I found myself driving along Santa Monica Boulevard the other day and noticed a strange building sitting off the corner of La Brea. I’ve noticed it plenty of times before and always thought it was an old theater, but it also strangely looked like a metro station, even though I knew damn well there was no metro line that ran underneath it. (Our public transportation here is lacking).
“Oh, there’s a logo on it, let’s look a bit closer!” I take off my super sick Julbo brand Legacy Glacier sunglasses I got from the local REI Co-op and pull out my opera glasses that enable me to have just a bit more reach than my from-factory eyesight, and I see two words written across the Space Mountain-esque building: Tesla Diner.


No, it can’t be! Nikola himself has risen from the dead like a zombie or perhaps a homunculus and decided to get into the culinary arts in lieu of his electrical prowess?! It’s like an episode of The Bear from hell. Oh no, just kidding, it’s actually just the creation of Musk himself. Maybe I’ll stop in and take a bite?
What is it?

Okay, so full transparency, this is my third time in the shadow of the eatery established by the now ever-divisive Tesla. The first was when I drove by (which played out exactly how I described it above), the second was the next day, so that I could actually see what was up there, and now, I have actually had a bite there. On that second venture, I learned a lot.
First and foremost, I learned the security guard is a dirty liar who said there was no timeframe on when it was gonna open, so I exhaled and thought “cool, I can get to writing this article in the coming days as a preview since there’s still some time,” only to see it opened Monday, just two days after our conversation, leaving me ass out and sobbing like the kid who was picked last to play red rover on the playground.
Secondly, I learned that this was a concept announced seven years ago, followed up on in 2023 when Musk tweeted/Xeeted that the place would be “Grease meets The Jetsons with Supercharging.” The exterior definitely confirms the latter two, with a very Jetsons-like styling and 75 V4 Superchargers lining the parking lot. That lying sack of security guard believes that the diner is probably the most densely populated site of superchargers in a very long stretch, and I certainly agree on that, considering how hard it is to get large plots of land in the city.
One thing that’s certainly rad is that there’s a drive-in theater there, with two 66-foot LED “megascreens” lining the parking lot so you can watch while you charge. I think that’s cool; however, I’d be behooved to ignore that my initial scout here had some late 90s/2000s sci-fi movie on the screen that had a completely topless, bare-chested woman blasting its way into the eyes of, well, anyone on Santa Monica.
Am I advocating for puritan policies against nudity? No. But what I am curious about is how that’s legal to play to the public, considering the only way you can see that in a movie is by being 17 or older for an R-rated ticket (though I guess PG-13 movies do allow for brief nudity if it’s nonsexual) or waiting for your parents to go to bed and then turning on Cinemax at night. But what do I know?
The Food

When you get there, you’ll find yourself with a line of folks who are overwhelmed with excitement going in. There was a group of cops outside as well, maybe pulling double time as security as well as getting a meal themselves, and after about 10 minutes of waiting in the line, we entered the Disney-esque vision of a futuristic diner. There were kiosks to order food, but they were staffed as if management couldn’t decide if they wanted cashiers taking orders or for it to be self serve, but I digress.
First, I ordered the breakfast tacos, and as someone who knows a good Taco when he eats one (I’m from Arizona, and I’ve been in LA a while), lemme assure you that it is one of the highest quality pieces of trash you can put in your body. I’m talking about grade A slop served over a bar counter.
I also got a burger, which was a smaller smash burger-style offering.
The two tacos were served on a larger organic flour taco shell that felt empty relative to its size. The two dishes came out to $26.89, and I am being so serious when I say I’ve had several meals that are both more tasty and significantly more filling at less than half the price.
With that said, the burger was little more than the offspring of In-N-Out burger with the thinly shredded lettuce and some kinda secret Elon sauce on top, with the only twist on the Cali chain’s standard fare being the chopped grilled onions that came by default instead of asking for them. First bites felt familiar, but as it went on, I was less than impressed.
Did the burger do anything abhorrently bad? No, but to me, it was a literal nothing burger when you consider the hefty price ($13.50 should get me some fries on the side, seriously). It’s also worth noting that the final couple of bites had some pink in it, despite the staff not asking me how I wanted it prepared. Do restaurants like In-N-Out ask you how you want it cooked? Nah, but I’ve also never had a burger with an ounce of pink in a burger from one of those fast food spots, so take that as you will.
So the burger wasn’t bad, but per dollar, it wasn’t great. The tacos, on the other hand, were JUST bad the entire time. American cheese sauce in a low-quality organic tortilla, beef chorizo that felt undercooked and like they added even more grease to a notoriously greasy sausage, and an avocado crema that inspired flavorless disappointment in me.
