rSlash - r/Askreddit Fast Food Workers, What Is Your "Sir, This Is A Wendy's" Moment?
Episode Date: October 6, 2020r/Askreddit On today's episode we have two questions. The first is, "What story do you really want to tell but no one has asked the right question yet?" The second question is, "What is your best, 'Si...r, this is a Wendy's' Moment?" So if you're ready for wild stories with insane Karen encounters, then today's Askreddit video is for you! Subscribe to my channel for more daily Reddit videos! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to R-Slash, a podcast where I read
the best post from across Reddit.
Today's sub-reddit is R-Slash Asked Reddit.
What story do you really want to tell,
but no one's asked the right question for you to bring it up.
Our first replies from Robin Downey.
Once when I lived in Japan, I was riding my bike across a rice field at 6 a.m. No one's asked the right question for you to bring it up. Our first replies from Robin Downey.
Once when I lived in Japan, I was riding my bike across a rice field at 6am.
The sun was coming up, and there was no one anywhere which is so rare in Japan.
Just me on a dirt road between rice field for miles and miles, and the sound of my bike.
Then I heard a saxophone.
As I kept riding, eventually I saw a man sitting on a stool practicing a saxophone,
just on the road between the rice fields.
He nodded to me without breaking play at all.
One of the most magical moments of my life.
Then Eritha replies,
Dude, you were in a studio Ghibli film!
Our next reply is from Kindness on Reddit.
So I would occasionally write
posted notes to myself if I was super drunk and something absurd happened. My writing
is a legible on most days. I had a note for every in my wallet that looked like it was
saying, I am something, eat something, cucumber, whore. It kept me up at night trying to figure
out what it said. About a year later, it dawned on me.
I saw a man eat a cucumber whole. Some dude at a bar was eating a cucumber like an apple,
and was so incense and defensive from questions that I decided to stay away in documented
for human history. So combative, yet being so unapologetically human. It's been probably
10 years. Our next replies from the Bumbling Bee. My great-grandfather lived in Kansas when the
Dust Bowl hit the US. He and his wife lived in a really small town and he owned the grocery
store. After he passed away, my family was going through this stuff in his house and found
a box of letters he had hidden from everyone.
Every letter was a thank you from different families he helped during the Dust Bowl.
People would be running from the Dust Bowl and pass through his town.
He would give them free food to last him until they reach their destinations.
Many of the letters thanked him for saving their lives and stuff like that.
He took the secret to his grave, literally, not even his wife knew.
I've heard mentioned that maybe she wouldn't have been quite as pleased, but I don't know
about that.
I just think that's super cool and I'm very proud of him.
Our next reply is from Noodle Nugget.
In the early 60s, my dad had a nervous breakdown due to severe abuse as a child while an army
basic training.
He went to a mental hospital and was released to his family when he was deemed well.
After a while, he started hearing voices and was re-admitted to another mental hospital. Around the same time, my
mother, who had recently gotten divorced from her first husband, lost her mother, and
she tried to commit suicide. She was admitted to that same mental hospital. They got married
in 1965. Our next reply is from Sweet Dengus. When me and my slightly older cousins were kids, they tried to convince me of falsehoods
all the time.
I was, and still kind of am, extremely gullible.
I fell for, hey, gullible is written on the ceiling more than once.
One day, when I was around 11, the older of my cousins was talking about how he was joining
a lacrosse team.
I had no idea what that was, so I asked him. He explained the rules and the tools of the game,
and I was certain that he was lying to me that it was another prank.
There was no effing way that people ran around with small baskets on sticks throwing and catching
hard balls. That's insanity. So I smirked and said, sure, and went on my way.
For the next several years,
whenever someone mentioned LaCrosse,
I'd snicker thinking I was privy to a joke.
When I was around 17,
a friend of mine mentioned that she was going to a LaCrosse game.
I laughed and said, kind of annoyed.
Yeah, I know the joke, you can drop it.
LaCrosse isn't real.
She was so confused and looked at me like I was crazy. She insisted
that it was, in fact, real. I insisted that it wasn't. We looked it up online. Sure enough,
completely real. I was utterly shocked. And way more than a little embarrassed, especially
when I thought back to all of my weird responses to mentions of the cross.
Ugh.
So you know those moments when you're trying to fall asleep and that random memory of something completely embarrassing pops into your head and you just cringet yourself?
Well, we all know what this guy thinks about when he's trying to fall asleep.
Our next reply is from Zidoum.
I was walking home from a school event late at night.
I'm a girl, and I didn't want to walk home alone at night because, well, I'm a girl.
But I was too shy to bum a ride from someone.
When walking to and from school, I always took a shortcut through a cops of trees, which
shaved off about five minutes of walking time.
As I was walking, I saw what looked like a person walking
out of the trees. I stopped. They stopped. I took a step forward. So did they. I stepped
to the right. They stepped to the right. I was already scared, but now I was terrified.
So I started yelling at the person. Hey, I can see you. What do you want? Don't screw with me, butthole. No response.
