back when i worked a pizza hut someone came in 5 minutes to close. I dropped one of their pizzas in front of them knowing I'd have to remake it and clean up just so I could ruin their night
It's not the customer's fault, you know. The joint is open, i wanna come in, i come in. It's the owners/managers job to account for that 30 minutes at the end of the day to clean up.
I work in a shop. If custumer comes to returnd some machines (he said not working good), we give this machine to next custumer. And no problem for everyone.
I know right! It was the worst, it especially sucks when closing time comes and you get piled with so much more and then are expected to have it done by a certain time
Sadly true…Or an alcoholic! I work in hospitality/ service as well and I know many housekeepers who just go home n get drunk or find liquor at work and drink 😬
Yeah I got a serving job with no experience, technically hadn't even finished high-school. I was supposed to memorize the whole menu and every item in every meal and then do a test to see if I qualify. I studied my ass off for it thinking it would be mandatory and they just never asked me to write it. Had to learn how to use the machines from my coworkers who couldn't be bothered as I was yet to realize the moment anyone steps foot in that place they switch off mentally to preserve whatever happiness they have left
I had this happen before at a buffet. I came in, not even dressed for an interview, and manager did interview on the spot. He said to get my food handlers card and they can move on to training. After getting it, I called the manager back, and he said he will call me back later in the week. This ended up going for over a month. I asked one of the employees, after checking back for like the 7th or 8th time, how the manager is. All of them said, he is a complete buffoon and has a very bad attitude. So, ya any time an interview is held on the spot, it is not always a good sign. 😅😅
Not me… I only have respect for the ones that maintain a positive attitude. The ones that act shitty towards me, like it’s my fault they have a shitty job can go fuck themselves
I got a visceral pain in my chest when he said he only started smoking to get some kind of breaks… Seven years later, and I’m still addicted to nicotine.
Waited tables for a couple years back in college days. Got tons of stories. The part about the co-worker saying "A customer asked if we have milkshakes...bro we're not a McDonald's", really hit home! We ACTUALLY had someone say something like that to a customer, customer went and complained and so the management fired the server, only to rehire him like a week later. Yeah, it's a rough job. It's a grind. Between the customers wanting things for free, customers complaining about things which aren't your fault but for which you must still apologize...then also the crackhead co-worker who keeps effing things up and you have to help clean up the mess...and the managers who throw you under the bus and aren't fit for their jobs....it's tough! That's why I always tip really, really well. I know, I've been there.
Managers throw the people under the bus if you're not fit for the job, applies to groccery store as well. I work bakery overnight as a 2nd job, and my manager gives so much shite to the girl that sets up all my stuff She isn't the best, but she's only been there a month, and my manager talks like she's been there a year. The girl has to fill out 8 racks with 15 trays under _four hours_ , the sheet that she references off of this is _20 pages long minimum_ and they pay _70 cents_ above _minimum wage_ They did the same to me, every tray had its own very specific instructions with varying bake times and I had to learn it within 5 days. I sucked balls for a couple months until she sent me to help other stores. Going to other stores that had more patient managers, I was able to slowly learn how to do things. Those stores were messy compared to ours, but still.. When the other 2 overnights at our store quit and I became their full-time, they're treating me with kid gloves, for now and I'm slowly learning more They still don't totally like me, but I know what I'm doing. They don't, however, do this to the other girl. They're a major chanin and expect way too much for the amount you have to learn and the pay they're giving.
@@HackersSun That's every job everywhere to some extent, especially when you're working for a big chain store where people come and go on a regular basis. They take you for granted until they realize they need someone to fill the shift and then all of the sudden you're their MVP. Unfortunately the one thing they can rarely do is pay people what they're worth, but at least they'll be nicer, give you better scheduling, etc...