I’m being sincere when I say I don’t have anything positive thing to say about the two food items I ate, but I will give some credit to the ambiance; it does feel a bit Jetsons. The inside is definitely a “futuristic” diner, which evokes the retro-American vibe he’s talked about in the past, and the roof does offer a good view of the massive screens with speakers playing the audio around you.

However, being in this restaurant makes it abundantly clear to me that it’s a Tesla project, where it’s disruptive and charging ahead in its own way, ignoring things that have made their competitors work for years, and finding success in the disruption. On that note, I’ve never been to a traditional restaurant that has its restrooms closed during peak lunch hours, nor have I been to one that still has half of the restaurant under construction with ladders and frantic staff everywhere, but this seems like an anomaly for Tesla, which would never launch something without it being fully complete. Maybe the restaurant will get some over-the-air-frier updates.
Despite all this, the fans were there in numbers. There was a line out front, with many wearing Tesla gear and coming to buy more; there were plenty of Tesla drivers pulling in during our wait, and so many more flowing in as I sat to write this. Do I think the Tesla fans will love it? Sure. I think that’s great. Do I recommend the burger or tacos? Not as soon as I’d recommend eating gravel (though that was only the second day it was open, so who knows if the food will improve). Do I recommend visiting the restaurant for something other than the food? Maybe, especially if you like brief nudity or the Jetsons.
McDonalds hamburger quality control is a very real thing, and also highly controlled by the brand. Regular burgers (10:1’s) are loaded 8 at a time on the grill. They are not allowed to be more than 5degrees difference in any of the finished cooked burgers. They cook all 8 in 41 seconds.
Meanwhile, same quality standards apply to the 1/4lb burgers, (aka 4:1’s), which are loaded 6 at a time, and cook in IIRC 61 seconds.
I designed the actuators used in the current generation grills. They are amazing machines, with the ability to cook a burger equivalent to a smash burger or any other gourmet burger. The reason they don’t is because they maintain a worldwide quality standard so every burger cooked everywhere tastes the same.
Also, the Quarter Pounder patty isn’t really that bad of a quality for fast food
They have changed something about them in the past decade or so, they are greaser than they used to be and don’t taste as good, and frequently don’t come to the edge of the bun like they used to. I used to always get the QP when I went to McD’s, now I normally get either a double cheeseburger or a chicken sandwich (although they have screwed those up too recently.) Needless to say, I don’t frequent McDs anymore unless I’m having a food emergency.
I dont go there often, but once in awhile you do just have a craving. They’re kind of their own thing, I dont really consider them a burger place, if you want a good burger, there’s better options, but if you want the taste of McDonald’s, that’s them
Also, the Filet O Fish is sort of addictive
I don’t eat any fast food fish. McD’s key is they have the best fries hands down, if they are fresh (which is becoming less and less common.) I prefer the snadwiches almost anywhere else now.
Reading this report, I can’t wait for the breakfast at SpaceX’s Martian base
So… status signaling gas station food.
Cool.
A new low for the consumer class.
I don’t ever want to hear that phrase “secret Elon sauce” again thank you very much. The visuals running through my head right now are frightening!
A little harsh jumping to conclusions about the security guard who may very well have been told that the timeframe was indefinite. He could have been equally surprised at when it opened. I would guess that he was not at executive meetings where the schedule was discussed. He’s just a paid hourly guy. Someone is owed an apology even if he doesn’t get to see it.
The movie is the pilot episode for Stargate SG1, “Children of the Gods” which aired on July 27, 1997.
I had no idea this was even open – Elon announced the restaurant in 2017, they started construction in 2022, and its apparently still under construction while being open to customers?
I’m baffled that its taken 3+ years to build out a freaking diner. There’s a company in Georgia that builds prefabricated stainless steel clad diners that they ship all over the country, surely Tesla could have gone that route and had the place fully up and running inside of 9 months, at most
With those restrooms closed during the lunch rush, I think it’s safe to say:
This Establishment Smells Like Ass
I appreciate your review of the ‘burger’, but Elon don’t like that woke language. It’s a hamburger.
How strict were they with the Jim Crow rules?
In a year the restaurant will close and they’ll put a Subway in there. Just like every other dirty truck stop in Texas.
Greasy food and no bathroom? I would have pooped my pants.
It’s your fault you didn’t pay another $10 for the full restroom experience, or $15 for the full unsupervised restroom experience.
*footnote*: full unsupervised restroom experience not yet available, and won’t be for many years, if at all.
I literally thought the entire point of the Tesla diner concept was to break even selling food so that then there will be employees there to clean the bathrooms that people need to use while charging their car. But that is probably so dumb that I need to be supervision.
How long until this diner is observed breaking up in flaming streaks across the Caribbean sky?
You know that crappy taco is about to have a rapid unscheduled diassembly soon.
