Restaurant Anecdotes

More stupid people/stupid situation stuff. (I love alliteration!)

I used to work at an Arby’s. In the two years I worked there, the dumbest customer by far has been one that apparently never succeeded at first grade math.
Me: “That will be $12.69, please.”
Him: “Ok. Here you go.”
He handed me a $10 bill. Thinking that this was just a mistake, that maybe he meant to give me a $20, I said:
Me: “This is a $10 bill.”
Him: “Yeah, I know.”
Me: “The total is $12.69.”
Him: “I gave you a 10. That’s enough.”
Me: “I need $2.69 more. The total is $12.69.”
Him: (annoyed) “It’s all there! I gave you a 10!”
Me: “No. I need $2.69 more.”
Him: “I gave you a 10!”
Me: “I know. The total is $12.69! I need another $2.69!”
This situation kept on going for a good four or five minutes, when something really wrong happened. I just had him on the verge of giving me a $50 bill, when a manager changed the price to make it less than $10. After I told the customer that, he said:
Him: “Darn kids don’t know how to do math these days.”
I suppose the moral of the story is act dumb, even if you aren’t, and rewards will follow.

One day, this lady brought in an Arby-Q sandwich because she didn’t like it and she wanted her money back. That would be fine if it weren’t for the fact that my Arby’s stopped selling those a month ago, and that the sandwich was black and moldy. It was one of the grossest things I have ever seen in my life.

Me: “I’d like a small coffee shake and nothing else.”
Clerk: “Anything else?”
Me: “Uh…a cup?”

This happened at a local fried chicken shack:
Customer: “I’ll have a half dozen chicken nuggets.”
Waitress: “I’m sorry, we don’t have a half dozen. You can only order six, nine, or twelve.”
Customer: “Well, ok, I’ll have six then.”
This has happened to me with two different people now.

I had a craving for french fries one day, so I pulled up to the drive-thru of McDonald’s.
Me: “I’d like a large french fries please.”
Clerk: “Would you like fries with that?”
I got sort of confused at this one and told him no. He told me to pull ahead, so I did, and then he asked me why I was sitting there.
Clerk: “I thought you didn’t want fries.”
Me: “No, I ordered a large french fries.”
Clerk: “Ok. Do you want fries with that?”
Since saying no the last time had gotten me nothing, I figured I’d better say yes this time.
He gave me two large fries.

I went to a McDonald’s in New York. My girlfriend and I didn’t know what we wanted ahead of time, but when we got there we saw a sign for a special: “2 Big Macs, 2 large fries, and 2 drinks for $7.99.”
Me: “Can I have the 2 Big Macs, 2 large fries special?”
Clerk: “Excuse me?”
Me: “Can I have the special on the sign up there?” (pointing to the sign)
Clerk: “What special?”
Me: “The 2 Big Macs special.”
Clerk: “That’s not a special. You just order 2 Big Macs and 2 fries and 2 drinks.”
Me: “Will it cost $7.99?”
Clerk: “I don’t know. Let me see.”
She rung up the order, and it came to around $12.
Clerk: “That is how much it costs.”
Me: “Then why does the sign say $7.99?”
Clerk: “I don’t know what you are talking about.”
Me: “The sign up there.” (pointing to the sign again)
Clerk: “Let me get the manager.”
The manager came over, and I was convinced I would be eating shortly.
Manager: “Can I help you?”
Me: “I just want to order the special that it see on the sign up there.”
Manager: “There is no special at this time.”
Me: “Then why does the sign say there is?”
Manager: “I don’t know about that, but you can order two value meals and get the same thing.”
Me: “But that will cost more than $7.99.”
Manager: “That’s right.”
Me: “But what I want is what is on the sign up there.” (pointing to the sign again)
The manager read the sign out loud, very slowly.
Manager: “The sign is wrong.”
Me: “Well, if you are the manager, why don’t you take it down?”
Manager: (angrily) “Excuse me?”
Me: “You are the manager, and you have signs in here that are wrong. You should take them down.”
Manager: “Sir, why don’t you leave my store.”
Me: “What?”
Manager: “Leave my store before something happens.”
Me: “What is going to happen?”
Manager: “Just get out of here.”
We left, walked about five blocks to the next McDonald’s. I ordered the same special without a problem.

