Page semi-protected

Big Belly Burger

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Big Belly Burger
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceAdventures of Superman Vol. 1 #441 (June 1988)
Created byJohn Byrne
In-story information
Type of businessRestaurants
Owner(s)LexCorp

Big Belly Burger is a fictional fast food restaurant chain in the DC Comics universe. It has appeared in a number of comic book titles and stories, alongside multiple appearances in other media, most notably including various television series set in the Arrowverse.

Fictional history

John Byrne, who created Big Belly Burger.

Big Belly Burger was created by writer John Byrne in the comic book Adventures of Superman in June 1988. The fast food chain was given its initial visual appearance by penciller Jerry Ordway.[1] The restaurant was inspired by Bob's Big Boy, a real-world chain of restaurants.[citation needed]

In DC Comics publications, Big Belly Burger is said to be one of the largest fast-food chains in the United States. Founded in Coast City[2] in the 1950s,[3] the chain opened restaurants across the world following its purchase by LexCorp.[2] Big Belly Burger is well-known in the DC Comics universe for its French fries, milkshakes, and large hamburgers. Its signature menu items include three burgers: the Belly Buster,[4][5][6] the Belly Bloater,[citation needed] the Belly Flop,[6][7] and the Cheesemeister Deluxe.[8][a] Its signature milkshake is the "Chocorrific",[10] although it also sells a strawberry-banana shake.[11] Desserts sold include apple pie and a "Drizzle Doodle" (whose exact composition is not defined).[10] The restaurant is depicted as also selling a hot dogs[5] egg salad sandwiches,[12] chicken sliders, fish sandwiches,[11] and breakfast items.[13] The chain's products include "value" combination meals (main item, side, and drink)[13] and "Jolly Meals",[14] a child's meal that comes in a box with an action figure.[15] The "Smiley Meal" is a similar boxed meal including a burger, fries, and cookie.[16]

The Big Belly Burger mascot is a smiling, bearded, red-haired man with glasses (modeled on comic book writer and editor Andy Helfer).[17] The mascot is often depicted holding aloft a plate on which a large hamburger rests.[18] Variations of the mascot also appear, such as a mascot with an upraised arm and no plate.[19] Beginning around 2008, a Big Belly Burger logo began to be depicted in DC Comics. This logo consists of a large red circle with a heavy black border, a smaller white smiley off-center at the top of the red circle, and two three-fingered cartoonish hands (one in the red circle, one opposite the smiley at the top of the red circle). The image looks like a rotund, smiling person patting a fat stomach and giving a thumb's up.[20] Big Belly Burger also has a catchphrase, "It's Belly Belly good" (a play on the words "very very good").[16][21][22] The slogan "Big Choices, Big Value, Big Belly!" has also been used.[13]

All Big Belly Burgers have a drive-through.[11][14] Some Big Belly Burger locations are depicted in the comics as having a "Playplace", an area where small children can play on jungle gym equipment and slides.[15] At least one has a jukebox.[12]

Various stories also establish that Big Belly Burger enjoys widespread brand awareness, and only O'Shaughnessy's (a fictional fast food chain with an Irish theme which also appears in DC Comics) may have more locations and be better known by the public.[citation needed]

Notable appearances

Superman

Big Belly Burger has appeared more often in Superman comics than in any other DC Comics publication.[citation needed] One notable appearance was in a 1990 story in which the villainous magical imp Mr. Mxyzptlk animated a Big Belly Burger mascot statue and used it to fight Superman.[21] In 1999, Superman characters Jimmy Olsen and Perry White were depicted in an advertisement for the fast food chain:[23][b]

Jimmy Olsen: You'd better hustle with those Big Belly Burgers, Mr. White. Perry White: Great Caesar's Ghost! I'm grilling as fast as I can, Olsen... and don't call me Chef!"

