Stuff You Should Know - Short Stuff: Waffle House Index
Episode Date: February 19, 2025The 24/7 short order restaurant Waffle House is known for staying open during natural disasters, so much so that federal agencies gauge where to start helping in areas where they’re closed.See o...mnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome.
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Hey, and welcome to The Short Stuff.
I'm Josh, and there's Chuck, and Jerry's here too sitting in for Dave,
and we're just cooking it up.
Here's the stuff you should know.
That's right.
We've talked about Waffle House here and there quite a bit over the years, and I was gonna
do a full Waffle House episode that was in the pipeline.
Maybe still, but maybe not after this.
I feel like we've taken a pretty good chunk out of what would have been a Waffle House
episode.
Agreed.
Well, because we're talking about the Waffle House Index. And yes, there's plenty of interesting stuff
about the Waffle House, but I would argue
that the Waffle House Index is possibly
the most interesting thing about the chain
of what everyone in the South or Southeast knows
is 24-7 restaurants that are legendary
for staying open against all odds.
That's right.
And a lot of restaurants and chains may claim to be open
365 days a year.
And they, you know, a lot of them are in general,
but the Waffle House in particular prides itself
and has taken great, great, great efforts
to really stay open.
Like it's gotta be a,
and as you'll see with the Waffle House index, if a Waffle House is closed,
that is very bad news for the area that that place is in because they stay open at all costs.
Yeah, and they don't just stay open at all costs because they couldn't care less about their staff, and
they're just greedy and want to make money. This is actually like by design. There's a corporate
want to make money. This is actually like by design. There's a corporate um, I guess, ideology? Mandate work, sure.
Um, that Waffle House should serve as essentially a
community center during disasters. And
during normal times, they're just Waffle Houses, but during a natural
disaster in particular, you should just stand back and watch them go
because they have actual plans
that the company has developed
to figure out how to stay open to serve the community.
Yeah, for sure.
We're gonna talk about a few of them here and there.
One of them is they have a limited menu
and it's not like, oh, what do we have on hand?
It's like, all right, we're going to, you know, I don't know what they call it on the inside, but let's just say like
we're going to plan B or something. And that means we're switching to the official limited
menu when there are food shortages, when the power's out and stuff like that. Most, I don't
think all of them do at this point, but most of them, and I'm sure they want to have them all on backup generators,
that's been a thing for a while. So if the power's out, you can still probably go to a Waffle House and not only get power, but get a hot meal.
Yeah. Whether you're like somebody whose house just got ravaged or a first responder helping people whose house just got ravaged.
Yeah, or just hungry.
It's a really important thing that you just totally overlook.
Like if your kitchen is gone
and all of the other restaurants in town are shut down,
having a Waffle House open is a really, really big deal.
And they have like actual,
what are called Waffle House jump teams
that can show up.
Parachuters. They parachute in.
They do parachute in. And I hope they have better names for these things than Plan B.
I hope it's more like Plan Darkstar or Plan Sorcerer's Sleeve or something like that.
Okay.
Better than Plan B. But they parachute in, like you said, and they will open a waffle house faster
than you can say waffle house.
Yeah, that's right.
Wait, hold on.
Faster than you can say scattered,
covered, smothered, and chunked.
I know I've asked you how you got yours.
How do you get yours?
Your hash browns?
Do what I just said.
Oh, you do?
So chunked is ham, right?
Yeah, I don't eat ham anymore,
but I haven't been to a Waffle House
since I stopped eating ham,
so yes, I always got it with ham, cheese,
and sauteed onions.
Yeah, I think I told,
I mean, I just get mine straight up.
I'm the weirdo that gets unadorned hash browns
at Waffle House.
But I do get a double order,
because I just, two of those, one isn't enough.
Yeah, agreed.
But I don't go anymore.
I think I mentioned on an episode last time I went,
it was actually with Hodgman,
after he went camping with a group of dudes here
on the way out, I was like,
we're stopping at Waffle House, right?
And he went, oh yeah, we definitely are.
And you don't go anymore?
No, I mean, that was the only time I've been in years.
I see, I got you. I thought you were saying, like you don't wanna replace? No, I mean, that was the only time I've been in years. I see, I gotcha.
I thought you were saying like you don't wanna
replace that memory with another memory.
Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no.
That was just a year and a half ago.
But I just, it's just not, you know,
I went a lot in college, like, you know,
late night after the bars.
But, you know, you grow up a little bit
and you realize you can't eat Waffle House every week.
That's true.
It's a sad realization, everybody.
It's coming your way though, if you're young. Yep.
So I say we take a break and come back
and talk more about this Waffle House Index
and what it is and where it came from.
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brought to you by the American Lung Association and the Ad Council. So, you know, we talked about Waffle House being set up with generators and jump teams and limited menus.
They also have temporary warehouses where they can store stuff, you know, on that limited
menu at least.
And this all started after Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
I think seven of the restaurants were completely destroyed, very sadly.
A hundred of them shut down, but they got up and running again very, very fast.
And the company basically decided like, hey, this is such a valuable thing, we need to come up
with that official plan, like a literal book of how to open as quickly as possible during an
emergency or stay open during an emergency.
Yeah, for sure. Not only did they come up with the book, that's when they figured out, okay, what
kind of limited menu can we come up with? How can we store it? They identified like local temporary food storage they could use that was, you know,
I'm sure central to a number of Waffle House is not one for each one.
And we're just basically ready.
It's called disaster preparedness.
I had no idea about this.
I really just thought Waffle House just stayed open just out of sheer will until I researched this.
