Yes, the Taco Kid rides again on this blog.
The building at 4300 Oberlin Ave. that was home to Taco Kid |
And fifty years ago this month, Taco Kid was holding a Grand Opening of the store on Oberlin Avenue.
Here’s the ad that ran in the Journal on October 16, 1970.
And a day later, this ad ran in the paper.As I mentioned on an earlier post, the chain was originally called Taco Boy when the West Erie Avenue store opened in 1969. But by early 1970, it had been renamed Taco Kid (which I discussed on this post).
By October 1970, it seems that only the Oberlin Avenue restaurant was still part of the chain (since it was the only location being advertised). Perhaps a Grand Opening being held so many months after the store first opened was due to a change in ownership or something.
Anyway, a month later, Taco Kid held an unusual promotion – a souvenir poster that was 25 cents with any purchase. Here’s the Journal ad from November 27, 1970.
So why do I think the poster promotion was unusual? Because the poster was for a (fictional) movie called "Midnight Sancho" – a takeoff on Midnight Cowboy. The stars of Taco Kid’s movie was Putsom Meatinya and Bidda Hunkov.
Here’s a copy of the poster. I’m surprised that there are still a few of these floating around the United States.
As you can see, it is indeed a takeoff on Midnight Cowboy’s poster. The burrito on the right is wearing the same fringed cowboy jacket as Jon Voigt did on the Midnight Cowboy movie poster, and the burrito on the left has on the long coat that Dustin Hoffman was wearing. (There’s even a tiny bit of the light pole that was on the Midnight Cowboy poster.)
I wonder what advertising agency thought it was a good idea to tie in the Taco Kid name with an X-rated film about (as Wikipedia puts it) “the unlikely friendship between two hustlers: naive prostitute Joe Buck (Voigt) and ailing con man “Ratso” Rizzo (Hoffman).”****
Although the smell of the hookah smoke now wafts on Oberlin Avenue where once the aroma of tacos and burritos drifted, there’s still one tell-tale sign of the building's origin as a Mexican fast-food joint: its windows.
A realty website reveals that the original half-dome windows from Taco Boy/Taco Kid days are still visible from the inside.
Wasn't that also a KFC for a while?
ReplyDeleteYou are correct, it was a Kenny King’s KFC by the time of the 1974 phone book.
ReplyDeleteWhat is the earliest business you have a record of at 4300 Oberlin Ave? The oldest business I have a record of is the Kenny King. Not listed in my 1939 directory as it was outside the city limits and looking at the Historic Aerials it was just farmland until the mid 1960s anyway. The first time the aerials show anything is 1969 when a miniature golf course was there but not the building.
ReplyDelete...FWIW, I definitely remember the KFC at that address; when I worked at Economy Sales/ESCO (now the Murray Ridge Center), that was a regular lunch dinner destination - but there were some remnants of the old miniature golf course still at the site next door to that. As of summer of '78, there were still good-sized sections of walkway there, and at least one or two holes could be seen, if overgrown.
ReplyDeleteMike