Fantasy Football Fairy
Footballguy
cstu is #11a: Tom Skerritt
1b: CSTU
2: Charles Ponzi
3: Bernie Madoff
cstu is #11a: Tom Skerritt
1b: CSTU
2: Charles Ponzi
3: Bernie Madoff
4. Hitler.1a: Tom Skerritt
1b: CSTU
2: Charles Ponzi
3: Bernie Madoff
WWTD?As an employer, I would love to use Tom's approach. When I have an employee who has a bad day, I just wouldn't pay them.![]()
Close enough to the scenario described the OP, amirite?We had a couple that came in regularly and skipped out on the bill. One night a couple police officers were eating and our manager asked them to keep an eye out.
Charges were pressed, I didn't go outside to see if they were arrested.. but I assume so.
Sorry, when I go out to a restaurant I am paying for the overall package. No problem walking out and not paying for over priced beverages that I never would have purchased there otherwise. My time is worth something and you have already wasted enough of it at this point.The number of people that think it's okay to steal from a business because they are not satisfied with the service is shocking. If one were to create a list that ranks dooshy behavior from 1-10 (10 being the most dooshy)---
- a restaurant being guilty of extremely slow customer service during one of it's busiest times of the year would be like an 8.
-a person stealing from a business--and then complaining about that business after they stole from it would be a solid 10.
The restaurant was guilty of slow customer service--this sucks--but **** happens from time to time--and my guess is that a simple conversation with a manager would have resulted in a satisfactory results.
The OP is guilty of stealing. Period. Customers don't have the right to take stuff without paying because they are "dissatisfied". The icing on the cake is that--he now has the unmitigated gall to complain about his experience/place that he stole from. I'm sorry--but the minute that you stole something--that restaurant has far more right to complain about you than the OP does about them. To steal something and then complain about "free" is far worse than a restaurant goer experiencing slow service at a busy time.
No offense--but that is not a decision that is up to you to make. Every human being has a different set of standards--and this is why it is not up to customers to decide when it is appropriate to justify stealing. If you go to a restaurant--and are unhappy with the service--you ask for a manager--tell them why you are not satisfied and tell them why you don't plan on paying and then leave. I manage a small but fine jewelry store--a business where "the overall" customer package means everything. On the days leading to xmas--there were times where we had 12-15 customers in our shop at any given time--with our entire staff of 7 people each helping a person. That led to cases where sometimes customers had to wait 15-25 minutes to get served. If each of them found it appropriate to steal a Rolex or take a diamond ring because their time is money--how would you feel about that? As the manager--when I see a customer is waiting--I'll apologize to them--thank them for their patience--and will even sometimes give them a gift card from the Starbucks that is in our same shopping center and have them enjoy a drink on me--and will personally walk over there/and or send them a text when I have an available associate to help them. For the OP to essentially steal (he didn't say a word to a manager)--and then to complain about it is reflective of terrible character. Dude probably stole what would have been a bill of $30--he already said earlier that he assumes that the stuff he stole probably costed the restaurant $5. So you go somewhere--get $30 worth of food---don't pay a penny--and then turn around and complain about it? C'mon man.Sorry, when I go out to a restaurant I am paying for the overall package. No problem walking out and not paying for over priced beverages that I never would have purchased there otherwise. My time is worth something and you have already wasted enough of it at this point.
Comparing to Best Buy, Jewelry store shtick is awesome also. not close to the same experience.Especially like the but I waited tables at Olive Garden so I know things you don't angle.
Saying that there are no parallels between those situations is also naive. Shoplifting from a convenience store is no different than shoplifting from a jewelry store. The parallel is that in commerce--once a product has been taken or consumed--an agreement is necessary by both the merchant and the customer to settle that transaction. In this case--products were ordered and consumed--and then walked out on without any input or agreement from the side of the merchant. That= stealing--whether it is a salad--or a watch, a ring or a television. I'm not sure what point you are trying to make.the walking out on food = stealing expensive jewelry analogies are lol bad.
analogies in the wrong hands will be the downfall of our society yet.
