Golden Arches

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Golden Arches, the McDonald's logo

The Golden Arches are the famous symbol of McDonald's, a fast-food hamburger chain based in Oak Brook, Illinois, USA. They were introduced in 1953, when Dick and Mac McDonald began franchising their company, as part of the standard building design: a pair of stylized arches, one at each side of what was then a walk-up hamburger stand. When viewed from an angle, the design was reminiscent of the letter M, and was incorporated into the company's logo. While McDonald's dropped the physical arches from nearly all of its restaurants in the 1960s, the Golden Arches have remained in the logo, and as a commonly understood term for the company.

A "retro" McDonald's in 2006
A "retro" McDonald's in 2006

They have also been seen more broadly as a symbol of capitalism or globalization, since they are one of the more prominent American corporations that have become global in their reach (along with Coca-Cola and Nike).

Contents

In his book, The Lexus and the Olive Tree, Thomas L. Friedman proposed The Golden Arches Theory of Conflict Prevention, observing that no two countries with a McDonald's franchise had ever gone to war with one another, a version of the democratic peace theory. The theory was never true; For example the 1989 U.S. intervention in Panama (both countries with McDonald's). Shortly after the book was published, the NATO bombing of Serbia proved an exception to the theory, though in a later edition Friedman argued that this exception proved the rule: the war ended quickly, he argued, partly because the Serbian population did not want to lose their place in a global system "symbolised by McDonald's" (Friedman 2000: 252–253). It should be noted that Friedman framed this theory in terms of McDonald's Golden Arches "with tongue slightly in cheek" (Friedman 2005). Recently, Friedman has updated the theory with the Dell Theory of Conflict Prevention (Friedman 2005). In 2006 McDonald's hosting nations Israel and Lebanon were involved in a war [1] which could also be considered evidence against the Golden Arches theory (It is not clear whether the conflict was between Israel and Lebanon or just Hezbollah specifically, and if Hezbollah owned any McDonald's franchises). However their armies didn't fight each other.

U2's PopMart Tour stage with a McDonald's-like arch
U2's PopMart Tour stage with a McDonald's-like arch
  • In many Japanese anime shows (and, to a lesser extent, other media) McDonald's is parodied in a trans-canon spoof called WcDonald's (which, with various spellings, is symbolized with a golden W, sometimes using the upside down M of the golden arches).
  • In the song "Neon" of a little-known metal band, The Kovenant, the lyrics include a mention of McDonald's golden arches:
Bastard proclamations of a dying nation
Social deconstruction through deceit and deception
Hit us with your pointing stick
Golden arches crucifix
We will never be like you
  • In The Far Side, a cow wakes up in the middle of the night, screaming "The golden arches got me!"
  • In the movie Coming To America, the fast-food store where Akeem works is McDowell's, with a Golden Arcs logo, a clear reference to the Golden Arches of McDonald's.
  • The last line of "Cool Place To Park," the last song off of GWAR's 1990 album Scumdogs of the Universe, mentions the golden arches:
Your Golden Arches and you shopping malls
Remind us you must FALL! DOWN!
  • In the song 'Slow Down Gandhi' By political rapper Sage Francis he mentions the McDonalds golden arches:
The day that Chris Columbus got crucified on golden arches
  • In the MMORPG Kingdom of Loathing, you can make evil golden arches by combining two of them.
  • The stage featured on U2's 1997-1998 PopMart Tour featured a McDonald's-like golden arch as a reference to the tour's satirical theme of consumerism.

  • All McDonald's stores, and commercials in Canada have a maple leaf in the middle of the Golden Arches.
  • Pint sized Mullingar Net-minder Al Cahill is credited with being the inspiration behind Naomi Klein's "No Logo". She is said to have drawn heavily on his existentialist poem "Give It A Rest With The Golden Arches" in both tone and cadence for her seminal work.


  • Friedman, Thomas. (2000) The Lexus and the Olive Tree. New York: Anchor Books.
  • Friedman, Thomas. (2005) The Guardian, 21 April 2005.
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