Re: Can Bricktown support 3 coffee shops?
We have nice days (dry) here - but they are mostly in the Summer.
Metro - Starbucks was born here, so it would not be too difficult to imagine that Seattle would have an unusually high number of them, would it???
That being said, I still dont agree that Seattle is the centre for coffee culture. Sure, Howard Schultz had a great idea of importing a brasillian blend of coffee, dark roasting it, and selling the "premium" coffee as a gourmet item of "italian cups of joe" which got lots of people "hooked" on dark roast [pressed] specialty coffee - but I would give the coffee culture award to cities in the NE, Chicago, and Italy of course.
Seattle is Starbucks culture - absolutely! But honestly, Portland OR (a peer city of OKC by the way) has a MUCH better coffee culture than does Seattle. They have WAY MORE independent coffee houses than we do as well as the corporate locales like Starbucks, Tully's (another Seattle coffee co), and S.B.C.
It is so interesting how Seattle has gained this image - Im not saying the city isn't great or anything, but as someone who lives here and has traveled EXTENSIVELY - Seattle is just another mid-sized US city that is often pretentious at best. Like I said, there are smaller cities who have better culture yet Seattle takes the credit.
Sure we have a lot of Starbucks here, we started it; just like OKC has a lot of Sonic. Now, I would not call OKC the "culture of fast food" but I would say it is Sonic's home and key market; same for Starbucks at Seattle.
It is the corporate home of Microsoft and Starbucks - so that is what America knows and associates anything high-tech or coffee related, to us. However, Seattle just made it "accessible" and "high fashion". That's all.
Is OKC's coffee culture better than Seattle's, I never said it was, in fact. But I do believe that OKC can support 3 coffee shops/houses in Bricktown - just like anywhere else in the world.
Oh, and those 3-neighbouring Starbucks in downtown Seattle - I bet they were empty or only a few customers, UNLESS it was lunch time or morning/afternoon rush hour.
That's not what I'd call coffee culture.
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
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