Almost nobody volunteers to work Christmas Eve. In the restaurant business, it's a given that you have to work that day, unless you have seniority and staffing needs and number of total employees dictates that they don't need you that day.I feel bad for the waiter. The guy volunteered to worked Christmas Eve so some of his fellow coworkers can spend the night with their loved ones. He had to work extra hard coz the restaurant was short handed, then the Scrooge Family walked his table.![]()
For our experienced servers in the crowd - what do restaurants do with the meals that were prepared but didn't get served since the OP and his crew walked the table? Do they save them and hope someone orders the identical meal?the only thing OP stole is the drinks and salads. he never received the food he ordered, so he didn't steal that. i probably would have left a $20 or whatever on the table to cover the beers and salads, but no problem walking out after that. jon taffer would back me up here.
If they are lucky they can fill other orders with some of the food. Otherwise they would give the food away to staff that can eat and run, or maybe some regular customers (anybody want some jalopeno poppers?!!). Most of it will get tossed.For our experienced servers in the crowd - what do restaurants do with the meals that were prepared but didn't get served since the OP and his crew walked the table? Do they save them and hope someone orders the identical meal?
So the restaurant is out more money for that food that went unsold and discarded, plus you've got the general travesty of wasted food in a world where people are starving. It just keeps getting worse and worse. :(If they are lucky they can fill other orders with some of the food. Otherwise they would give the food away to staff that can eat and run, or maybe some regular customers (anybody want some jalopeno poppers?!!). Most of it will get tossed.
Yes. It is not the waiter's fault when the kitchen is overwhelmed with order at peak time. I always try to be patient and overtip when other people have to work on holidays.Almost nobody volunteers to work Christmas Eve. In the restaurant business, it's a given that you have to work that day, unless you have seniority and staffing needs and number of total employees dictates that they don't need you that day.
If I had to guess, I would bet this restaurant was understaffed, hence the long wait time for food.
No way they lost $5. Labor alone goes way past that.Those who say the restaurant didn't lose anything aren't considering opportunity cost.
New band nameSo the restaurant is out more money for that food that went unsold and discarded, plus you've got the general travesty of wasted food in a world where people are starving. It just keeps getting worse and worse. :(
A smart guy would turn a bad situation into an opportunity to make a deal, but sometimes it's hard to think when one's hungry and the survival instinct kicks in.OP made a #### move, but not that big of a deal (from the restaurant perspective, not OP having to look himself in the mirror).
He could've spoken with the manager, but really, on a night like this, the manager did not have time to deal with listening to OP whine. Manager would've certainly comped the drinks, and was probably glad he didn't have to waste time dealing with him. Still a #### move, but really no harm done overall.
The only thing the restaurant would really care about is that he's probably not coming back. Not the worst loss, losing a customer like that, but margins are slim so you'd like to keep every customer, even the sort of people that would do something like this.
Sure, sounds good. And if you run over a pedestrian with your car, just keep right on driving. They "most likely" had it coming.New band name![]()
And managers comp food for employees and good clients all the time. So maybe the travesty is your reaction.
Also, the issue here is that most likely, the food hadn't even been prepared yet.
I doubt it was OG because he mentioned salads but no breadsticks.Did we ever find out the restaurant? I am picturing the Olive Garden as Viper pushed through the double doors.
I never said there are no parallels between the situations. There are parallels between lots of situations - that doesn't mean they need to be compared.Saying that there are no parallels between those situations is also naive. Shoplifting from a convenience store is no different than shoplifting from a jewelry store. The parallel is that in commerce--once a product has been taken or consumed--an agreement is necessary by both the merchant and the customer to settle that transaction. In this case--products were ordered and consumed--and then walked out on without any input or agreement from the side of the merchant. That= stealing--whether it is a salad--or a watch, a ring or a television. I'm not sure what point you are trying to make.
