Double post because wtf kinja.
Double post because wtf kinja.
Assholes are assholes and will always find a way to be so, I guess. I once had a guy tell me to pick the green olives out of his pasta (our olives are a sliced mix of green and black—not something you can really sift through) and threaten to have me fired when I pointed out that it was the lunch rush, there were 30…
I feel bad for the next customer actually, because I literally stood there and stared at the stacks of cups for a good two minutes while my mind did a hard reboot.
Oh god, I swear I had Coffee Latte's husband the other day. Never in my life have I felt the stupidity ratio in a room rise so rapidly as when this guy opened his mouth.
My guess is that it's intended as a preemptive measure to protect against the possibility of conversion therapy being banned for minors, as it has been in other states, as Oklahoma doesn't have any sort of provisions against it right now. It could also be intended to make it easier to put your kid into conversion…
Clearly, this woman has never heard of Greece or Rome. Or Christianity, apparently (for its first few centuries, the Church performed same-sex marriages, although there's some debate about what the actual intention with these marriages was).
This seems to be a trend with sandwich shop type places. Everyone I know who's worked at one of these sorts of restaurants has absolutely hated it, no matter what chain.
Autism Speaks supports eradicating or "curing" autism, which many people with autism find offensive since it gets close to saying "autistic people shouldn't exist." They've also produced numerous PR materials that treat autistic people like burdens and promote the idea that autistic people can't have productive, happy…
Eh, you had to wade through three different discussions to find that out.
Well, it seems the seating is for a disability, which is also totally kosher (though more polite if you tell the hostess right off). But yeah, in re-reading them I think people are reacting to the attitude rather than the literal contents.
I think the problem with the original commenter is that he/she has a bit of a whiny attitude (servers not liking special requests is not about them not liking him/her as a person) and refuses to understand that all special requests take extra work no matter how small it may seem to a customer (they also began by…
In my experience, pastas are usually all cooked together which cuts down on problems, but that might not be the case everywhere. I don't personally think it would be too hard to accommodate (assuming that there isn't just 1 angel hair dish and 1 penne dish, because that means that the kitchen didn't prep a whole lot…
That would be fine for me as long as the restaurant isn't too busy and they don't take forever. The only exception is if they order something that strikes me as odd, in which case I would double check with you to make sure its okay (like once when I had a 10-year-old-ish kid order just pasta noodles. No sauce, no…
Seeing as how you are apparently a reader of this site, shouldn't you be jumping for joy right now? This article was exactly what you hoped for!
If you tell your server at the beginning of a meal "I have this and that allergy" then that is totally acceptable. Having allergies isn't the same as being picky or wanting stuff changed around. Just be reasonable when the server offers suggestions, and try not to make a totally new entree out of the menu parts.
Because the restaurant expects to sell X amount of rice with X plates of chicken. Guaranteed, your one serving of rice might not tip the scales, but a restaurant only preps so much of each thing. If a side specifically comes with only one entree, then they've prepped enough for the number of that entree they expect to…
Yeah, but that's a bit different from a standalone sit-down restaurant, and I bet your manager still wouldn't be happy if the whole party bought McDonald's but decided they liked the tables in your restaurant better. It's one thing for restaurants to make small exceptions in the general "no outside food" rule in the…
From a legal standpoint, it's a liability issue. The kitchen can't know what's actually in the couple's food or if the given cooking directions are correct, so if the couple was to get sick (or fake sick as part of a scam, I suppose) the restaurant could be in trouble.
Because usually plays do allow a certain amount of interpretation and change on the part of the performers? It's not the same sort of art form as a novel, painting, etc. There's nothing at all unusual about plays being shortened or lengthened, or having lines or setting altered.
There's a difference between saying "you are not allowed to talk about your vagina" and "please don't conflate vaginas and womanhood" and it seems like the latter is what's being said here. The Vagina Monologues have empowered a great number of women, but I don't think you can read them without seeing the…