"A.C." > wrote in message
...
>
> i have one of those machines and i am here to tell you it is a magic
chicken
> machine. it makes the best rotisserie chicken. i picked mine up for
dirt
> cheap and barely used at a garage sale. i salt and pepper the
inside,
> quarter an onion, crush four or five cloves of garlic, cut a lemon
in half,
> jam all of the stuff in the cavity not forgetting to sqeeze the
lemon juice
> into the cavity, liberally season the skin with salt / pepper and
> rotisserate away. the outcome is really tasty. the skin is like
crack...
> once you get started, you have to eat it all!
>
I'm sure there must be a lot of these "slightly used machines" that
are for sale or have been sold. That doesn't speak poorly of the
machine but it does not speak well for the original buyer's decision
to purchase it. Most infomercial marketing is intended to make people
believe they can do something that they are really not inclined to do
by simply offering some tool that makes it seem so effortless. So
people who don't ever want to exercise or don't want to cook or don't
want to use a computer feel that by just having that one magical item
they see in the infomercial, that it is going to change their
motivation and outlook and life, which it doesn't. And the items keep
collecting on shelves in garages.
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