Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Creator Of McDonald's Flagship Sandwich, The Big Mac, Dies

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Nov, 2016 11:40 AM
    PITTSBURGH — You probably don't know his name, but you've almost certainly devoured his creation: two all-beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, onions, on a sesame seed bun.
     
    Michael James "Jim" Delligatti, the McDonald's franchisee who created the Big Mac nearly 50 years ago and saw it become perhaps the best-known fast-food sandwich in the world, died Monday at home in Pittsburgh. Delligatti, who according to his son ate at least one 540-calorie Big Mac a week for decades, was 98.
     
    Delligatti's franchise was based in Uniontown, not far from Pittsburgh, when he invented the chain's signature burger in 1967 after deciding customers wanted a bigger sandwich. Demand exploded as Delligatti's sandwich spread to the rest of his 47 stores in Pennsylvania and was added to the chain's national menu in 1968.
     
    "He was often asked why he named it the Big Mac, and he said because Big Mc sounded too funny," his son Michael Delligatti said.
     
    Jim Delligatti told The Associated Press in 2006 that McDonald's resisted the idea at first because its simple lineup of hamburgers, cheeseburgers, fries and shakes was selling well.
     
    "They figured, why go to something else if (the original menu) was working so well?" Delligatti said then.
     
    McDonald's has sold billions of Big Macs since then, in more than 100 countries. When the burger turned 40, McDonald's estimated it was selling 550 million Big Macs a year, or roughly 17 every second.
     
    "Delligatti was a legendary franchisee within McDonald's system who made a lasting impression on our brand," the Oak Brook, Illinois-based company said Wednesday in a statement. The Big Mac "has become an iconic sandwich enjoyed by many around the world."
     
    Ann Dugan, a former assistant dean of the University of Pittsburgh's Katz School of Business and an expert on business franchises, said Jim Delligatti's genius was simple: He listened to customers who wanted a bigger burger.
     
    "In franchising, there's always this set playbook and you have to follow it. Jim saw an opportunity to go outside the playbook because he knew the customer," Dugan said. "He persevered and (McDonald's) listened, and the rest is history."
     
    Delligatti headed M&J Management, a four-generation family business and McDonald's franchise organization, for more than 60 years. He opened his first McDonald's in Pittsburgh's North Hills suburbs in 1957. In 1979, he co-founded Pittsburgh's Ronald McDonald House, then the seventh such facility in the country, where families can stay when children travel to Pittsburgh for life-saving medical care, and he was involved in several other charities.
     
    Delligatti also helped introduce breakfast service at McDonald's, developing the hotcakes and sausage meal to feed hungry steelworkers on their way home from overnight shifts in the mills, his family said.
     
    In addition to his two sons, Jim Delligatti is survived by his wife, Ellie, five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.
     
    The Devlin Funeral Home near Pittsburgh is handling visitation Thursday and Friday. Delligatti's funeral will be held Saturday at St. Joseph's Parish in O'Hara Township.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Chinese Man, 30 Gets Breast Implants To Improve Chances Of Finding A Job

    Chinese Man, 30 Gets Breast Implants To Improve Chances Of Finding A Job
    Convinced that women have more job opportunities than men, a 30-year-old Chinese man decided to get breast implants to increase his odds of finding employment.

    Chinese Man, 30 Gets Breast Implants To Improve Chances Of Finding A Job

    Beware! You May Soon Lose Your Job To Robots

    Beware! You May Soon Lose Your Job To Robots
    Automation threatens 69% of jobs in India, 77% in China, according to a World Bank research which says that technology could fundamentally disrupt the pattern of traditional economic paths in developing countries.

    Beware! You May Soon Lose Your Job To Robots

    How A Patient's 'crazy' Request For A New Womb Made History

    How A Patient's 'crazy' Request For A New Womb Made History
    This was nearly two decades ago, when the Swedish doctor Mats Brannstrom was training to be a physician abroad.

    How A Patient's 'crazy' Request For A New Womb Made History

    Swapping Spit: How Much Cocaine Can Actually Be Passed Through Kissing?

    TORONTO — Is it possible to ingest cocaine by kissing someone who has just snorted the powerful stimulant drug? Enough that its chemical signature would show up on an athlete's doping tests?   

    Swapping Spit: How Much Cocaine Can Actually Be Passed Through Kissing?

    Adolf Hitler Was Drug Addict, Veins Collapsed Due To Injections: Book

    Adolf Hitler Was Drug Addict, Veins Collapsed Due To Injections: Book
    According to Norman Ohler, an award-winning German author, the Fuhrer became addicted to a heroin-like substance called Eukodel which was prescribed following a nervous breakdown in 1944.

    Adolf Hitler Was Drug Addict, Veins Collapsed Due To Injections: Book

    Daughters Belong To All: Sushma Swaraj's Heartwarming Tweet To Pakistani Girl

    Daughters Belong To All: Sushma Swaraj's Heartwarming Tweet To Pakistani Girl
    Sushma Swaraj, in her response to the girl, proved that the bitterness between the two countries will never come in the way of humanity.

    Daughters Belong To All: Sushma Swaraj's Heartwarming Tweet To Pakistani Girl