next....


Hyannis

More "Buy Ann this" than "Uranus."


Nahant

Just as confusing backwards as forwards.


Eastham

Looks easy enough. The end can be a deal-breaker. I threw this article up on the Eastham FB page, and there is some debate ongoing. 'Ham or 'Hum, choose your side wisely. It is tied very heavily into how one pronounces "Chatham." I'm an Upper Cape guy, this is Outer Cape stuff, and I can't be the one who makes the call.


Housatonic

Should be in Texas, and used as an adverb.


Wellesley

Also should be used as an adverb.


Mattapoisett

This isn't that hard to pronounce, but you have to stare at it for a second before you do so.



Quincy

Your favorite TV coroner pronounces his own name wrong, there's a Z in this.


Assinnippi

A little bit of Mississippi, in Norwell.


Assonet

Sounds like a crude name for pantyhose.


Cambridge

More "I came, I saw..." rather than Cam Neely's first name.


Padanaram

The nice part of Dartmouth, but it sounds like a level of Hell.


Truro

A rare Massachusetts word that pronounces both "r" sounds. It fools people who try to fake a Boston accent by dropping every "r." The actor who portrayed Cliff Clavin would have Jacksonian seizure if "Truro" came up mid-sentence on the teleprompter.


Amherst

No "H."


Acushnet

"A cushy net," minus the "y." The town seems to be named after a hammock.


Groton

Rhymes with "cotton," I think. I don't get there much.


Athol


Local Town Nicknames


Most of the town names around here are easy enough to figure out. Duxbury was the name of the Standish family estate back in the E. Plymouth was named after an English port city. Hull was named after an English river, Marshfield was named for her meadows, Kingston was named for Stephen King, and so forth.

But locals have their own language, and these towns around here often get a second name, and sometimes several of them.

I'll lead off here by stating that I know where none or almost none of these nicknames come from... especially the fun ones like Marsh Vegas or Deluxebury. I'll be guessing, mostly to entertain you good people. If you disagree, don't get all mad at me... you'll find me amenable to opposing views, because I realize even before I start writing that your guess is as good as- and possibly better than- mine. I just happen to be the one at the keyboard.

Let's check some nicknames... and folks, if you get offended, remember that I'm not the Chamber of Commerce. Your town earned these nicknames.


Marshfield 

We may as well start at the top. Marsh Vegas is the Grandaddy Caddy of local town nicknames.

A lot of people hate this nickname, but I think that they're being a bit sensitive. Marsh Vegas- big, bold, bawdy- rules!

It almost doesn't matter, because Marshfield people tend to identify their homes by villages. They are more likely to say "Brant Rock" or "Green Harbor" than to answer "Marshfield." No one from Duxbury does that, other than perhaps the people in really rich neighborhoods saying something along the lines of "Washington Street."

Las Vegas was founded in 1905, and gambling was legalized there in 1931. After Dubya Dubya Deuce, casinos began to spring up. It was famous after that.

But where does Marsh Vegas come from?

There are several prominent theories.

1) Mark Parentau made it up.

Parentau,  the kid-diddling former WBCN DJ, was a Green Harbor resident once. If you waste a morning looking for Marsh Vegas origin stories, you see ol' Mark Parentage coming up a lot.

However, it seems as though he may have just popularized the term by dropping it on WBCN broadcasts when he could. Mark started at BCN in the late 1970s, and the term was already in wide use for decades by then.

2) Marshfield Fair horse racing

You can bet on horses, and that goes a long way in a place founded by Puritans so stuffy that they even banned Christmas.

The Marshfield Fair, and several other agricultural fairs, were allowed to solicit betting on horse racing. Race Fixing was widespread.

However, this is more likely a part of the whole than the whole itself. If it were the whole, Marshfield would have a horse-racing styled nickname, aka Marshfield Downs or something.

3) Gambling, Ballrooms, Eating Establishments

We live in a modernized South Shore, with malls every 1000 yards and a Dunkin' on every block. It used to be a lot quieter in these parts.

But not Marshfield. As soon as ocean recreation became popular in 'Murica, Marshfield was a favorite spot. Marshfield began to cater to out-of-towners, and was soon the Fun Mecca of the region. Compared to, say, a sleepy Freetown side street, Marshfield would look like the friggin' City Of Light.

The resulting Gestalt of it would be a mix of all of those attractions, viewed from an unsophisticated Swamp Yankee eye, resulting in a cool nickname.

4) "The Meadows"

"Las Vegas" or "Los Vegas" (I took French in high school, which got me laid a couple of times but is of no use in this particular discussion) is Spanish for "the meadows." Marshfield is literally covered in meadows, to the extent that there really was no second choice for a town name... except, of course, Marshfield.

5) Route 139

Marshfield was never shy about her commercial district. Route 139 is almost a complete run of business signage from the highway to the beaches. It may not look like much if you drive by it every day, but you need to remember that neighboring Duxbury wouldn't even let Dunkin' put a sign up.

Most people in these parts live in quiet little cul de sacs, so Route 139 is as much advertising as they'll see unless they drive up to Boston or turn on the infomercial channel.

