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鈥淭he Cut鈥 is a weekly reporters notebook-type essay by an 蜜桃导航 content creator, reflecting on the news and on life in Northeast Ohio. What exactly does 鈥淭he Cut鈥 mean? It's a throwback to the old days of using a razor blade to cut analog tape. In radio lingo, we refer to sound bites as 鈥渃uts.鈥 So think of these behind-the-scene essays as 鈥渃uts鈥 from Ideastream's producers.

Who was Mr. Delicious?

Mr. Delicious advertisement
RAX Roast Beef
The story of Mr. Delicious and RAX Roast Beef takes us from 1990s Ohio to present day Hollywood, and back again.

Ohio has a special place in the history of fast food.

The last two standalone Arthur Treacher鈥檚 restaurants in the world are in Northeast Ohio. White Castle is headquartered in Columbus. Giant chains such as Wendy鈥檚, Arby鈥檚 and Donato鈥檚 were founded here.

Sunday, as 蜜桃导航 was cleaning up at the Associated Press Media Editors ceremony in Columbus, the Ironton Tribune also won several awards. That reminded me that Ironton is the current home of RAX Roast Beef. I was the emcee and I made a reference linking Ironton to RAX. I'm pretty sure people ate it up.

At one time, the chain had hundreds of locations around the world. Today, it鈥檚 down to six. What happened? The internet would lay the blame at the animated feet of Mr. Delicious.

Travel with me back to the early 鈥90s, when 鈥淰ance鈥 was diplomat Cyrus Vance (trying to negotiate an end to the war in Bosnia) and 鈥淗arris鈥 usually meant Ed Harris, star of a movie I wasn鈥檛 allowed to see (鈥淕lengarry Glen Ross鈥).

The retro craze was just taking flight thanks to Lenny Kravitz and 鈥淩eservoir Dogs鈥 (which I am still not allowed to watch). A new management team was trying to turn around the faltering fortunes of RAX, then based in Columbus.

They hired an edgy marketing agency run by Donny Deutsch. He鈥檚 a frequent political commentator today, but in 1992 he was busy creating fictional mascots like Mr. Delicious. The character looks very similar to , the 1960s mascot for Forest City Auto Parts. That鈥檚 perhaps fitting, as Mr. Delicious conjures the quiet rage bubbling under post-war suburbs with his casual mentions of alcohol-fueled weekends, money troubles and a 鈥渞ather delicate surgery.鈥

, then the executive VP of marketing for RAX, said in a that Mr. Delicious would 鈥済o down as one of the classic characters in advertising history.鈥

The man knew what he was talking about: He was previously the driving force behind the successful 鈥淲here鈥檚 the beef?鈥 campaign for Wendy鈥檚. View the comments on the video below, and most of them lament that Mr. D was ahead of his time.

Yet if you Google 鈥淢r. Delicious,鈥 you鈥檒l also find a plethora of videos labeling him a disaster. Bill Underhill, the chain鈥檚 president at the time, disagreed when I spoke with him in 2022.

鈥淲e turned it from where we were losing a million a month to making about $4 million a year,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hen, we made the mistake of taking over for Citicorp the third largest Hardee鈥檚 franchisee. And that鈥檚 really what sunk things. Some people try to link it to Mr. D, but it wasn鈥檛 him.鈥

After a long career in marketing, Underhill is now a Las Vegas restaurateur. He joyfully remembered creating a backstory for Mr. Delicious: A Corvair-driving former aluminum siding salesman who was recovering from, in Underhill's recollection, hemorrhoid surgery.

鈥淲e caught a fair amount of flak, including from a few of the franchisees in the more rural areas of West Virginia,鈥 he said. 鈥淎t a meeting they told me that Mr. D was too effeminate.鈥

Yet who was he, really? The animation is easy to describe, but the voice? Underhill couldn鈥檛 recall. Deutsch鈥檚 representatives said he was unavailable for an interview.

Googling produces the name Gregg Berger, who is familiar to fans of Garfield, Transformers, Spider-Man and numerous other cartoons and video games. I spoke with Berger ahead of this year鈥檚 Comic-Con International, and he said he was not Mr. Delicious. Instead, he thought perhaps it was , another prominent voice actor with credits dating back to 鈥淢uppet Babies.鈥 Prior to that, he was on the radio in his home town of Akron.

When I spoke with Berg earlier this month, after reminiscing about Houlihan & Big Chuck and other staples of Northeast Ohio, he thought perhaps Mr. Delicious had been voiced by Gregg Burge. I immediately recognized the name from 鈥淭he Electric Company.鈥 Unfortunately, Mr. Burge passed way in 1998. His voice doesn鈥檛 quite sound like Mr. Delicious, at least to me, so the trail goes cold at this point.

If there was actually a different voice of Mr. Delicious, perhaps he鈥檒l read this piece, send in his pledge of support for Ideastream鈥檚 APME Award-winning programming, and contact me with stories and coupons from RAX.

"The Cut" is featured in 蜜桃导航's weekly newsletter, The
Frequency Week in Review. To get The Frequency Week in Review, The Daily
Frequency or any of our newsletters, sign up on Ideastream's newsletter subscription page.

Kabir Bhatia is a senior reporter for 蜜桃导航's arts & culture team.