I took another step forward, and the other person did too. And then I realized I was being
backlit by a street lamp, and I had been posturing and screaming at my own shadow.
Our next Ask Reddit question is, fast food workers have read it. What is your, sir? This
is a Wendy's moment. Our first reply is from Displacianchi.
I was a shift manager at a McDonald's
in the very middle of a mall.
A guy walks up to the counter
with several McDonald's bags of food.
He says, my wife came through your drive-through
and you messed up the order.
Are you sure she came through hour drive-through?
Yeah, she told me she came through the drive-through
and when she got home, she realized the order was wrong. Y'all need to give us our money back and give us the right food.
I stand there confused while looking around the mall. Did she drive through Sears or JCPenney
to get here? The guy looks around and finally realizes that he's in the middle of a mall.
He grabs the bags and huffs away. That was the single greatest amount of human stupidity I had ever experienced, until I joined
Reddit.
And down beneath this response, we have an interesting comment from El Patrino Fred.
The sky is an idiot, but he knew exactly what he was doing.
Get the money back, get the right food, then go to another McDonald's and do the same thing.
Hit three stores, and it's an easy $30.
And at the end, he gets a free meal. So basically this guy's scam was clever, but he was too
stupid to realize that this game would completely fail with OP.
Our next reply is from MaxCrab. I work at Pinera. I guess calls in from the car, and I
hear several people in the background all giving orders for a pick up. The first order
is something simple, the next order is an item that we don't carry, a
salmon dish of some kind.
I know there are some regional paneras that have or have had salmon, but we're not one
of them.
So I let them know, hey I'm sorry, but we don't carry salmon.
Maybe…
And the person on the other end of the phone cuts me off and starts getting really aggressive.
Yes you do, you do, they scream.
But I don't, we don't.
So then I'm like, hey, maybe you're thinking of another chain.
We're very similar too.
And I started a list of some other places and they cut me off against screaming.
I know you have f'ing salmon.
What the f?
I hated just the other day.
And at this point I'm just being honest with them and say, hey man, I don't really need
this attitude.
We don't have salmon.
I can't make the dish for you.
You have us confused with someone else.
There's a long silence and finally someone other than the person who's been yelling says,
wait, this isn't, and then she says the name of some other plays that totally isn't
Panera. I say no.
And then everyone in the car starts yelling at each other and I
hang up customer service is the worst.
Hi, I'm Pete Davidson. And if you're like most people, you may be
asking yourself, whoa, Hey, Pete, are you here to up my hydration
game? And I'd be like, Hey, you, that's exactly right with new
smart water alkaline with antioxidant. And you'd be like, hey, you, that's exactly right with new smart water alkaline with antioxidant. And you'd be like, okay, cool, but there's no way there's
a higher pH, right? And I'd be like, there actually is. And you'd be like, that's rad. I hope
there's electrolytes for taste too. And I'd be like, you're not going to believe this.
Elevate how you hydrate and keep it smart with smart water alkaline.
What do I love getting my holiday gifts at Chopper's Drug Mart?
The PC Optimum Points.
Perfume from Mom?
Points for me.
Gaming console for the kids?
Points for me.
Chalkets for the teachers?
Oh yeah.
Points for me.
Shoppers.
You should totally go.
Exclusions of life.
And beneath that, we have a similar Panera story from Louis,
Esraela.
I recently went to a Panera bread and overheard the employees talking about a customer's
order.
In the notes, it said,
Chicken noodle soup.
No broth, please.
I'm still messed up over this.
What on earth is chicken noodle soup with no broth?
Just wet noodles with chunks of chicken?
What?
Our next reply is, do we want to go there?
First of all, FUOP for making me relive this. What chunks of chicken? What? Our next reply is, do we want to go there?
First of all, FUOP for making me relive this.
Now, working at McDonald's, every single day at the same time at 4pm, this old guy would
come in and order his food.
Most people knew that he wanted a special order, overcooked the bejesus out of the patty.
We started that up right when he walked in.
Anyway, that's not the problem.
The problem is this dude was forgetful as all hell and would demand a ceramic plate to
eat on every time.
So that's when we would explain it to him.
Dude, this is a McDonald's.
We don't have plates.
And usually he'd be like, oh right.
But sometimes he would just rant about how he should have plates.
I saw him absolutely flip the F out because a girl stepped outside the break room with
the plate of food she brought from home.
I knew you bastards had plates, and we could never convince him otherwise after that day.
Our next reply is from Cadbury, Obeldean Daddy.
This dude came to the drive-through, I opened the window.
Sir, how can I help you?
I'm out of checks, he replies calmly.
I'm not sure I follow you, I say.
I'm out of checks, he says again, more impatiently.
Right, I heard you, but I don't know what you want me to do about it.
You can pay with cash or card too.
The dude gives me a weird look then says,
Oh, this isn't the bank, and peels out from the window.
I'm a pharmacist.
Our next reply is from Amphodka.
It wasn't me involved, but I witnessed it.
I worked at Burger King when I was a teenager.