@Raskolnikov70 Yea I know, and it's unreal. I have a "real" job (data entry for a lab being tracked to be a lab tech) so it doesn't affect me much. The first week of my job, they were so patient with me. They didn't snap, they sheepishly smiled when I asked, "How did you know that?" As they guided through how to use their system. It was the first time I felt treated like a human and not shoveled poo (I was in the food service before that for 7 years) and it was clicking buttons to put a number in the system to print out a sticker to put on a sample. It's easier, pays more, and gets the full package of paid 2 week vacation, 5 yearly sick/PTO days, and holidays. Each year, my performance review yields me a 50 cents a year raise (the job pays $4-5/hr more than baker job) no teasing bs of "do a better job, take the test, and we'll talk about it" for a 25 cent raise every 2 years, just a raise from their appreciation. These jobs treat others like poo, the only reason I'm working was for business work contract for reduced school tuition. After a summer of working full time on top of my full-time job for them, the GM of my store pulled teeth, refusing to sign the contract despite me having save 2 months of pay stubs and hr telling her SHE had to be the one to sign 🙃 She refused. This is, by far, the shitest food service job I've had. They expect way more out of you for the pay. I've worked all positions in the industry this is the one where they expect you to memorize a volume of material and master it within a week along with the speed. My busser job didn't have me memorize the position of every grain of seasme on a bread for minimum wage under a week 😒
I did that for a few years. Working security stations (glorified customer service) sucked but overnights patrolling a big empty factory/office complex was great. Nobody around and nothing stressful to deal with.
@@Cookieboy70 I’m talking regular security. I used to do retail security and then night club bouncing straight after during my final year in uni and I’m convinced I lost brain cells doing that. Besides the fact that you’d get into a full fist fight with some scumbag over ABSOLUTELY NOTHING, staring at the doorway for 10-12 hrs a day is mind numbingly boring
@SirWilliamDeHooton Exactly what my friend said. He said he had to make certain number of patrols per night and was only allowed his phone and a flashlight, no weapons. And things definitely went bump in the night!
@@Yenaldooshi138 Oh damn. Yeah day security does sound like a bit of a nightmare now that I think about it. Mostly the actual of dealing with people part of it.
The part where he joked about quitting cigarettes and everybody laughed was so funny. The only way to survive these jobs is by having horrible debilitating vices lol
@@adeptronici work home around 3 days a week and 2 days at the office. It can be hard to motivate myself at home but overall I prefer it over the office. Longer sleep, time to do housekeeping stuff inbetween and I might or might not game sometimes when i dont have urgent things planned lol.
I’ve been working from home for 3 years. It is awesome, get more sleep, save money on gas. But after a while you notice you just want to drive around and get out of the house after a while on your lunch break. I miss coffee runs, taco runs with my colleagues as well. Laughing with people, telling stories. I felt like I had a better social life when I worked at the office. Idk just my two cents.
If everybody worked as a waiter, even just for a week, the world would be a much more understanding place. I did it for four years and trust me when I say I almost never complain at a restaurant. My orders are simple and I’m patient even if it takes a while to arrive.
it's because 90% of the world are straight up dumb, since i was a kid i always saw my dad getting angry with the waiter because the food is taking a while to arrive and i was just thinking "wtf the guy that bring the food to the table have to do with the time the food arrives?", thought i was just dumb because i was a kid but look, my dad was dumb not me
I never worked in service industry but I know it is tough work I never complain and I know what I want before they take my order I am polite never demanding and I leave a good tip.
I felt again all of that pain again. I once worked as a server in a restaurant, working 6 days a week, serving lunch and dinner, and even sometimes working 15 days straight and only one day to rest, to do everything again. From that experience, I respect every and single one of you who is working in this field.
I actually prefer the zoomer crowd over an eccentric food enthusiast or a Karen or someone entitled. Back when I used to work for a restaurant, a lady from California would come over to my city in Mexico for business and would bring her workforce and friends to eat. She was entitled as hell and seemed like she didn't care about the service. The "zoomers" of her workforce were the life of the table. Guys even gave me like 50 dollars of tips because I was totally nice to them... and in Mexico, that's a lot just for a tip, don't know about USA. The worst memories I have of working in a restaurant come from serving the entitled or Karens.
@fred1160 Know a guy who worked in the lobby for a motel chain location; cops got called a few times a week over junkies (almost dying from OD-ing) and/or drugs, usually heroin, meth, or large amounts of weed. You would be shocked how many people leave it out in the open when cleaning maids come in. If a little weed was found or a guest room smelled straight up like it, they would be asked to leave or have the police involved. Sometimes the police were called over possible prostitution (worried about human trafficking especially). Bed bugs were a problem. Drunk people coming back from sporting events were too (fighting, passing out, being too loud, creating others to complain). My friend was glad he doesn't work there anynore and never will. PS, pay was bad.