I used to work at a Subway restaurant, and I found this happening quite often:
Me: “How can I help you?”
Customer: “I’d like a Club with everything.”
So I start putting cheese on the bread.
Customer: “No cheese.”
Me: “Ok.”
So I start putting vegetables on the bread.
Customer: “No lettuce or pickles.”
Me: “Ok.”
Customer: “No olives.”
Me: “Everything, right?”
Customer: “Yes.”
Me: “Everything?”
Customer: “Everything.”
Me: “Ok.”

Whenever I go to my local Subway, I find I constantly get either ingredients on my sub I didn’t ask for, or a sub missing some ingredients I did ask for. I’m not that picky, so one day when I was in a rush I asked for a 6-inch meat-lovers with everything.
Clerk: “Do you want lettuce?”
Me: “Yeah, everything please.”
Clerk: “Cheese?”
Me: “Yes, just put everything on it please.”
Clerk: “Pickles?”
Me: “Yes, everything, the works, please.”
This went on for every ingredient, getting more annoying with each step, until we reached the salt and pepper.

Clerk: “Salt?”
Me: (wanting to get going) “No, that’s ok.”
Salt goes on anyway.
Clerk: “Pepper?”
Me: “Yeah.”
No pepper.

Finally the sub’s rung up, and I rush out of the store. Half an hour later, start eating the sub and notice there’s no meat on my meat-lover sub.

The scene is a mostly takeout sandwich shop kind of like Subway. Your order is taken at the counter, and the sandwich is made while you watch. It is difficult for an order to get messed up unless neither party is paying attention. While I admit that from time to time I mumble, and, having been raised in the South, my drawl is not understandable by some, I generally have no trouble communicating with the vast majority of people that I speak with.

So you can imagine my surprise and consternation when, one afternoon:

Me: “I’d like a plain number three, white, end piece preferred, no cheese. And BBQ chips. To go.”
Clerk: (grabs a wheat roll) “Number three?”
Me: “Yeah. Plain.”
Clerk: (holding a wheat roll) “What size?”
Me: “That’s on white, please. Large.”
Clerk: (cutting off a small piece of the wheat roll) “Ok.”
Me: “Uhhh…I want that on white. End piece if you got it. And a large.”
Clerk: “Oh…yeah…sorry. What size?”
Me: “Large.”
Clerk: (grabbing a white roll – with an uncut end still attached) “Ok.”
Me: “End piece is preferred.”
Clerk: (cutting off a small piece from the roll which is just barely long enough to qualify for a large sandwich, resulting in two pieces of while roll: a small-sized piece and a piece that is only about half as long as the small size although it is the end piece of the original whole roll) “Hmm.”
Me: “That’s large, please. Large.”
Clerk: “Huh?”
Me: “I want a large number three.”
Clerk: “Oh…yeah…sorry.” (looks at the two pieces of bread on the counter in front of him, confused) “You said you wanted an end piece?”
Me: “Yeah. End piece is OK. Not required. Picky teenage daughter.”
Clerk: (horizontally slices the smaller-than-small-sized piece of white roll – the piece that has the end on it) “Ok.”
Me: “Uh. Excuse me. I want a large number three.”
Clerk: “I thought you wanted the end piece.”
Me: “I want a large number three. Plain. The end piece is OK, but it is not required.”
Clerk: (continues to make the sandwich on the less-than-small-sized end piece) “Ok.”
Me: “Uh. Excuse me again. That’s a large number three, please.”
Clerk: “I thought you wanted the end piece.”
Me: “I want a large number three, plain. Forget about the end piece, OK?”
Clerk: “What do I do with this?”
Me: “What do you do with what?”
Clerk: “What do I do with this end piece?”
Me: “Push it aside. Get a fresh roll of white bread, OK? I want a LARGE number three.”
Clerk: “Oh…yeah.”
Me: “Picky teenage daughter. She has to have a large, plain sandwich.”
Clerk: (cuts off a large sized piece from a fresh, whole white roll) “That’s a large, right?”
Me: “Yes. Large. You got it.”
Clerk: “Number three?”
Me: “Yeah. Plain.”
Clerk: “What kind of cheese?”
Me: “That’s plain.”
Clerk: “What kind of cheese do you want on it?”
Me: “I want it plain, please.”
Clerk: “What is that?”
Me: “What is what?”
Clerk: “What is plain?”
Me: “I want a large number three, plain.”
Clerk: “What do you mean, plain?”
Me: “Yes, plain.”
Clerk: “What do you mean, plain?”
Me: “Just a number three. Plain. Absolutely plain.”
Clerk: “I dunno know what you mean.”
Me: “I want a large number three, absolutely plain.”
Clerk: “I don’t think we have that.”
Me: “You can’t make a plain sandwich? I order them here all the time!”
Clerk: “What do you mean, plain? We don’t have plains.”
Note that, at this point, the other customers at the counter are visibly amused, one even chuckling out loud. I look at them, and get “What a moron!” looks from them, so I know it’s not just me. The other clerks appear curious about why a customer is raising his voice, but they still appear unaware that anything odd is going on.

