A Quote by Rene Redzepi

The restaurant industry is brutal. — © Rene Redzepi
The restaurant industry is brutal.
Restaurant industry sales in 2011 are estimated to have reached a record high of $604 billion, up 3.6 percent from 2010. Restaurant employment grew 1.9 percent in 2011, with some 230,000 jobs added, the strongest gain in five years.
I loved working on that show [Defiance]. I mean, that show was brutal. We worked long, brutal hours in really brutal weather.
The movie industry is brutal. It is dangerous. It is, for most, soul destroying.
I absolutely love the restaurant industry.
Film industry is a pretty brutal business. If you fall too far behind, all of the perfectionism in the world won't save you.
I started in the restaurant industry when I was 22, so I've had quite a long tenure, if you will.
Restaurant kitchens are highly pressurised environments, with lots of young men, and that means one thing: testosterone. It's not brutal - it's military. It is regimented, tough. People are put into compartments and have to do exactly what they're told or the whole thing falls apart.
The level of jealousy and insecurity in this industry [restaurant] is far greater than ever before.
In the bar and restaurant industry, you're always one idea away from your next quarter-million.
Nowadays with the internet, it's an equal opportunity brutal playing field. I mean, everyone is brutal to everybody half the time. People can be unbelievably brutal on the internet, about everything. But they can also be really, really nice. The problem is that human beings like to focus on the negative sometimes, unfortunately.
The restaurant industry in New York in the '80s was a good place to hide out if you had issues.
When I started at Puma, you had a restaurant that was a Puma restaurant, an Adidas restaurant, a bakery. The town was literally divided. If you were working for the wrong company, you wouldn't be served any food; you couldn't buy anything. So it was kind of an odd experience.
If the brutal facts are not faced by leaders, the brutal reality sets in.
I'm lucky that my restaurant partners are my wife Liz and Doug Petkovic. We opened our first restaurant over 15 years ago. And we didn't open up our second restaurant for almost ten years. So that gave us a good foundation of employees.
I do not consider divorce an evil by any means. It is just as much a refuge for women married to brutal men as Canada was to the slaves of brutal masters.
Both sides in Syria are bad. One side is a brutal dictator, and the other includes Islamists and terrorists who are dangerous already and who would be brutal in power if given the chance.
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