@@The_Feral_manI worked for a restaurant in a hotel for 2 years. That is truly another dimension of hell that makes regular restaurant biz seem tame lol
@@abrahammesrajecorrea2349the manager and all of the workers are the real freaking workers and deserve basic respect (anything above that depends on the person)
I remember coming in to a restaurant 15 minutes before the kitchen closed. The servers were doing their closing duties and I walked to the nearest server and asked him if I could still order food. He said, “Well yes technically if you wanna be that guy.” I knew exactly what he meant and why he said it; wasn’t offended in the slightest. From that point forward I gained a newfound respect and understanding towards restaurant staff.
@@ronatolanun wrong with being that guy if i have the ability to walk into a high end restaurant any time of day I want than I’m gonna do that and let my nuts hang on these wagie servers
I respect that of you sir. Technically if the kitchen is still open, you could order but if it was 10 minutes before closing or the staff is closing, it is too late to order
I'm not a server, but I work in retail so when I go to a restaurant and asked the server for something, I always say "take all the time you need". Because I can't imagine how much they go through there so I want to make sure they have some gratitude coming their way.
This is actually why I have the perspective of not wanting to lead a long life. Why extend my life beyond the 60s if it's only gonna get harder? Not like I'll miss out much, so just let me go however I damn please instead of staying and suffering
Don't give up. Yes it would make your mama sad. Things change...perspectives change. Just stick it out. Death comes for us all for free. No need to go asking for it.
I empathize with Wojack. He possesses more intelligence than people acknowledge, yet he consistently grapples with stress. He serves as the embodiment of the everyday struggling individual in the 21st century, someone to whom life has dealt an unfortunate hand.
I’ve worked this miserable job for four years. Thank god I left it, some people get stuck in that job for decades and are no longer able to leave for something else.
@@minimalistvlogger3467 they end up in a situation where they don’t have any skills outside the food industry, so they can’t transition, and they couldn’t invest in education or trade school due to financial or family obligations. The result is that they end up trapped in the industry, able to leave any given restaurant, but not the job of being a server.
Yeah I feel bad for people who get into a job like that when the times were better and you got more out of your money. Finding yourself getting close to retirement in these bad times and then finding yourself out of work because they let you go to replace you with a new hire is hard.
Ah yes. Customers saying one thing but then getting upset cause they meant another. Taking forever to decide. The fear of passing complaints to the cooks. The anxiety of knowing you're technically putting more work load on the cooks and they despise you for it. And the people who dont tip.
I can totally relate to the first point. When I was young and I worked as a waiter, it was honestly disturbing how customers would blatantly lie about being given the wrong order. I went from a nice guy in the beginning to dishing out sly revenge to anyone who infuriated me. Now that I'm older and working in the field that I graduated in, I always give waiters/waitresses respect. You never know what they can do to your food/drink lmao
Not tipping is fine, it’s not mandatory. Want better pay? Get a better job or go to your boss, not to your customers 😂 also you’re just doing your job. bet you dont tip a doctor for curing you
Join the dark side and become a cook: 🦹 >Watch coworkers simp by slipping free food to that one hot waitress. Who also tries to get you to do her job at closing. Or interrupt your flow to grab something she can easily reach. >have a karen order her steak medium rare and then accuse you of undercooking because she meant well done >feed your anger as the prep guys constantly missplace the ingredients you need or forget to restock >have the manager blame you for making to large batches of fries when they just yelled at you to do that exact thing. You know you want to.👹
My aunt likes cheap rosé and white Zinfandel. She ordered Chardonnay, copying my other aunt, then complained that it was strong and sent it back. She did it on a couple of occasions and I finally told her Chardonnay is aged in oak barrels and has a strong flavor. I told her to other Pinot Grigio. That took care of that. She had a new sophisticated-sounding favorite. 🙄
I just straight-up warn people that it may be dry and that they may want to try it medium well at least because they can always get it brought up a temp. A good server always knows when to warn a guest about something like that.
server jobs don't usually follow legal, you work when they need you for as long as they need you and you get days off when they can give you days off, You also go home when they don't need you and don't make money that day often@@meroinheroin
Spot on mate, used to work at a fancy restro pub during broke college days, and man that fake smile while being treated like dog sh!t from both the rude customers and manager is so true! Glad i left after a few months, you go mental !!
man its wild how real some of these stories are, like i swear the admin of this channel must have worked at every job at some point to have this level of realism in the videos😂😂😂
I was working in hotel, very similar job. At least in 12-16h shift you don't have time to think about anything so you don't have time for depression or anything, also after your shift you can get some coke in glass and eat dinner for free, $per hour was also higher than mcdonald so in the end some profits but it takes so much time that you literally live for work.
lol very accurate. I don’t work as a restaurant server/waiter but I observe their work when I go to restaurants and treat them with respect. Tipping is not required since I live in a developing country but I do tip them most of the times specially if they look busy yet serve you properly, I tip them more. There are almost no Karens here fortunately, I hope it’s just a Western thing.