Anyhow, your guess is as good as mine.

If Marshfield dropped the "field" and added "Vegas" to the town name, they'd probably be everyone's second favorite town.

Long shot/you heard it here first bet? If "Vegas" can be hung off of whatever Massachusetts town gets a casino, look for some variation of the Vegas name to be formed from their name. "Taunt Vegas" or "Midd Vegas" or whoever...

Let's hop a town line or two, shall we?



Pembroke

Pembroke has 2 nicknames, neither one in wide usage. "Pimp Broke" is mostly used by hip-hop fan kids, and may never have been uttered by anyone over 17 years old who isn't writing this article.

"Pemby" is useful only to people who have to write "Pembroke" a lot. It's kind of cute and peppy, but is also not in wide use.

Pembroke's nearest flirtation with an alternate name was in colonial times. They were very nearly called "Brookfield," as the town is covered with both brooks and fields. "Mattakeesett," which means "place of many fish," was also pretty catchy.

They ended up naming it after a Welsh castle, river, battle and village. Massachusetts got the far more peaceful Pembroke.

There is a small section of Pembroke named Bryantville, but it was never really a contender for the whole town's name. I spent a year of academia trying to find out who named Bryantville, and I'm pretty sure it was a guy named Bryant.


Hanover 

Some nicknames take care of themselves. Hanover is named after a German city, sort of as a tribute to King George, a Hanoverian head of state in England who was perishing at the time of Hanover's 1727 incorporation.

Hanover (formerly a part of Scituate, another hard-drinking town) people are the veterans of many a hard-fought bottle, and they don't need a second nickname.

Hangover!



Taunton

Taunton has a pair of nicknames, neither of which really fits.

"Silver City" harkens back to the days when silversmiths practiced their craft there. There's nothing wrong with this nickname, other than Taunton not being in Nevada.

It's bad enough that people use "Taunton Mall" in place of the "Silver City Galleria "

Taunton's "Christmas City" nickname stems from their zealous holiday decorations. Attleboro, right next door, has them beat with La Sallette.



Scituate

Scituate is a pretty cool name, made cooler by the fact that only locals can pronounce it.

You will hear this pronounced with a misleading "Skit" prefix now and then, perhaps springing from the Cape Cod habit of teasing the tourists (for instance, there is no Cape Cod Tunnel) now and then.

We may as well knock off another Heavyweight next...


Duxbury

Duxbury is a rather posh locale, and shoulders a lot of hate from the more blue collar towns. Naturally, there will be some good-natured ribbing involved.

Unknown to history, some South Shore genius hung "Deluxebury" on to someone who most likely deserved it. "Bucksbury" was passed over.

Duxbury embraced the term, and using it on them is now ineffective, much like when black people call white people "honky." 

There is a Deluxebury Wheels in Los Angeles, which could just be one of my people moving out west. I wish they made rims, but I don't think that they have a website.



Dorchester

Dorchester is known as "The Dot." That's a shame, because "Dorchester" has the fun-to-use double R spelling, which gives Boston accent users two opportunities to drop the R.

It is also close enough to Worcester to confuse non-residents into a Dor-ster pronunciation.

Southie should have a name to drop Rs from, but they don't.

We had to use the Brockton BFC picture, as I am editing this article on Cape Cod and really do not feel like driving to the Dot for a pic. BFC originated in Dorchester, which makes it OFD, which actually is a nickname for former Dots.



Halifax

Halifax is the opposite of Deluxebury and Marsh Vegas. They chose their own nickname, knocking a syllable off the total cost.

They call the town Hally, pronounced like the first name of Miss Berry from Monsters Inc.

Facebook feedback tells me that usage of this term is limited.




Monponsett

Shortened to Mopo, which is probably a syllable too many for this tiny area. 

It is Wampanoag for "island between the seas."

One of our authors uses Monponsett as a sort of Alan Smithee nom de guerre. She's been doing it long enough that we forgot her real name... it may be Moreau.


Bridgewater

Any of the Bridgewaters- East, West or Regular- is known as Bilgewater here and there. I'm not sure if there is a sewage treatment plant in town. I have no idea who hung it on them.

Locally, there may be some Eastie/Westie distinction. I don't know... I went to the U, but I commuted.

Hardcore Bridgewater residents still refer to Brockton as "North Bridgewater."


Plymouth

Plymouth's America's Hometown nickname is so prominent that it almost needs a nickname for itself. 

It also isn't casual, like most nicknames. I doubt that Madonna's friends call her "Madonna," and- likewise- no one says "I'm headed down to America's Hometown today" to other locals.

However, this was the big one I forgot to add. See? I do take (useful) advice from commenters.



Brockton

It's never a wise policy to make fun of Brockton where she can hear you, but it is known as Brocky, B-Rock, 30 Brock and a dozen other minor epithets.

The high school used to be known as Club Homeboy, but that may have played itself out.

Whatever you call Brockton, I'd advise you to smile when you say it.

Otherwise, stick to The City Of Champions.



New Bedford

New Bedford is sort of lame anyhow... "We couldn't think of an original name, so we stole an old one." Would you pay money to see "New Led Zeppelin" and such?

