While bathed in the blinding fluorescence of a nondescript Dairy Queen on the outskirts of Toronto, Vicky Cheng found himself at a crossroads.
It was a day just like any; a job just like any. While others rostered at the fast-food chain might see only revolving doors of dead-end shifts leading nowhere fast—or even nowhere at all—Cheng was clocking into the time of his life. “I just loved talking to people,” he says. “I loved the interaction. I loved clearing plates and asking, ‘How was your meal?’
“Can you imagine sitting [at a fast-food restautant], and having someone take what’s left of your tray away for you with a ‘Oh, how was your dinner? How was the burger? Would you like an ice cream for dessert? No? Well, let me get you a glass of water so you can keep chatting,’” Cheng quips, with a wry chuckle. “I was that guy.”
During a shift on a day like any other, someone with a modicum of sway slid into Cheng’s section; it might have been a manager at the Marriot nearby, Cheng can’t be sure now. But exactly one ice-cold Blizzard—Dairy Queen’s signature frozen dessert later—later, he offered Cheng a job at the hotel.
This path, if he chose it, would diverge towards the kind of front-of-house hospitality Cheng is so preternaturally attuned to. “But I had to turn him down,” the chef says, “because I love cooking more.”
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THE LAST WORD
Every issue, we ask our cover star a round of quickfire questions that give us a little more insight into their personalities. This month: Gulf Kanawut lays it bare
WOMEN AT THE WICKET
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TIME TURNER
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