Kinda, there will be Karens every now and then, it's just a matter of luck. I remember I had to deal with 2 different ones in separate times. And a guy that was the most Karen being ever, only because guy was a renowned painter from the country or something like that. Guy was not humble at all...
I worked a bit in a restaurant as a student, most depressing job experience of my life. All the people that work there are depressed alcoholics or drug addicts or both who hate their life
Don't know if that is a blessing in disguise to be told that or a passive insult to call you softie... but yeah, outside of overworking during heavy times, you'll get some awful treatment from costumers and sometimes coworkers alike. You kinda grow desensitized to it over time some times
@@abrahammesrajecorrea2349it might’ve been a blessing in disguise. Typically the tips are good money, but if the company is a bad place, they’ll take it out of the paycheck. And you must be very hard on the coworkers that treat you like sht, with customers just be tough but not enough in where you’ll be the bad guy
100% I was sensitive and had social anxiety and now I am an impenatrable rock who is unable to care about anyone saying anything to me@@Raskolnikov70 Getting older I am really doen with not being able to site down at all for 7-8 hours, my feet and legs hurt end of day. Like 5 minutes to just sit down a day would be nice.
@2:57 as a waiter can 100% agree. this is what me co-workers are talking 24/7 straight. jokes about funny guest requests. what is missing is that waiters always drop cutlery and still giving it to the guest. happens every singel day
I look back at my Waiter days as old war stories that I so desperately glad I survived from , I sometimes still have nightmares of being triple sat and given a large party
I worked as a porter in hotel once, which is basically being server, barman, room service/delivery and whatever the fuck the boss needs at the moment that doesn't involve cooking. Let me tell you, this hits way too close to home.
Literally every Server job rejected me. Oh well atleast Valet Parking is just "pls have driving experience and manual transmission knlowedge, thx." And you earn almost the same as Waiters in tips while just parking cars. I still wish I was a server during my special prime years man, not old yet but not young enough to look great as a server.
Insane how 100% of this is true it hurts hahaha I've just quit a job really JUST like it after being tired of being a hotel receptionist thinking it couldn't be worse... at least the pay was better but at what cost? Especially 12h a day without even sitting lol Now I'm going to start in a consultant company... they hired me in 5 minutes... may this time be slightly less worse pls.. (also worked on sales, teacher.. you name it...) thats why people say R.I.P when we die, 'cos it's the only time we do haha
55 Likes before it even starts. Wojak MUST work at a swanky restaurant where he has to serve Bogdanoff, Chad, and Emily who is with Chad at the table. Bogdanoff offers to leave a lot of the latest crypto as his tip instead of cash. Wojak accepts. After Wojak clocks out, Chad calls Bog to tell him that Wojak just left. "Dump It" is the reply. Wojak's tip money is all gone.
I been a server before but tips weren't a thing so was paid $14 it was at a retirement home but i have terrible memory it didnt last long and ended up working in production assembly but always respected servers because i have social anxiety.
In my fast food days, I would do any job but cashier. I had stage fright and couldn't do it. I washed dishes and worked in the kitchen and handled the trash but, I couldn't work the front.
AHHHHHHHHH! This was my temp job in my first year in college. Goddamn truck driver / travel plaza and buffet! I was the dishwasher. And yes, breaks were EXACTLY like that at @3:05. EDIT: that ending.... 30 min to close, bus from CANADA arrives.. 40 souls.. and you JUST got done cleaning all the dishes and scrubbing the soup pans!.
I feel lucky. I waited at an a neat old school Italian restaurant where the owner talked to the guests like family but was surprisingly stern and made sure to close out reservations a half hour before the kitchen closed. Long hours and hard work, but its what got me through college
As a former kitchen porter the bit where he does the last dish only for a mountain of shit to be brought before you all at once honestly made me spit my cereals out 😂😂😂
as a former waiter at a family owned restaurant my diet was monster,cigs,and occasional double shots of jager during my shifts. the zoomers coming in right before closing was accurate asf! I would usually get a “break” but that literally meant I could sit down eat and the second the fork is down I’m right back to the 8 people table with three full trays and probably a semi torn rotator cuff
We had a bouncer his name was Mike and the last 15 minutes before closing was his final break (idk why maybe because of safety reasons) but Mike would let no one into the restaurant during those 15 minutes. Our saving grace.