In January 2016, Jimmy Olsen mentions that the first time he and Clark Kent spent time together was at a Big Belly Burger, and that he had his first interview with Superman at the same restaurant after the meal. A background image in the same issue of Superman shows a Big Belly Burger "Employee of the Month" named Stan, who bears a strong resemblance to legendary comic book writer, editor, and publisher Stan Lee.[24]

Booster Gold

The superhero Booster Gold was once depicted as working (for a brief time) at a Big Belly Burger.[25] He also is depicted appearing in Big Belly Burger television advertisements,[26] and a Big Belly Burger sticker appeared on Booster Gold's coffin along with other corporate sponsors (including Soder Cola, Cap's Hobby Shoppe, EZ Caskets, Guardian Cigarettes, Lit Beer, Pep Cereals, and Vertigo Comics).[27]

Son of Vulcan

Big Belly Burger made two appearances in the Son of Vulcan limited series comic book. The first issue of the publication depicted Big Belly Burger as the location where 14-year-old orphan Miguel "Mikey" Devante worked when he met the superhero Vulcan and received his powers from him.[28] The fictional restaurant appeared again in the limited series' final issue, after Devante defeated a group of supervillains.[29]

Other heroes

Will Payton, the teenage version of the superhero Starman, is depicted as a Big Belly Burger employee in a 1989 story,[30] and the DC Comics alien Nix Uotan is depicted working at Big Belly Burger during his exile on Earth in a 2008 story.[20] The superheroine Skyrocket of the superhero group Power Company also was depicted working at a Big Belly Burger in order to earn money prior to becoming a hero-for-hire in a 2002 tale.[31] Captain Marvel ate a Big Belly Burger at almost every meal during his time with the Justice League.[32]

Other versions

Injustice: Gods Among Us

In the ninth issue of Injustice: Gods Among Us - Year Five, Bizarro and the Trickster eat at a Negev-based Big Belly Burger location. After Bizarro accidentally starts a fight, he misinterprets a statement from the Trickster and massacres the witnesses at the restaurant with his heat-vision.[33]

In other media

Film

Television

  • The fictional chain appears a number of times in the TV shows set in the Arrowverse:
    • Big Belly Burger is regularly featured in first and second seasons of the television series Arrow, and occasionally thereafter. Big Belly Burger made its first appearance in the third episode of the first season, where John Diggle brings Oliver Queen and Tommy Merlyn to the restaurant after they are beaten by Max Fuller's henchmen. Diggle's sister in law, Carly, is a waitress there.[35] It makes another major appearance when Oliver Queen, John Diggle, and Felicity Smoke meet at the Big Belly Burger where Carly works as they plot to capture a jewel thief known as The Dodger.[36] A Big Belly Burger is where The Canary first appeared in the second season premiere episode.[37] Felicity Smoak announced toward the end of the second season that she's no longer patronizing the restaurant: "No Big Belly Burger, though; it's giving me a big belly."[38]
    • Big Belly Burger is also regularly featured in the television series The Flash. The restaurant makes its first appearance in the show's premiere episode,[39] and in another episode The Flash locates a villain after being told the attack is occurring near a Big Belly Burger.[40] The series depicts the Flash as needing to eat a large amount of food to replenish the energy expended by running. In the episode "Revenge of the Rogues", the hero is shown having eaten several hundred Big Belly Burger hamburgers (whose wrappings lie in a pile next to him).[41] Eobard Thawne mentions that he's a fan of Big Belly Burger in the season one finale "Fast Enough". He's seen later in the same episode eating a Big Belly Burger hamburger, drink, and fries.[42] Hunter Zolomon of Earth-Two (posing as Jay Garrick) remarks that every Earth in the Multiverse has a Big Belly Burger.[43] A Big Belly Burger meal is one of the first things the Harrison Wells of Earth-2 asks for when he meets the Flash in the episode "The Darkness and the Light".[44]
    • In the Supergirl episode "Fallout", Kara Danvers brings a serving of Big Belly Burger food to Lena Luthor.[45]
    • In the Legends of Tomorrow episode "Meat: The Legends", it is revealed that Big Belly Burger originally began as a diner named Big Bang Burger located in San Bernardino in 1955 where it is run by Bert Beeman. His wife Rhonda found a liquid from a cocoon that was located in a displaced alien pod she found and used it for the secret sauce so that they can have Big Bang Burger outdo the restaurant opened by "those two brothers". The Legends stumbled upon Rhonda's plot and she is killed when a moth-like Giant Air Feeder emerges from it's cocoon and eats her. After Bert is eaten by the Giant Air Feeder which is later slain by Esperanza "Spooner" Cruz, waitress Sandy Sledge becomes the new owner of the restaurant and renames it Big Belly Burger.[46]
  • In Powerless, an advertisement for Big Belly Burger can briefly be seen in the pilot episode "Wayne or Lose".[47]
  • A Big Belly Burger location appears in the Justice League Action episode "Best Day Ever", where it is visited by the Joker and Lex Luthor. This version of the restaurant serves more than burgers, with their food items including Belly Tacos and Double Belly Cheese Fries.[48]