We're short-staffed one day, and the girl in the drive-through was on break,
so our manager stepped in to cover her.
He was pretty old and didn't have the best hearing,
so most customers were pulling around
to the window to talk to him as he was struggling to hear through the headset.
Anyway, this one guy rolls up to the window in shouts.
I win a large Big Mac meal and a Coke, please.
Is that so dang hard?
My manager very calmly says, My apologies, sir.
That won't be difficult.
He leans out of the window and points down the road.
There's a McDonald's about three miles in that direction. They'll be happy to help. Have a nice day,
sir. Then he just closes the window and walks around the corner at a site. I laughed so hard.
Our next reply from 14k anthropologist. As a former Del Taco employee, I can confidently say that
regular Del Taco customers are all mean and-or idiots.
One lady in particular still makes my blood boil almost 10 years later.
It was Taco Tuesday, three tacos for one dollar, and we had over 50 orders in our queue
plus a line of people putting in more orders.
We were slammed and understaffed, and our way time was extremely long even though we were
trying our best.
So this lady was getting really pissed about waiting for her super important order of
six sucky tacos.
Defrosted and assembled by a guy who went to my high school but never actually showed
up for class.
Every time we would call out an order number, she would sarcastically and loudly cheer
and clap and congratulate us for finally learning how to do your jobs.
This went on for 10 or 15 minutes before I finally showed her our order board and said,
here's the order we're currently making, order 15, and way over here is your order, order
45. Realizing how many orders were ahead of her finally prompted her to leave with no
tacos, so that we could
continue fulfilling orders under the silent, watchful gaze of our other 30 angry customers.
I hated working there. Then, one day, I showed up for my regularly scheduled shift to find
a notice on the door that said, sorry, this location's closed. So anyway, I hate Del Taco.
Our next replies from YodaJerp.
I used to work at Target and they hired a new girl who had previously worked at Walmart
to work the fitting rooms, and by default, the Intercom system.
A few days after she started, she was about to make an announcement over the Intercom,
and I guess Habitatukover because she started the announcement with.
Attention Walmart shoppers?
She realized her mistake and made a good recovery with.
You're in the wrong store.
The funny thing is, that's exactly the type of thing where this girl probably felt super
embarrassed by it, but I bet everyone else was just amused by it.
Except for maybe her boss.
Our next replies from Universe Bear.
I worked at a small roadside produce place.
My boss had a few different stalls, so I was often left to run the stall myself.
I remember this lady walked up.
Do you have any tomatoes?
Sorry, we don't.
But the place down this street has them.
Then go there.
Our next replies from the insane potato.
This happened in an actual Wendy's.
It's a bit long, but trust me, it's worth the read.
I once had a woman come to the drive-thru and tried to order mac and cheese.
I politely informed her that we didn't have that.
She insisted we did.
I told her we definitely didn't.
She got angry and yelled that yes, we did.
I told her, ma'am, I've been working here for three years.
We've never had macaroni and cheese.
It's not something we serve.
Would you like to order something else?
She says,
Yes you have to do.
I can see it on the menu board.
It's right there in front of me on the menu.
I tell her I'm really not sure what she's looking at but we don't have mac and cheese and if it really does say mac and cheese on our
menu board then that means someone's bandalized it. She says no it definitely is part of the
menu board and it is real and we do have it and she isn't leaving until she gets her mac
and cheese. Q literally 10 minutes of this back and forth. All while she's holding up the drive-through line, I finally got the manager to come over
and deal with this after asking him for the 15th time, because they don't pay me nearly
enough to deal with people like this for that long.
The woman absolutely refuses to accept that we don't have mac and cheese.
She also refuses to order anything else and won't move her car until we give her
the mac and cheese that we don't have. We have a line of cars wrapped around the building
now and everyone's pissed. It's been half an hour and the line's not moved. The manager
tells her that if she doesn't leave, he's gonna have to call the cops. She screams that
she can't understand why we're doing this. And why we won't just serve her mac and cheese
when she can clearly see it on our menu board right in front of her.
So we do have it, and why are we lying to her?
My curiosity and exasperation finally got the better of me,
so against my better judgment, I exit the building
and walk along the outside to the drive-through
order screen with woman's car is.
I tell her to please show me on the menu
where it says the words macaroni
and cheese anywhere. She points and confidently says, right there. With all the conviction
of someone who is absolutely sure that they just prove some big dumb idiot wrong and
that they'll be hailed as a hero. I look where she's pointing. I see it. I sigh heavily
as a bit of my soul dies. I compose myself and say, as politely as I can,
ma'am, that's a picture of the orange slices that come with the kid's meal.
We don't serve mac and cheese.
Please drive away before the police get here.
She those confused looks at the menu board again, the realization dawns on her,
and she drives off without a word.
I go back inside and scream in the
walk-in freezer for 10 minutes. O.P. provided a picture of the oranges and for those of you who are
listening but not watching, they look like a bowl of oranges, not like a bowl of macaroni and cheese.
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