Wojak's first mistake was thinking that going from a fast food job to a restaurant was an upgrade. His second mistake was taking the job anyway when he got hired on the spot lmao
People coming in 10 or 15 minutes before you close up is SO true! Wild! We close the dining area 30 minutes ahead of time every day for deep cleaning except when customers are already here or any online take out orders have been taken. Any new orders are not taken. That way, we can sustain a clean environment before heading out.
I've been a server for almost 20 years, on and off. The only thing I disagree with is the length of the shifts. Usually you only work a five to six hour shift and if you're on a double you always have that downtime between lunch and dinner to eat or chill or whatever. If you get good at it and get into fine dining, you can make good money, and some better houses even offer benefits. Of all the "low budget" jobs, this one is probably the best. I work at a Michelin starred restaurant and I make a minimum of $70,000/year, and I only work like 25-30 hours a week. But that's because I learned all I could, worked my way up, and even got my level two sommelier card. All and all, it isn't a bad gig. A lot of people in this industry either go into management or work in sales. A solar company hired a couple servers from a restaurant I worked at to sell solar panels to clients (no cold-calling needed) Or you could go into event planning. It's a fast-paced job, yes, but it's good money.
Interesting, every time I dine in a Michelin starred restaurant waiters are somethings else. They are like super proud of what they do and happy. I'm glad to read they are properly compensated.
@@JohnnyEscopeta Usually a restaurant that goes out of its way for a pedigree awawrd wont take a shmuck. I could count on one hand the times I've come across wait staff with exceptional manners and menu skill - they where at very reputable fine dining restaurants. One waitress knew ENTIRE 20 item dessert menu and every ingredient in them while the owner could do the same with the main menu. They're all versed in table wait etiquette, and so on. It's like a different world in terms of going to eat, but its rare to find such a place, and you really pay for it.
Omg, this even brings back memories of working at Panera. How tired I got doing dishes all day and not being able to have a break until the busy time of the day was over (lunch/dinner time). So glad I got out after 3 months. That’s all I could take
As a former server, the part where the customers come in a few minutes before closing hit really hard
Yep
back when i worked a pizza hut someone came in 5 minutes to close. I dropped one of their pizzas in front of them knowing I'd have to remake it and clean up just so I could ruin their night
@@dagrynchThat sounds like both masochism and coping at the same time
It's not the customer's fault, you know. The joint is open, i wanna come in, i come in.
It's the owners/managers job to account for that 30 minutes at the end of the day to clean up.
Thankfully I never tip lmao
"I am still waiting for my new soup."
"Here you are sir"
Gives the old soup back. 😮😂😆😂
That’s what I do as a waiter. Just go to the kitchen remove the hair and give it back
@@nwoadrenochromdealer6667 more like "replace the hair with a spit"
@@muccafamumuOof, you may end up not being able to spit in the future one of these days..
I work in a shop. If custumer comes to returnd some machines (he said not working good), we give this machine to next custumer. And no problem for everyone.
sooo accurate tho I've had this happen to me, like ma'am I haven't even made it back to the kitchen yet because I've been stopped by 5 other customers
Karen: "I am vegan"
Also Karen 30 seconds later: "I dont like vegetables"
Karen....
Didn’t even catch that, lol
All she eats is Tofu 😭
@@traolin5877 The "Code K" wasn't a giveaway?
I hate Karens
The cigarette conversation was so good. It felt genuinly like an organic conversation.
They’re all relating to each other how much their jobs suck, with a moment of respite for all of them. Kinda cute tbh
You sound like chat gpt leaning how to speak
Nah fr I was kinda…relaxing while they were talking? I was also a server for years so it felt like I was actually on break 😅
Bro as a server its literally the only way to build morale with your coworkers
yea that brought back memories
The dishwasher part was too true. Every time you think youre done, here comes another mountain of dishes
I know right! It was the worst, it especially sucks when closing time comes and you get piled with so much more and then are expected to have it done by a certain time
Yeah lol, I work in a cafe so it is really bad, I am also expected to take out dishes when called
@isaacw2245 and no one helps you even though they are all finished
Im honestly glad i was dishman for my first job makes me appreciate were im at now lol
@@pancakes7483 yep, then they wanna bitch when you can't get 3 hrs of work done in 20 minutes
The service industry births a new smoker every 15 minutes
Sadly true…Or an alcoholic! I work in hospitality/ service as well and I know many housekeepers who just go home n get drunk or find liquor at work and drink 😬
And gamblers! After work, every shop is closed. So, we would head out to the casino/disco for a bit of excitement.
