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Restaurant brings strangers together in Mississippi - cool idea -
Posted on 12/28/25 at 9:53 am
Posted on 12/28/25 at 9:53 am
LINK
MCCOMB, Miss. (AP) — Over the course of a steaming-hot Southern lunch, served family-style on a giant lazy Susan, restaurant owner Andre Davis has watched people go from perfect strangers to lifelong friends.
His restaurant, The Dinner Bell in McComb, Mississippi, consists of just four tables. Large and circular, they seat upward of 15 people. In the center of each is a lazy Susan dotted with heaping platters of food, spinning back and forth as customers pile up their plates.
On any given day, anyone could be sitting around the table. Davis’ customer base ranges from European tourists to locals. The tables have hosted water treatment plant workers, church groups and once, according to Davis, British actor Hugh Bonneville.
“We’ve had people sitting together that had nothing in common but the table they were sitting at,” Davis said. For restaurant goers, the rotating tables provide a unique opportunity to meet new people, hear different perspectives and bond over a shared enjoyment of classic Southern food and the restaurant’s famed fried eggplant.
“We’ve met doctors, lawyers, teachers,” said Wayne Dyson, a regular customer. “And find out that most people are all good people.”
Dyson and his wife have met countless people from all over the country in the 40 years they have been frequenting the restaurant. Over lunch earlier this month, the couple quickly bonded with a group of strangers, laughing like they had known each other for years.
Justin Monistere and his family stopped for lunch to celebrate his sister’s graduation from nursing school. By the time he left, he was referring to the Dysons as “mom” and “pop.”
“Today in time we don’t talk as people. It’s either through a message or phone,” he said, adding this is the first meal he has had since he was a kid where no one pulled out a cellphone. “I think that’s a great thing that they’re doing here.”
MCCOMB, Miss. (AP) — Over the course of a steaming-hot Southern lunch, served family-style on a giant lazy Susan, restaurant owner Andre Davis has watched people go from perfect strangers to lifelong friends.
His restaurant, The Dinner Bell in McComb, Mississippi, consists of just four tables. Large and circular, they seat upward of 15 people. In the center of each is a lazy Susan dotted with heaping platters of food, spinning back and forth as customers pile up their plates.
On any given day, anyone could be sitting around the table. Davis’ customer base ranges from European tourists to locals. The tables have hosted water treatment plant workers, church groups and once, according to Davis, British actor Hugh Bonneville.
“We’ve had people sitting together that had nothing in common but the table they were sitting at,” Davis said. For restaurant goers, the rotating tables provide a unique opportunity to meet new people, hear different perspectives and bond over a shared enjoyment of classic Southern food and the restaurant’s famed fried eggplant.
“We’ve met doctors, lawyers, teachers,” said Wayne Dyson, a regular customer. “And find out that most people are all good people.”
Dyson and his wife have met countless people from all over the country in the 40 years they have been frequenting the restaurant. Over lunch earlier this month, the couple quickly bonded with a group of strangers, laughing like they had known each other for years.
Justin Monistere and his family stopped for lunch to celebrate his sister’s graduation from nursing school. By the time he left, he was referring to the Dysons as “mom” and “pop.”
“Today in time we don’t talk as people. It’s either through a message or phone,” he said, adding this is the first meal he has had since he was a kid where no one pulled out a cellphone. “I think that’s a great thing that they’re doing here.”
Posted on 12/28/25 at 9:55 am to Eurocat
And sit around where some poor with dirty hands is touching the food ? No thank you.
Posted on 12/28/25 at 9:55 am to Eurocat
A lazy Susan?
What a novel idea.
What a novel idea.
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:03 am to DustyDinkleman
Yes, a massive lazy susan my angry little friend. No, it’s not a revelation but it’s a fun concept that’s been around for decades.
I’ve been to the Dinner Bell a half a dozen times as a kid and loved it. The food was fantastic. It’s worth a quick half day trip if you’ve got kids.
I’ve been to the Dinner Bell a half a dozen times as a kid and loved it. The food was fantastic. It’s worth a quick half day trip if you’ve got kids.
This post was edited on 12/28/25 at 10:05 am
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:06 am to Klark Kent
Can be awesome.
Can be not so fun
Ita a crap shoot
Can be not so fun
Ita a crap shoot
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:07 am to Klark Kent
Went as a kid 50 ish years ago.
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:09 am to Klark Kent
We stop at the dinner bell when traveling through as often as we can and it’s always a highlight. The vegetables alone are worth it
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:19 am to Eurocat
Had something similar in Chattanooga. Cool experience.
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:20 am to Eurocat
If I have to choose between communing with the general public vs not…I choose the ‘not’ every time. Most people today are slobs and watching fat people eat is just disgusting to me.
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:22 am to KAHog
quote:
Had something similar in Chattanooga. Cool experience.
kind of a famous one in Savannah, Mrs. Wilkes, good grub, have to help save the dishes too
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:31 am to Eurocat
We went so often, my sister married a guy from McComb. We went a few years back. Still great food.
Back when we were going, they had a major tornado. Done a bunch of damage. Elvis was doing a concert. They had told him about to damage, took him around and showed him the damage.
During his performance, he said, I’ve seen the destruction in this small town. Every penny from the concert, will go back to the city in a rebuild effort. After they told Elvis, his manager said, you mean after expenses right? Nope, every penny! Thats why one of the streets is named Elvis Presley Blvd!
Back when we were going, they had a major tornado. Done a bunch of damage. Elvis was doing a concert. They had told him about to damage, took him around and showed him the damage.
During his performance, he said, I’ve seen the destruction in this small town. Every penny from the concert, will go back to the city in a rebuild effort. After they told Elvis, his manager said, you mean after expenses right? Nope, every penny! Thats why one of the streets is named Elvis Presley Blvd!
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:35 am to Eurocat
It’s a buffet. No thanks.
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:39 am to Strannix
Have you Yankees really never been to the Dinner Bell?
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:41 am to Eurocat
Don’t care to sit with strangers.
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:43 am to Eurocat
I went once. It was just a bunch of old white ladies sitting around a table. Definitely not a "dude" thing. 
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:48 am to shutterspeed
quote:
It was just a bunch of old white ladies sitting around a table.
Lazy Susans
Posted on 12/28/25 at 10:59 am to Eurocat
They had one of those on I75 in Jackson Ga
Posted on 12/28/25 at 11:07 am to Eurocat
Wasn't the Hopkins House in Pensacola similar to this?
Posted on 12/28/25 at 11:11 am to DustyDinkleman
quote:
A lazy Susan?
Better than an angry Karen.
Posted on 12/28/25 at 11:11 am to Eurocat
My dad was a pilot and would look for any reason to fly somewhere . Going to eat somewhere on a Sunday was one of those reasons, and the Dinner Bell was always in the rotation . We would land at the small airport in Mccomb . A cab would bring us to the Dinner Bell and would come back in an hour or so to bring us back to the airport .
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