Video games

  • Big Belly Burger is referenced in the DC Universe Online. It is a four-part "Franchise Briefing" (e.g., information about a business appearing in the DC Universe Online) that can be found in the Little Bohemia and Chinatown districts of Metropolis and in the Burnley and Diamond Districts of Gotham. Players may also collect five types of cookies (such as the Big Belly Dinner Mint Cookie, the Big Belly HappyTime Meal Cookie, or the Choco-brand Big Belly Cookie Bits), and receive a secret message as well as a piece of alien technology.[51]
  • In Lego Dimensions, Green Arrow attempts to persuade Homer Simpson to help him track down Hank Scorpio by promising to take him to Big Belly Burger afterwards. Despite this promise, Homer ignores him due to his stupidity.[53]

Six Flags Parks

Miscellaneous

  • Although it does not appear in the actual film, Big Belly Burger is referenced in tie-in materials to the film Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. This version of the restaurant chain solely operates along the East Coast of the United States and has locations in Coast City, Gotham City and Metropolis. This version also has burgers named after real people in the DC universe, such as the Wayne Steakburger for Bruce Wayne and the Dent Double for Harvey Dent.[56]
  • In promotion for the release of Zack Snyder's Justice League, Warner Bros. Consumer Products partnered with Wonderland Restaurants to release a real-life Big Belly hamburger as part of its "Mother Box" take-home dining experience. This version of the burger was topped with lettuce, tomatoes, onions, an eight ounce beef patty, and potato and onion rösti on a pretzel bun. It was sold from April to May 2021.[57]