Got my first serving job this year. Big alcoholic now no good lol
I went to work as a server for 2 years, I quit it, but I'm not smoking or drinking, never did, never will.
@@crazydudeyt good on you. Strong will
If you easily get the job like that , it’s a huge red flag
Yup it is
also if is hard as fuck to get for a not that high income
@@jjpc6830 it’s also because so many assholes want to work there, places know that. At least that’s what I think
Yeah I got a serving job with no experience, technically hadn't even finished high-school. I was supposed to memorize the whole menu and every item in every meal and then do a test to see if I qualify. I studied my ass off for it thinking it would be mandatory and they just never asked me to write it. Had to learn how to use the machines from my coworkers who couldn't be bothered as I was yet to realize the moment anyone steps foot in that place they switch off mentally to preserve whatever happiness they have left
learned the hard way (12 hour night shifts ain't fun i tell you)
Lol when they offer you the job straight away with no interview you know it’s gunna be a shit place
Facts
I had this happen before at a buffet. I came in, not even dressed for an interview, and manager did interview on the spot. He said to get my food handlers card and they can move on to training. After getting it, I called the manager back, and he said he will call me back later in the week. This ended up going for over a month. I asked one of the employees, after checking back for like the 7th or 8th time, how the manager is. All of them said, he is a complete buffoon and has a very bad attitude. So, ya any time an interview is held on the spot, it is not always a good sign. 😅😅
As a former server i have the biggest respect for anyone who works in Customer service.
Not me… I only have respect for the ones that maintain a positive attitude. The ones that act shitty towards me, like it’s my fault they have a shitty job can go fuck themselves
What do you do now?
I got a visceral pain in my chest when he said he only started smoking to get some kind of breaks…
Seven years later, and I’m still addicted to nicotine.
Waited tables for a couple years back in college days. Got tons of stories. The part about the co-worker saying "A customer asked if we have milkshakes...bro we're not a McDonald's", really hit home! We ACTUALLY had someone say something like that to a customer, customer went and complained and so the management fired the server, only to rehire him like a week later.
Yeah, it's a rough job. It's a grind. Between the customers wanting things for free, customers complaining about things which aren't your fault but for which you must still apologize...then also the crackhead co-worker who keeps effing things up and you have to help clean up the mess...and the managers who throw you under the bus and aren't fit for their jobs....it's tough! That's why I always tip really, really well. I know, I've been there.
I'm surprised Wojak didn't tell the customer the shake machine was down for cleaning out of habit from his old McWagies job.
this is like any service-oriented job. it's like that in the hospitals too.
Managers throw the people under the bus if you're not fit for the job, applies to groccery store as well. I work bakery overnight as a 2nd job, and my manager gives so much shite to the girl that sets up all my stuff
She isn't the best, but she's only been there a month, and my manager talks like she's been there a year. The girl has to fill out 8 racks with 15 trays under _four hours_ , the sheet that she references off of this is _20 pages long minimum_ and they pay _70 cents_ above _minimum wage_
They did the same to me, every tray had its own very specific instructions with varying bake times and I had to learn it within 5 days. I sucked balls for a couple months until she sent me to help other stores. Going to other stores that had more patient managers, I was able to slowly learn how to do things. Those stores were messy compared to ours, but still..
When the other 2 overnights at our store quit and I became their full-time, they're treating me with kid gloves, for now and I'm slowly learning more
They still don't totally like me, but I know what I'm doing.
They don't, however, do this to the other girl.
They're a major chanin and expect way too much for the amount you have to learn and the pay they're giving.
@@HackersSun That's every job everywhere to some extent, especially when you're working for a big chain store where people come and go on a regular basis. They take you for granted until they realize they need someone to fill the shift and then all of the sudden you're their MVP. Unfortunately the one thing they can rarely do is pay people what they're worth, but at least they'll be nicer, give you better scheduling, etc...
@Raskolnikov70 Yea I know, and it's unreal.
I have a "real" job (data entry for a lab being tracked to be a lab tech) so it doesn't affect me much.