I’m not here to kink shame, but Jetson’s nudity would be weird. No way Judy is old enough, so it’s gotta be Jane, right? Weird.
It’s the robot maid. George has a dark side hustle going on.
Dark dealings at Boston Dynamics.
That’s Astro. He got weaponized.
Ruh ro!!
“kinda secret Elon sauce on top”
This phrasing sent chills up my spine.
What a terrible day to be able to read.
This definitely gives Disney vibes, but without, you know, the Disney part. At Disney you’re stuck in the park so kind of have to buy the overpriced food, which is usually cooked ok, here it’s in the middle of town, a block away from a McDonald’s. Just park there to charge and go get a Happy Meal.
When Tomorrowland opened up in the early 1960s, Disney had sponsors for the restaurants, and the Tahitian Terrace was sponsored by Stouffer’s.
I… can’t even imagine…
Stouffer’s used to be a chain of perfectly decent sit down restaurants, the frozen food business was spun off from that. They started out with quick service lunch counters in the 1920s, but by the 1950s also had a number of higher end, fine dining restaurants, as well as intermediate tier family restaurants and cafeterias. They also had a chain of hotels
The last restaurant under the Stouffer’s name closed in the early ’80s, but the Stouffer’s restaurant company was rebranded as Select Restaurants Inc and still operates a group of 8 standalone upscale restaurants under different local names
Today I Learned!
Very cool, and brings in useful context! I genuinely forget that a lot of frozen foods in your grocer’s freezer absolutely originated from restaurants and chefs that simply had enormous requests for something shelf stable or could be purchased at other points of sale.
For example, Krispy Kreme was seriously doing damage to itself by allowing people to buy donuts at supermarkets (which held up quite well!), even though it paled in comparison to getting them fresh from a franchised shop right when they came off the line.
I think it would be amazing to be able to go back in time and try Chef Ettore Boiardi’s actual food, the guy was made the head chef of the Plaza Hotel at age 17, then was poached by a consortium of wealthy investors who threw a pile of cash his way to lure him to Ohio to become head chef at the new Winton Hotel, he had to have been seriously good at what he did
Also worked at the Ritz-Carlton and did catering for the White House
Please tell the residents of my city about this, because there is frequently a line a couple of blocks long leading to KK when the hot doughnut now sign is illuminated.
I think they stopped the boxed donuts available in supermarkets back in the late 2000s. That’s the last time I remember them being available, here in New England.
Again, it was cannibalizing traffic to the actual franchise stores, and with the supermarket (and possibly a distributor) in the middle, the issue is corporate itself was taking the money while franchise stores were getting left to fend for themselves.
Moreover, it kind of cheapened the brand. Were the donuts available in the supermarket good? They were. Were they anywhere near as good as going to a franchise store and getting a dozen fresh off the line? Not even close.
Hell, I remember a gal and I that I worked with, we had to make a multi-state journey to a customer, and we absolutely picked up a dozen on the way since you could see the “hot donuts” or whatever sign from I-95. This was early 2000s when they were trying to expand nationwide. She was trim and fit (as was I), but that didn’t stop either of us from having a half-dozen each.
They are still available in stores in my area (the home state of KK.)
I am nowhere near the home state of KK and they are available in grocery stores here.
Or I dunno, go anywhere else.
This is the Cybertruck of restaurants, flashy, expensive, and poorly executed.
I’ve been to a lot of diners and this is totally inauthentic
15 minutes after you finish your burger your a$$ will have a rapid unscheduled disassembly!
Well. Ever since The Wild Goose closed on Aviation Blvd south of LAX the west side has been bereft of a place to get substandard food to go with the nudity.
Kudos, Tesla.
Their slogan should be, “If you need to charge your car, it’s something to do.” I wonder if any remaining drive in theaters thought about putting in a charger or two? Perfect time to charge up.
Drive in theater charging, interesting idea. There are a few within easy distance of me, and it wouldn’t hurt to add some electrons should the opportunity present itself, especially since they tend to be double-headers and you’re there for 4 or 5 hours at a stretch.
Or a public library. Wait, not enough literacy in the general public. Um… will Elon dressed as a fairy reading tweets keep people occupied long enough to charge?
https://lacountylibrary.org/ev-charging-locations/
As opposed to Strawbridge’s latter years slogan “that thing in Center City that’s open!”
Delivered undercooked. Well, that tracks…
I hear they’re gonna set up tents in the parking lot so additional workers can finish cooking the food.
Full cooking is a $12000 upcharge that will come with a later update to your meal.
At the risk of flogging a clearly-deceased equine that has partially turned to glue…
You will Nazi me in that establishment, ever. Even if they play Interstellar.
It’s really confusing because they have all the prices listed in Reichsmarks.