twsmomm
Cactus47 second account
twsmomm

Sexism because OBVS he couldn't be calling them out on their shitty behavior.

Wow, throwing the sexism card in there, too? What a c**t. :-)

Fuck those people. The service industry is a two way street. I expect to be served to the best of their abilities but I do so knowing that I am in their world and exist under their rules. If I am expected to wait to be seated I wait to be seated. If it's a place that requires you to wear a tie I will wear a tie. I

It's already been pulled for violating Yelp's terms of service. I hate it when people do reviews like that.

I'm really impressed how the yelper threw the sexism allegation in there.

It means she's the kind of Jezebel poster who turns people off Jezebel.

I never post anything on yelp. But I will say, there is a local place that I love but the owners really are crazy and rude. They often yell at customers and have these set rules that if you don't know them, they will just be so rude and condescending about it. It's basically order your food and sit down. No

Dubious. Emily R. is a Californian who doesn't appear to have reviewed any other Boston-area businesses. But Emily R. is definitely an asshole-sympathizer.

Actually, I'd think with 'men with opinions' the owner would have chosen to call the police instead. Just going completely on stereotypes, 'men with opinions' would likely be far more physically intimidating to staff. And such men never share their opinions quietly.

Someone pathetically trying to rally the Tumblrinas to her defense.

Before I go to any fast food chain, I ALWAYS check the Yelp reviews. I'm not stepping foot in a BK that says I can't have it my way.

I agree, and I'm someone who writes yelp reviews. I tend to write positive reviews (I wrote a review of my longtime hairdresser that she said was so nice that it made her cry, she ended up giving me like a free color or something because she said the review brought in so much business), but sometimes I will write to

I disagree — For the most part (where I live) you can quickly and easily figure out what reviews represent nonsense versus which ones make legitimate points. A "nice" mechanic (who earns raves) that scams customers is easy to figure out by more knowledgable reviews. Same applies to restaurant reviews when they

There was that B&B (possibly in upstate NY?) that decided they'd impose a fine on all wedding parties whose guests wrote negative reviews of their B&B. I guess the place wasn't the best and people had written legitimately bad reviews, and the owner would figure out what weekend they stayed there, what wedding party

I hope you turned around and went elsewhere! That smacks of "we can't get insurance", which means they've had to use it in the past...

I don't see how that would deter people from posting negative reviews. If you had a bad enough experience with the daycare, I'm pretty sure you wouldn't want to take your pet back there regardless, so what difference would it make if you wrote a negative review?

I once went to a OB/GYN who asked me to sign a form saying I wouldn't sue for malpractice before they'd see me. They handed me an iPad and had me watch a video about the effects of malpractice suits on OB/GYNs' ability to deliver babies and practice medicine, had me read a long explanation of why they didn't carry

Agreed.

That sounds sketchy af, yo. I've never heard of a quality company demanding that sort of thing out of their customers, just awful ones. :/ I'd find a new doggy daycare.

Never. I think I'd take my dog to a different daycare first.