The first week of my job, they were so patient with me. They didn't snap, they sheepishly smiled when I asked, "How did you know that?" As they guided through how to use their system. It was the first time I felt treated like a human and not shoveled poo (I was in the food service before that for 7 years) and it was clicking buttons to put a number in the system to print out a sticker to put on a sample.
It's easier, pays more, and gets the full package of paid 2 week vacation, 5 yearly sick/PTO days, and holidays.
Each year, my performance review yields me a 50 cents a year raise (the job pays $4-5/hr more than baker job) no teasing bs of "do a better job, take the test, and we'll talk about it" for a 25 cent raise every 2 years, just a raise from their appreciation.
These jobs treat others like poo, the only reason I'm working was for business work contract for reduced school tuition.
After a summer of working full time on top of my full-time job for them, the GM of my store pulled teeth, refusing to sign the contract despite me having save 2 months of pay stubs and hr telling her SHE had to be the one to sign 🙃
She refused.
This is, by far, the shitest food service job I've had. They expect way more out of you for the pay. I've worked all positions in the industry this is the one where they expect you to memorize a volume of material and master it within a week along with the speed.
My busser job didn't have me memorize the position of every grain of seasme on a bread for minimum wage under a week 😒
Anything that has the title “Life of X” is a must watch. Absolute gems. Do one for security
According to my friend, he loved his summer working nights in security. He read the entire Harry Potter series in 3 months just from his shifts.
I did that for a few years. Working security stations (glorified customer service) sucked but overnights patrolling a big empty factory/office complex was great. Nobody around and nothing stressful to deal with.
@@Cookieboy70 I’m talking regular security. I used to do retail security and then night club bouncing straight after during my final year in uni and I’m convinced I lost brain cells doing that.
Besides the fact that you’d get into a full fist fight with some scumbag over ABSOLUTELY NOTHING, staring at the doorway for 10-12 hrs a day is mind numbingly boring
@SirWilliamDeHooton Exactly what my friend said. He said he had to make certain number of patrols per night and was only allowed his phone and a flashlight, no weapons. And things definitely went bump in the night!
@@Yenaldooshi138 Oh damn. Yeah day security does sound like a bit of a nightmare now that I think about it. Mostly the actual of dealing with people part of it.
The part where he joked about quitting cigarettes and everybody laughed was so funny. The only way to survive these jobs is by having horrible debilitating vices lol
I've pretended to smoke at jobs so I could get the same breaks as the smokers.
totally!
BASED @@B3Band
Worked for over a decade at front of house in restaurants.
I became a smoker and drinker purely because of having to deal with the patrons.
@@QuintBlitzsame but working register and storage in a retail for 7 years now
Next video: life of working at home. "Gets very depressed and anxiety attacks"."also sleeps a lot."
yes please
Is working from home rough? It seems like a dream to many people. What are the challenges of working from home? Is it the isolation that is tough?
@@adeptronicI really wonder too
@@adeptronici work home around 3 days a week and 2 days at the office. It can be hard to motivate myself at home but overall I prefer it over the office. Longer sleep, time to do housekeeping stuff inbetween and I might or might not game sometimes when i dont have urgent things planned lol.
I’ve been working from home for 3 years. It is awesome, get more sleep, save money on gas. But after a while you notice you just want to drive around and get out of the house after a while on your lunch break. I miss coffee runs, taco runs with my colleagues as well. Laughing with people, telling stories. I felt like I had a better social life when I worked at the office. Idk just my two cents.
If everybody worked as a waiter, even just for a week, the world would be a much more understanding place. I did it for four years and trust me when I say I almost never complain at a restaurant. My orders are simple and I’m patient even if it takes a while to arrive.
True
I've never worked as a waiter, but I simply behave that same way.
it's because 90% of the world are straight up dumb, since i was a kid i always saw my dad getting angry with the waiter because the food is taking a while to arrive and i was just thinking "wtf the guy that bring the food to the table have to do with the time the food arrives?", thought i was just dumb because i was a kid but look, my dad was dumb not me
Same bro lol I’m about a decade in the restaurant industry… 5-7 as a server
I never worked in service industry but I know it is tough work I never complain and I know what I want before they take my order I am polite never demanding and I leave a good tip.
I felt again all of that pain again. I once worked as a server in a restaurant, working 6 days a week, serving lunch and dinner, and even sometimes working 15 days straight and only one day to rest, to do everything again. From that experience, I respect every and single one of you who is working in this field.
