Episode notes
In the late 1890s, a drifter named Ronald McDonald toured county fairs across the Midwest with a tent he called the “Happy Meal.” He wore a dark red suit, black waistcoat, white gloves, and a painted smile so wide it looked like it cut into his cheeks. Admission was free for children. Inside his tent, the light was dim and the air smelled of sweet bread and varnish. Each child received a small red paper box with a yellow emblem on the side—a bun, a slice of cold meat, a carved wooden toy, and a card that read: “Eat up. Come back tomorrow.”
Parents saw nothing wrong. But children walked out pale and silent. Some refused to eat. Some wouldn’t speak at all. By the end of the summer, 16 children had vanished from the towns where his tent appeared. When the law finally searched his wagon, they found it empty—except for red paint, yellow cloth, a ...