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Here at Gawker, two has always equaled a trend — and this one smells like the Beatles. What gives? Did Ringo die or something? From Open All Night comes this photo of Sean Lennon at the 'Fahrenheit 9/11' premiere, eerily resembling his father — and now, the Conde Nast cafeteria is hosting a "Strawberry Fields" theme at their international table. A bizarrely overzealous lunch report follows.

Our Correspondent for Publishing Empire Cafeterias reports:

The theme for the international table today in the CondeNast cafeteria is "Strawberry Fields."

This is interesting for two reasons: one, because unlike most other Conde cafeteria international themes, it doesn't provide Restaurant Associates with an obvious excuse to throw either of their go-to ingredients (tomatoes or white beans - both consistently tasty, btw) on anything they like and call it "moroccan" or "transylvanian" or whatever; and two, since many of the items offered today have similarly Beatles-esque names, it's given rise to the spectacularly misnamed "Fool on the Hill Magical Mystery Meatloaf."

I think what they meant to do was call the dish "Fool on the Hill," and then indicate the Beatles record that the song in question came from, and then since none of that has anything whatsoever to do with meatloaf itself, they went ahead and also identified the mysterious brown slices in the serving tray. And then printed it all on a little card where it comes off as one fluid paragraph.

I mean, that's a possible explanation, but I don't think it actually clears anything up, does it? Like, maybe Meatloaf the guy sang "Fool on the Hill" in that Bee Gees / Frampton Beatles musical from '78... (Hmmm. Amazon doesn't seem to think so)... But still - is there not some sort of Cafeteria University where Rule #1 is "Keep the words 'mystery' and 'meatloaf' away from each other"?

Word is that it's no great shakes, as meatloaf goes.