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Slide of the Week: August 19th, 2004

Bob’s Big Boy, Michigan 1966

Bob's Big Boy, Michigan 1966

Who can ever forget the Bob’s Big Boy Combo? That signature mushy double burger littered with wilted shredded lettuce, dressed with their own hamburger relish and gobs of mayonnaise served with a bonus bun in the middle. Not only was it difficult to swallow, but it was the inspiration for the Big Mac.

When I was a kid we ate at Bob’s a lot. I downed way more Big Boy Combos than I would ever care to admit. My favorite part was dipping those soggy French Fries in that big dollop of blue cheese that topped of that little bowl of iceberg lettuce. And those chocolate milkshakes served in silver goblets.

Bob’s began as a traditional hamburger stand in Glendale, California in 1936. By the late 1940s there was a handful of stylish coffee shop/drive-ins bearing the name and Big Boy logo in the Los Angeles area. The first franchise, called Frisch’s Big Boy, was in Michigan in 1952. During the 50s, 60s and 70s the chain expanded into many other states including Texas, where it was called Kip’s Big Boy.

Bob, the charming, chubby fiberglass iconic clone, with the check overalls and the Elvis coif, was to the chain what the Statue of Liberty was to the United States. While Lady Liberty held the flame, Bob Held a Hamburger

Here’s to you and Bob

Charles Phoenix

Charles Phoenix
Los Angeles
August 2004

Sets this Slide belongs to:
Food & Recipes & Roadslide

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15 Comments on “Bob's Big Boy, Michigan 1966”

  1. Chris Says:

    I was in Michigan last October and my brother and I stopped at a Bob’s Big Boy in Ann Arbor. As we ordered, I made a comment about “Bob’s” Big Boy to our waitress and she scolded, “It’s just “Big Boy!”, what are you taaaking about? Who’s Baaab?
    Coincidentaly, there were two kids that looked **exactly** like these two (..I mean, down to the shirts and all) sitting just across from us! Is it possible that Bob’s, ur..uh, Big Boy is haunted in MI and these two are laughing it up as I write eating their their chicken fried steak breakfasts? ….which were just divine BTW!!!

    Really sswell stuff!!

  2. Don J Says:

    Yes, nice Michigan dialect-if you’re shot in the Cass Corridor you’ll call a “cap” & in the Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament you pray to “Gad”. Chris meant to say “Elias Brothers Big Boy”, for they own the whole chain now. There used to be one ’round Detroit Metro airport that I remember looked a good deal like Toluca Lake…

  3. Patricia Says:

    I was born and raised in Glendale - cut my teeth on Big Boys - would still love to taste one of them - but moved a bit far away now to get the chance. My Husband worked for them in Glendale when he got out of the Navy. So as a family we have a connection to them.

  4. Markus Says:

    I remember growing up in Indonesia, in the 80s, when the first Bob’s Big Boy opened in Jakarta. For my sister and I, we thought Bob’s Big Boy was another cool thing imported from America. It was such a treat going there with my family. Years later, in college, I stopped by one on the way to Philadelphia from Pittsburgh. To my surprise, none of my friends ever heard of Bob’s Big Boy. Sometimes, I noticed that growing up overseas I really got over-exposed to many (sometimes obscured) American food franchises. But yeah, it was nice to see Bob’s Big Boy and reminisce my long lost childhood. :)

  5. Peter Hoffman Says:

    In South Carolina the “Big Boy” chain was called “Shoney’s”. The name came after Alex Schoenbaum who owned the original chain of Big Boy restaurants in the southeast during the 1950s. Of course, Big Boy was started in 1936 by Bob Wian in Glendale, CA.

    The whole thing about who owned what and when is a little complicated but the Wikipedia has some details at “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Boy_(restaurant)”.

    In the mid-1970s I used to work at the one in Dentsville, SC along with all of my friends as the cooks. We were told that our restaurant was the most profitable one in the chain (i.e., as teenaged employees we got taken advantage of the most - a lot of people got roped into working off the clock there).

    The good memory though is that our food was of very high quality and we even prepared the food that was photographed for the menus. Our customers were very loyal and, when we all quit inside of about a two week period when we finally had enough of the “management”, that location pretty much collapsed.