Me: “I want a LARGE number THREE, absolutely PLAIN. Can you make one of those for me?”
Clerk: (visibly irritated) “I dunno. What do you mean, plain?”
Me: “PLAIN! Nothing on it!”
Clerk: “Nothing? Just the bread?”
Me: “No. Just a plain number three. Nothing on it at all. No–”
Clerk: (interrupting) “What kind of cheese?”
Me: “No cheese at all! Plain!”
Clerk: (walks away from his station and talks to the manager) “I can’t do this.”
Manager: “What’s wrong?”
Clerk: “He won’t tell me what kind of cheese he wants.”
Me: “Can I speak to a manager?”
Manager: “Is there a problem?”
Me: “I’m just trying to get a sandwich made.”
Clerk: “He keeps talking about some kind of airplane or something.”
Manager: “Airplane? What’s his order?”
Clerk: “A large number three airplane…or plane…I dunno what he wants me to do.”
Manager: “What did you order?”
Me: “I’d like a number three, plain, on white, preferrably an end piece…no cheese. BBQ potato chips. To go.”
Manager: “What was the problem?”
Me: “I have no idea, but it appears from what he said to you that he doesn’t know what the word ‘plain’ means.”
Manager: “Well, we’ll get you taken care of.”

When I get out to the car, my wife and daughter are curious why it took so long. They are the first to hear the story but not the last.

:bored:

Wow. That’s a truly incredible list of tales…

You must’ve been pretty bored to type all that out.

Uh, no I didn’t type all that out. I cut and pasted it from rinkworks, a site devoted to sharing this kind of stuff. *It’s where I get all my funny stuff: court statements, accident reports, etc.

*I can see why you thought it was me though, with all the “me’s.” However, the last tale was about a guy trying to get a sandwich for his daughter. I’m a seventeen-year-old girl.

Ah well, guess I’ll be more specific next time.

:eek:

Oh my! That was really funny :smile: People can be so dense sometimes :tongue:

:rofl: haha the clerk from the last story sounds like me. lol im pretty dense like that too :tongue: .

I love that. Thank you, you made my day. Although it sounded really, really irritating.

LOL! Subway one is hilarious :happy:

Wow! That’s indeed hilarious. Almost sounds like dealing with government agencies in Belgium :neutral:

(for example: people who have been declared officially dead while still alive - they had to move heaven and earth to get the situation right. Not easy to claim anything when you don’t exist anymore)