No worries... New Bedford is also known as New Betty, New Beddy, New Beffuh and both Beige and New Beige. I'm pretty sure that New Beffuh is white trash articulation, while various forms of Beige are pure Portuguese patois. After a while, it just sort of became one of the names.

Each of these names are used extensively, especially by me.


Middleboro

Facebook people are telling me ex post publisho that Middleboro, which we sometimes refer to as Middle Bro, is actually called Diddleboro.

Middleboro is horribly misplaced, as it should be between Northboro, Southboro and Westboro. I'm not sure if there is an Eastboro, that may be what Marlboro is for.

Either way, they need Middleboro. Maybe we could trade the name for a police cruiser or a math teacher.

Renaming our Middleboro would be fun. It was originally Nemasket, which means "place of fish." Naming it for a war hero would rock, as would naming it Mookie to honor the Sox.

Long shot? "Brady." Dude deserves it. 


Mattapoisett

How you pronounce this word is not important, because if you get it wrong, by the time they go through the word's syllables, you'll have had enough time pass where you can say "Yeah, that's how I pronounced it."

Alternately Nattypoisett, Nastypoisett, Nasty P, Matty and Master P, most people just pretend they live in Marion to save syllables.

Complaints on Facebook are monitored and acted upon by small sites like ours. Many thanks to those who reminded the author- who dated a Mattapoisett girl, and should know better- that locals tend to refer to the town as either "Poi" or "the Poi."



The South Coast in itself is a nickname, invented as a sweeping-his-arm term by a weatherman. Todd Gross also coined "The Perfect Storm." 

Dude's a genius at nicknames. You might want to have him around when you have kids. Not at conception, of course...

The South Coast used to be known as the Greater New Bedford area.

I don't know who invented The South Shore. I know that a newspaper nicknamed Metro West.



Bourne

Not many one-syllable towns out there, other than Bourne and all the ones I can't think of (ed. note: Hull, Rowe, Lynn, Ware...ummm...) right now.

One-syllable-named people rarely get nicknames, unless they earn them. "Def Jeff" is a good example. I used to know a Cool Roy, he was also a good example.

Bourne is very parochial, as everyone there self-identifies by villages. The only villages I know who get nicknames are the mainland ones, Bee Bay and Snagawhore. They are generally used derisively, usually by the residents of said villages.

Buzzards Bay House Of Pizza is in my phone as BBHOP, pronounced Bee Bop. The second syllable almost looks Egyptian.

Bournedale is also known as "Shortcut."



Eastham

Eastham doesn't have a nickname. People tend to self-identify by beaches, which is a pretty nice option to have.

Eastham is in this article because I enjoy watching the East-ham vs East-hum pronunciation battles on Facebook. 

I am far too easily amused, yes.



Provincetown

Everyone knows this one, even heterosexuals and people from the Berkshires.

P-Town!

There is no second contender for the title, look.

OK, some people call it the tip.

It is very Massachusetts to not have a gay nickname for Provincetown, especially with Gay Head out on the Vineyard. Tourist dollars may be diverted.


Sandwich

For some reason that I never identified during my near decade as a Bourne town reporter, I have observed a sizable % of the locals refer to this town as "Sammich." It is even done in print.

This is not at all done in a derogatory manner.

Otherwise, Sandwich doesn't really need a nickname.



Hyannis and Wareham

Cape Cod is a nice little place, and generally is the sandy tourist trap that you think it is. However, there are some shifty parts, where folks are sketchy like Captain Bob.

I list these two as a pair, because they share the same modus operandi as far as nickname assumption goes.

For one, both are known as "Brockton-by-the-sea," sort of like "Manchester-by-the-sea" but 100% opposite. Wareham probably lives it more than a town that has the Kennedy Compound in it, but Hyannis had it first for their Wedge neighborhood.

Wareham sort of dines on the leftovers.... "Baby Fall River," "Coastal Lynn," or "Sea Lowell," which doesn't really fit but sounds sort of like Sea Level.

(Please note that we are aware that Lynn has a coast, and is therefore a beach town just like Wellfleet. We would remind the reader of Rush Street Reggie.

Rush Street Reggie was Reggie Theus, Reggie was the shooting guard for the Chicago Bulls who became obsolete when they drafted Michael Jordan. Reggie was traded away to Sacramento.

Theus gained his Rush Street nickname due to his love of the Chicago nightlife. Unfortunately, he wasn't traded to glamorous Los Angeles or sophisticated San Francisco. Nope. Sleepy Sacramento was his new home, not really that far from where that shaky Sasquatch film was made.

A reporter caught up to a miserable Theus at the end of the season, and asked him how he liked California. "Sacramento," said a depressed Rush Street Reggie, "is not California."

We feel that way about Lynn Beach on Cape Cod. Thank you, and apologies in advance)

We love "Shangri-La," but that's just a part of town.

Wareham also most likely would lose out on ?ham, as the town of Ware sort of deserves that question mark.

I do wish to one day write a cop show called "The 'Ham." We'll leave that discussion for a future article.

If we left something out, hit us up in the comments!