    That was a shame because we took pride in our work and had developed a whole sub-culture of throwing food and knives to each other as needed.

    For example, if you were busy but needed a knife right now, you yelled “knife off!” and someone would throw a butcher’s knife at you to snatch out of the air. If you were unlucky, a couple of people would throw knives at you!

    That all ended when the night manager came through the swinging door at just the wrong moment and nearly got skewered.

    However, we did call the diners “the audience” and we continued to throw cheese and steaks and anything else we needed in a hurry.

    My friend, Richard, used to be the guy in the Big Boy suit for the Columbia area. That suit sure did stink but how could it not when it was like wearing an arctic sleeping bag in the 100 degree sun? He would go out for ten or twenty minutes to wave at cars and then come back in about to pass out from dehydration! Ah, good times….

    Ok, maybe not exactly “good times”, but we were young, foolish, and just glad to be making $1.60/hour. After all, honest work for honest pay was still an ideal back then.

  6. Don Says:

    I used to work down the street from the one in Glendale (San Fernando Road). As I remember the one in Ontario served quality double burgers, which of course they were famous for.

  7. Rob Says:

    Ahhh, the memories. In the mid-late 1970’s, a favorite haunt of mine was the Big Boy on Van Nuys Blvd in Van Nuys Calif. The Big Boy combo was for me the only thing on the menu!! Well, there was the Silver Goblet chocolate shake. Or them BEAR CLAWS! ! ! Nothing, or no reincarnation of Big Boy, even comes close to the taste anymore. *sigh*

  8. Scott Mercer Says:

    Bob’s Big Boy on Van Nuys Boulevard, where David Lynch consumed a chocolate shake every day for six years at 2:30 p.m….or so goes the tale. (This was in the 1970’s supposedly.) Had the pleasure of dining there a few times before it was torn down for a car dealership, around 1993?

  9. Denise Says:

    I grew up on Kip’s Big Boy in the Dallas area. Oh what I would give for a burger and some of their blue cheese dressing. Used to mix the dressing with a little ketchup and dip my fries in it. Still do that to this day but no other blue cheese dressing compares to theirs.

  10. Melissa Says:

    The Bob’s Big Boy on Riverside in Burbank, Ca. has a menu that’s pretty close to the original one and the building looks the same. You can still get the Big Boy Combo and if you’re a vegetarian (which I am now), you don’t have to miss out…you can get it with a double decked veggie patty, cheese, shredded lettuce, and Big Boy sauce. It tastes great. They still have the hot fudge cake with vanilla ice cream made like the old days with fresh cake and hot fudge from a dispenser (instead of cold cake and fudge heated in a microwave). The prices are also good, especially for Los Angeles. If you’re looking for a nostalgic, googie coffee shop, Bob’s in Burbank won’t let you down.

  11. Judy Fullerton Says:

    In the 50’s Bob’s Glendale was a drive-in complete with carhops and car trays. I still have some of the cards they put on your front window (had the number of your carhop). On the cards I have the Big Boy hamburger was 45 cents and a milkshake was 30 cents.

  12. Walter Bien Says:

    I have a question regarding “Bob’s Big Boy Tarter Sauce”. I noticed on the top of the bottle there is a date, and the word “expires”. Does that mean that one shouldn’t eat it after that date, even though it has been refrigerated all during the time it was opened? Or, does it mean that one shouldn’t buy it after that date? Or, is there some other meaning?

  13. Dan Batroff Says:

    My 1st job was at Bob’s in Phoenix, Az., in the 70’s. I worked at 32nd street and Indian School, Central and Thomas, and filled in sometimes at a store in Scottsdale. I went from dishwasher, to prep cook, to night cook, and eventually breakfast cook. I live in Ca., now, and recently had the pleasure of visiting Bob’s in Calimesa. It’s one of only 7 left(in the whole U.S.A.?) it brought back some great memories!

  14. Brent Says:

    And who could ever forget the “free” Bob’s Big Boy comic books that they gave to the kids. The adventures of Bob, his “girl friend” and his dog. Darn if a Bob’s double-decker wouldn’t hit the spot right now!

  15. Wally Mains Says:

    I am looking for matches from all the different Big Boy franchises.Please let me know if you have any.Wally.

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