But they have a disaster preparedness plan.
And apparently other companies do in the United States too
like Lowe's and Home Depot will
because people need lumber and shovels and hammers and stuff
because they're blew away and they need to rebuild.
And probably also more like generators and gas cans
and so on and so forth.
I don't know why I'm staying on this list,
but Waffle House isn't the only one,
but they're just part of a handful of companies
who've essentially made themselves
like de facto essential operations
for post disaster preparedness stuff.
Yeah, for sure, which leads us finally
to the Waffle House Index, which is a pretty unique thing.
It was the brainchild of a guy named Craig Fugate,
who was the FEMA administrator back in the early 2010s,
and he had that position after the Joplin tornado
of 2011 in May of that year. And he had kind of had this
idea for a little while because he had noticed after, you know, various hurricanes that Waffle
House was one of, if not the only thing open. And he started to notice this sort of trend like, hey,
your community doesn't have water, you don't have power, yet the Waffle House was open.
And he started looking at maps and realized that like,
hey, if you actually look at where the weather hit the hardest and the damage was the most severe,
you can kind of rate that according to whether or not that Waffle House is either open, closed,
or serving a full menu, limited menu, and just how they're doing. And he really, like, that was sort of like the light bulb
above the head moment when he said,
this could be a real thing.
The Waffle House index could really help us out.
Yeah, and I mean, it's as simple as like calling
the local Waffle House in Tampa after a hurricane
just passed through and saying, are you guys still open?
And if they don't answer the phone,
there's trouble in that community. he was saying like that's where FEMA
should start sending its people first because that's as bad as it gets if the
Waffle House isn't open and they actually color-coded it there's green is
the best part of the index it means that your Waffle House is totally fine maybe
there's like a cracked window but everything else is good and everyone in the community can come there.
Yellow has a limited menu
and they're probably using a generator.
And then red is like, it's closed.
The Waffle House is toast.
Come here because this is the community that's hardest hit.
That's how like dedicated Waffle House is to staying open.
That if they're closed, FEMA knows that that's where you should go first.
Yeah, absolutely.
You don't get the red index a lot.
But again, if you do, then that's the really bad sign.
If they know a hurricane or something like that is coming,
and there's evacuation orders and stuff like that you you know if it's mandatory a
Waffle House might close but the very first chance they get to open that thing
up they're gonna open it back up. Yeah there's this really great story I read
on the Waffle House blog. Well in North Carolina back in 2011, Hurricane Irene passed through there.
And the local Waffle House lost its power, but the gas was still going to the grill.
And so the Waffle House stayed open and was cooking for people as long as it was light
enough for them to see what they were doing.
And then when it just became too dark to keep going, they closed and then opened at first light at dawn.
Yeah, I love that story, but I was so ready when I was reading it to hear they cooked
by candlelight through the night.
Yeah.
Sorry, sorry, Chuck.
I didn't say I expected them to.
That would have been even more amazing.
But maybe also dangerous, so that might have had something to do with it.
Or maybe they just didn't have candles, and then the Waffle House employee,
there's a manual after where it was like, buy candles, make sure you have plenty of candles.
We learned from Hurricane Irene.
I looked up, by the way, I tried to find that they have a mobile emergency, what is it, like a...
It's like a RV, like a command center.
Yeah, but the only thing I could find
looked like a food truck.
Oh, is that right?
Yeah, I mean, I tried to find a picture
and everything, it just kept showing me this food truck.
And I couldn't, when it was called a command center,
I was like, is it dressed to look like a Waffle House?
Because it looks like a little tiny Waffle House.
Oh, does it?
And is there like communications inside?
Or are they showing up and cooking?
Like I couldn't figure that part out.
If it is a food truck though,
there's a hundred percent chance
that they're serving empanadas.
Right.
Even from the Waffle House food truck.
But they have a great nickname for it though, at least.
Yeah, well it was from Stripes.
What would they call it?
The EM-50, which is apparently the assault vehicle
that Bill Murray drives in Stripes, was the EM-50.
I never got into that movie.
Like, liked it or saw it all the way through?
Saw it all the way through.
Oh, Stripes is great, I think.
It's a movie in two parts, so the first half
is a lot better than when they
go on the mission in the RV.
Mm, gotcha. Okay.
But, you know, not the best movie in the world, but I love Harold Ramis.
Well, yeah, of course. I feel like it might have just been a couple years ahead of me
when I was younger. I was more a meatballs guy.
Yeah, I mean, that stuff, I wasn't allowed to watch any of that at the time, so I had to sneak in a little later.
Yeah, I don't know how I was allowed to watch meatballs
because I was never allowed to watch Porky's
or just about anything.
My mom wouldn't even let me watch Sanford and Son
because she thought Red Fox was a dirty old man.
Oh, interesting.
That's funny.
Yeah, well, it wasn't funny when you're a kid
and you want to watch Sanford in the sun.
It's not funny at all.
I learned two things about your mom this week, that and that she played the banjo, which
just floors me how cool that is.
She loved playing the banjo.
I love that.
And I love the Waffle House Index.
And Waffle House didn't even sponsor this, everybody.
That's just how impressed we are with the Waffle House Index.
I always thought it was just some fooling around pop culture thing. Nope, it's a real thing.
Yeah, if you've never been, if you're ever in the South, go check out a Waffle House.
The coolest, most awesome, fun people work there and you might be able to get into a
fist fight with Kid Rock. You never know.
Yeah, there's a pretty good chance you will. Short Stuff is out.