Oh yeah, he could've made out like a bandit, though that would've just taken more time.A smart guy would turn a bad situation into an opportunity to make a deal, but sometimes it's hard to think when one's hungry.
No offense--but that is not a decision that is up to you to make. Every human being has a different set of standards--and this is why it is not up to customers to decide when it is appropriate to justify stealing. If you go to a restaurant--and are unhappy with the service--you ask for a manager--tell them why you are not satisfied and tell them why you don't plan on paying and then leave. I manage a small but fine jewelry store--a business where "the overall" customer package means everything. On the days leading to xmas--there were times where we had 12-15 customers in our shop at any given time--with our entire staff of 7 people each helping a person. That led to cases where sometimes customers had to wait 15-25 minutes to get served. If each of them found it appropriate to steal a Rolex or take a diamond ring because their time is money--how would you feel about that? As the manager--when I see a customer is waiting--I'll apologize to them--thank them for their patience--and will even sometimes give them a gift card from the Starbucks that is in our same shopping center and have them enjoy a drink on me--and will personally walk over there/and or send them a text when I have an available associate to help them. For the OP to essentially steal (he didn't say a word to a manager)--and then to complain about it is reflective of terrible character. Dude probably stole what would have been a bill of $30--he already said earlier that he assumes that the stuff he stole probably costed the restaurant $5. So you go somewhere--get $30 worth of food---don't pay a penny--and then turn around and complain about it? C'mon man.
I see you working, but to me that responsibility falls onto the restaurant staff after they've failed to meet reasonable expectations of their customers. What would have been an acceptable time frame where he's OK to walk? 2 hours of waiting? 3? Is there no period of time where he can call the waiter over and say "hey thanks just the same but this has taken too long, we don't want the food any more"?For our experienced servers in the crowd - what do restaurants do with the meals that were prepared but didn't get served since the OP and his crew walked the table? Do they save them and hope someone orders the identical meal?
Yep....guessing people only like to be walked on in Minnesota.might be the right thing if you live in DODGEVILLE
That would've been awesome if he did that. Instead he just left without paying.I see you working, but to me that responsibility falls onto the restaurant staff after they've failed to meet reasonable expectations of their customers. What would have been an acceptable time frame where he's OK to walk? 2 hours of waiting? 3? Is there no period of time where he can call the waiter over and say "hey thanks just the same but this has taken too long, we don't want the food any more"?
sighAt what monetary value do you justify stealing? Just wondering. If he walked out on $150 worth of salads and drinks at Mortons- then what?I never said there are no parallels between the situations. There are parallels between lots of situations - that doesn't mean they need to be compared.
I get that there is some technical definition of stealing that his actions fall into.
The point I made is that your analogy was bad and disingenuous. He walked on salad and some beers. No need to start talking about stealing an engagement ring.
It's stealing. Not sure why this is so difficult to understand.Not sure why this is so difficult to understand.
well sure, that's the better way to go about it.That would've been awesome if he did that. Instead he just left without paying.
It's not like the entire staff left to go to the movies. He could've flagged anyone down and asked for a manager. That's what non-horrible people do when they have a dispute with a business.
sigh
$0. I already said he should have left cash for the drinks and salads before walking the table.At what monetary value do you justify stealing? Just wondering. If he walked out on $150 worth of salads and drinks at Mortons- then what?
More our less than your crappy analogy?Yeah- that's soo funny. Great input.
I don't think anyone here thinks he was on the hook for the entrees.well sure, that's the better way to go about it.
I can see it from both sides. he probably owes them the courtesy to tell them that he's going to leave. but, they already wasted a significant portion of his time. why should he spend any more of his letting them know what he's thinking?
but, for the purposes of whether or not it's 'stealing', it doesn't matter whether he tells them before he leaves, does it? my point was that at some point, enough of his time has been wasted with no food where it's OK for him to leave without paying for the entrees. again - he already ate some salad and had some beer, so that should have been paid for. but as far as being on the hook for the entrees - nah.