References

Notes
  1. ^ This is apparently the cheeseburger which Deadman craves.[9]
  2. ^ The advertisement plays off the running gag in Superman comics in which Jimmy calls White "Chief" in reference to White's role as editor of the Daily Planet newspaper, after which White consistently orders Olsen to never call him that again.
Citations
  1. ^ Adventures of Superman Vol. 1 #441 (June 1988).
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Jaffe, Alex (June 17, 2020). "Ask...The Question: How Can Mr. Terrific Be an Atheist if He's Met the Spectre?". DC Universe Infinite. Retrieved July 20, 2021.
  3. ^ Flash Vol. 4 #32 (August 2014).
  4. ^ Adventures of Superman Vol. 1 #564 (February 1999); Superman Vol. 2 #36 (October 1989).
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Nightwing Vol. 2 #104 (April 2005).
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b Showcase '95 #10 (November 1995).
  7. ^ The Power of Shazam! #16 (July 1996).
  8. ^ Superman Vol. 2 #59 (September 1991).
  9. ^ Justice League Dark #19 (June 2013).
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b Action Comics Vol. 1 #973 (April 2017).
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b c Justice League Vol. 2 #20 (July 2013).
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b Brightest Day #7 (October 2010).
  13. ^ Jump up to: a b c Suicide Squad Vol. 4 #30 (July 2014).
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b Formerly Known as the Justice League #1 (September 2003).
  15. ^ Jump up to: a b Black Canary Vol. 3 #1 (September 2007).
  16. ^ Jump up to: a b Impulse #50 (July 1999).
  17. ^ Byrne, John (September 5, 2008). "Unexpected Byrne references". Byrne Robotics. Retrieved October 22, 2016.
  18. ^ Adventures of Superman Vol. 2 #480 (July 1991).
  19. ^ Justice League Spectacular #1 (April 1992).
  20. ^ Jump up to: a b Final Crisis #3 (September 2008).
  21. ^ Jump up to: a b Adventures of Superman Vol. 2 #463 (February 1990).
  22. ^ Superman Vol. 2 #92 (August 1994).
  23. ^ Superman Secret Files and Origins #2 (May 1999).
  24. ^ Superman Vol. 3 #46 (January 2016).
  25. ^ JLA Classified #6 (June 2005).
  26. ^ 52 #4 (May 2006).
  27. ^ 52 #18 (September 2006).
  28. ^ Son of Vulcan Vol. 2 #1 (August 2005).
  29. ^ Son of Vulcan Vol. 2 #6 (January 2006).
  30. ^ Starman #16 (November 1989).
  31. ^ Power Company #1 (April 2002).
  32. ^ The Power of Shazam! #22 (January 1997).
  33. ^ Injustice: Gods Among Us - Year Five #9 (May 2016).
  34. ^ Liu, Sam (director) (March 30, 2019). Justice League vs. the Fatal Five (Motion picture). United States: Warner Bros. Home Entertainment.
  35. ^ Guggenheim, Marc; Kreisberg, Andrew (October 24, 2012). "Lone Gunmen". Arrow. Season 1. Episode 3. The CW.
  36. ^ Schwartz, Beth (February 20, 2013). "Dodger". Arrow. Season 1. Episode 15. The CW.
  37. ^ Kreisberg, Andrew; Guggenheim, Marc (October 9, 2013). "City of Heroes". Arrow. Season 2. Episode 1. The CW.
  38. ^ Mericle, Wendy; Schwartz, Beth (April 23, 2014). "Seeing Red". Arrow. Season 2. Episode 20. The CW.
  39. ^ Kreisberg, Andrew; Johns, Geoff (October 7, 2014). "Pilot". The Flash. Season 1. Episode 1. The CW.
  40. ^ Schapker, Alison; Godfree, Grainne (October 21, 2014). "Things You Can't Outrun". The Flash. Season 1. Episode 3. The CW.
  41. ^ Wu, Kai Yu; Geoff, Johns (January 20, 2015). "Revenge of the Rogues". The Flash. Season 1. Episode 10. The CW.
  42. ^ Stanton, Gabrielle; Kreisberg, Andrew (May 19, 2015). "Fast Enough". The Flash. Season 1. Episode 23. The CW.
  43. ^ Meiojas, Julian; Walczak, Katherine (October 20, 2015). "Family of Rogues". The Flash. Season 2. Episode 3. The CW.
  44. ^ Sokolowski, Ben; Godfree, Grainne (November 3, 2015). "The Darkness and the Light". The Flash. Season 2. Episode 5. The CW.
  45. ^ Jierjian, Harry; Horgan, Dana (October 21, 2018). "Fallout". Supergirl. Season 4. Episode 2. The CW.
  46. ^ Talalay, Rachel; Maala, Matthew; Faust, Morgan (May 9, 2021). "Meat: The Legends". Legends of Tomorrow. Season 6. Episode 2. The CW.
  47. ^ Buckland, Marc; Halperm, Justin; Schumacker, Patrick (February 2, 2017). "Wayne or Lose". Powerless. Season 1. Episode 1. NBC.
  48. ^ Castorena, Jake; Dini, Paul (August 10, 2017). "Best Day Ever". Justice League Action. Season 1. Episode 33. Cartoon Network.
  49. ^ Zwyer, Mel; Vietti, Brandon (July 2, 2019). "Influence". Young Justice: Outsiders. Season 3. Episode 14. DC Universe.
  50. ^ Bishop, Sean; Ryan, Michael (July 2, 2020). "One Minute Mysteries!". Scooby-Doo and Guess Who?. Season 1. Episode 16. Boomerang.
  51. ^ Dimensional Ink Games (January 11, 2011). DC Universe Online. WB Games.
  52. ^ WB Games Montréal (October 25, 2013). Batman: Arkham Origins. WB Games.
  53. ^ Traveller's Tales (September 27, 2015). Lego Dimensions. WB Games.
  54. ^ "Restaurants & Dining". Six Flags Discovery Kingdom. Six Flags. Retrieved July 20, 2021.
  55. ^ "Restaurants & Dining". Six Flags Magic Mountain. Six Flags. Retrieved July 20, 2021.
  56. ^ Wallace, Daniel (February 16, 2016). Time Shortlist Gotham and Metropolis. Time Out Group. ISBN 9781846709807.
  57. ^ Weiss, Josh (February 10, 2021). "WANT A BIG BELLY BURGER? OR JITTERS COFFEE? TAKE A SUPER-SIZED BITE OUT OF THE DC UNIVERSE WITH JUSTICE LEAGUE MEAL KIT". Syfy Wire. Retrieved July 20, 2021.
Retrieved from ""