Changing "Kentucky Fried Chicken" to "KFC" appears to be a rebranding strategy used by Pepsico when they acquired the company from Colonial Sanders. For more information, visit the Related Question.
KFC/ Kentucky fried chicken
According the the website of Kentucky Fried Chicken "There are over 15,000 KFC outlets in 105 countries and territories around the world." While this fact makes KFC a multinational company; they are still headquartered in Louisville, Kentucky, and a distinctly American company.
Kentucky Fried Chicken is a proper noun, it is the name of a specific company. Proper nouns are always capitalized.
They call it Kentucky Fried Chicken.. Or Just KFC... Theres no difference in the name just because it's in Kentucky...
it originated in Kentucky by a man named Colonel Sanders, he invented the recipe for the batter around the chicken.
In 2007, the original, non-acronymic Kentucky Fried Chicken name was resurrected and began to reappear on company marketing literature and food packaging, as well as some restaurant signage.
Kentucky Fried Chicken is most famous for the use of a special seasoning on the chicken, made from 11 herbs and spices put together originally by the company's founder Harland Sanders. The exact details of the 11 are a closely guarded trade secret.
Don't work for KFC, they are a very cruel company to work for. They kill their chickens very inhumanely.
A company's core product is the number 1 thing the company sells most of. For example Kentucky Fried Chicken's core product is chicken. All the other products such as mash potatoes, corn, biscuits are not the core product, but rather additional products.
Kentucky Fried Chicken
Kentucky Electrical Lamp Company was created in 1899.