Viral Photos Expose the Dramatic Evolution of Fast-Food Menus Over the Decades Relive the glory days of fast food with this X account's viral thread of retro photos.

By Carl Stoffers Edited by Jessica Thomas

Key Takeaways

  • As competition for value intensifies among big brands, there's a growing nostalgia for when fast-food restaurants offered both vibrant designs and lower prices.
  • One X account shared photos of iconic fast-food chains from the 1970s, '80s and '90s, rekindling memories of a simpler era.
  • Highlights include discovering a fully intact Burger King from the '80s in a closed Delaware mall.

As the inflation-triggered competition for value between big brands heats up, nostalgia for fast-food restaurants — and their affordable prices — is high. One X account takes us back to a simpler time of extreme color schemes, flamboyant designs and low prices.

Related: Considering franchise ownership? Get started now to find your personalized list of franchises that match your lifestyle, interests and budget.

X account Time Capsule Tales is publishing photos of fast food icons like Taco Bell, Burger King, Pizza Hut, McDonald's and others in their 1970s, '80s and '90s glory.

The nostalgic pics include a Burger King that was found "fully intact" behind a wall at a long-closed shopping mall in Wilmington, Delaware, in 2022.

One highlight is the circa 1970s-'80s Taco Bell menu, which explains in great detail what a taco and a burrito are, complete with a sound-it-out, phonetic pronunciation of each food — "Tah-co" and "Buh-ree-toh."

The menu is from when the brand called its Pintos and Cheese refried beans by a different name — Frijoles (Fre-ho-les) and still served the now-extinct Enchirito, which made a brief comeback last year.

Then, there are the prices. One retro Taco Bell menu from 1984 shows how inexpensive it used to be to eat fast food. The prices for drinks — $.45 for a small Pepsi compared to $2.29 today for the same beverage — are immediately noticeable. But it's the Combo Burrito Meal for $1.19 that really stands out. Taco Bell's least expensive combo is the value-inspired temporary $5.99 combo, with prices for combo meals rising from there to the $11.29 price point for the 2 Chicken Chalupa Supreme Combo.

Read More on X: Time Capsule Tales
Carl Stoffers

Entrepreneur Staff

Senior Business Editor

Carl Stoffers is the Senior Business Editor at Entrepreneur, where he covers the franchise industry. Before joining Entrepreneur, he was Managing Editor at IPVM and held editorial roles at The New York Times Upfront, The Marshall Project, and the New York Daily News. He holds a Master's in Journalism from Columbia University.

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