Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tweeter awarded free chicken for life

Her praise draws crowd to D.C. eatery

- HANNAH NATANSON

WASHINGTON — Two weeks ago, a tweet praising the fried chicken sandwiches at Roaming Rooster in the District of Columbia got a lot of coverage — and now, to repay the tweeter, the restaurant’s owners have granted her free chicken for life.

The tweet from Bri Hall, a 24-year-old musician raised in Maryland whose stage name is “La Hara,” drove demand for the restaurant’s sandwiches, generating lines that still stretch out the door at all hours of the day. Hall posted during the height of America’s obsession with the Popeyes chicken sandwich to suggest that Washington, D.C., locals try Roaming Rooster, a family business owned by an Ethiopian immigrant who, she wrote, “has always been kind.”

“After her tweet, our business went up,” said Michael Habtemaria­m, one of the restaurant’s owners. “Now she never has to pay again.”

That also holds true for Hall’s boyfriend, Kristopher Head, a photograph­er and videograph­er, Habtemaria­m said. Habtemaria­m — who owns the restaurant along with his brother Biniyam Habtemaria­m and Biniyam’s wife, Hareg Mesfin — has never before granted anyone free chicken in the roughly four years since Roaming Rooster opened, he said.

Head was the one who introduced Hall to the restaurant about a year ago, Hall wrote in an email to The Washington Post, sent before she learned she was receiving free chicken.

“He came home raving about their food, bringing some for me to try and it was the BEST chicken sandwich I’ve ever had,” Hall wrote. “From there on, a bond was forged between our families and we became regular customers.”

She felt the urge to tweet about Roaming Rooster when she was “scrolling through Twitter” and noticed a large number of posts about Popeyes, which she has never particular­ly liked. Hall always thought that Popeyes lacked the “it factor” you see at home or when exploring other cultures’ cuisines, she wrote.

Plus, she saw the Habtemaria­ms as “one of the kindest groups of people” she had ever met.

“I wanted people in the DMV area to know that we had something special right here in front of us, that wasn’t a fast food chain,” she wrote. “I couldn’t be more happy since the virality of my tweet. Going to the restaurant and seeing the line wrapped outside the door was beautiful.”

Habtemaria­m said last week that demand hasn’t dipped since Hall’s tweet — if anything, it seems to be growing. Still, customers eager to try Roaming Rooster’s fried chicken sandwiches, which come in five varieties, shouldn’t despair: Habtemaria­m said that, unlike Popeyes, his restaurant is unlikely to run out of fried chicken any time soon.

Hall, who could not immediatel­y be reached for comment about the gift, joked in a tweet that the lifetime supply of free chicken was likely to add to her waistline.

“Y’all I’m about to be THICK thick,” she tweeted to her almost 27,000 followers, before adding “much love.”

Hall wrote in an email to the Post that her biggest takeaway from the past few days is that “there’s nothing to lose by promoting someone or something you think deserves better.”

“There is no better feeling than being able to go somewhere locally and see a whole family’s life changing,” she wrote. “I want readers to know that if they have friends, family, or local businesses they support to support them out loud.”

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