"We close in 10 minutes" is where the fun begins and you stay 3 hours longer to clean up the entire place and rearrange it for the next day
god that's awful
Truthful
Then come back 5 hours later because your workplace becomes where you live
At 2.83 per hour for front of the house staff too.
When you think peace is near, The zoomer flock will order a beer
Sheeeeeesh
I actually prefer the zoomer crowd over an eccentric food enthusiast or a Karen or someone entitled.
Back when I used to work for a restaurant, a lady from California would come over to my city in Mexico for business and would bring her workforce and friends to eat. She was entitled as hell and seemed like she didn't care about the service. The "zoomers" of her workforce were the life of the table. Guys even gave me like 50 dollars of tips because I was totally nice to them... and in Mexico, that's a lot just for a tip, don't know about USA.
The worst memories I have of working in a restaurant come from serving the entitled or Karens.
I hate when people say sheeeesh. How is that even funny
@@frogglen6350 it's very annoying
@@abrahammesrajecorrea2349$50 is a big amount for a tip in America! You did amazing I'm happy for you 🤟🤗
I can't believe it took me this long to find this channel. Good shit
I’m sitting outside my serving job getting ready to go in. I needed this lol
The trying to quit scene was really on point.
Thanks!
@@LowBudgetStoriesbro I really love your Vids , but I wish you do a one about Hotels workers because...bro it's way worse than restaurant jobs 😂😂
@fred1160 Know a guy who worked in the lobby for a motel chain location; cops got called a few times a week over junkies (almost dying from OD-ing) and/or drugs, usually heroin, meth, or large amounts of weed. You would be shocked how many people leave it out in the open when cleaning maids come in. If a little weed was found or a guest room smelled straight up like it, they would be asked to leave or have the police involved. Sometimes the police were called over possible prostitution (worried about human trafficking especially). Bed bugs were a problem. Drunk people coming back from sporting events were too (fighting, passing out, being too loud, creating others to complain). My friend was glad he doesn't work there anynore and never will. PS, pay was bad.
@@nwilt7114 Jesus....and I thought my hotel was bad💀💀
@@The_Feral_manI worked for a restaurant in a hotel for 2 years. That is truly another dimension of hell that makes regular restaurant biz seem tame lol
Servers deserve more respect.
Them and the cooks and dish washers are the real workers, not the freaking Manager.
@@abrahammesrajecorrea2349says someone who's never been a manager.
Everyone deserves more respect lol
Nope, that's mean failure of Capitalism 😂
@@abrahammesrajecorrea2349the manager and all of the workers are the real freaking workers and deserve basic respect (anything above that depends on the person)
I remember coming in to a restaurant 15 minutes before the kitchen closed. The servers were doing their closing duties and I walked to the nearest server and asked him if I could still order food. He said, “Well yes technically if you wanna be that guy.” I knew exactly what he meant and why he said it; wasn’t offended in the slightest.
From that point forward I gained a newfound respect and understanding towards restaurant staff.
I respect the guy who told you that. Takes balls
To be fair, if the kitchen is not closed yet, wtf, you can't be "that guy"
If you don't want to make orders that late, close the kitchen sooner lol
@@iaroslavtitov2270dude, you ARE that guy.
@@ronatolanun wrong with being that guy if i have the ability to walk into a high end restaurant any time of day I want than I’m gonna do that and let my nuts hang on these wagie servers
I respect that of you sir. Technically if the kitchen is still open, you could order but if it was 10 minutes before closing or the staff is closing, it is too late to order
3:58 code "K" Means Karen
U work waitress?
@@Southafricaa330His screen name is Mathew, how dare you gender assume!
@@catlady8324 mb I was drunk 🤣
@@Southafricaa330 Valid excuse accepted ✅ 👍
wow you got a real Einstein brain up there, huh?
I'm not a server, but I work in retail so when I go to a restaurant and asked the server for something, I always say "take all the time you need". Because I can't imagine how much they go through there so I want to make sure they have some gratitude coming their way.
I genuinely appreciate you as a person, thank you bro.
When you ask yourself "why am I not putting an end to my suffering" and only argument is "it would make my mother sad". It doesn't feel good bros.
you
I've been there brother
This is actually why I have the perspective of not wanting to lead a long life. Why extend my life beyond the 60s if it's only gonna get harder? Not like I'll miss out much, so just let me go however I damn please instead of staying and suffering
Don't give up. Yes it would make your mama sad. Things change...perspectives change. Just stick it out. Death comes for us all for free. No need to go asking for it.
You can’t do anything when you dead but you can be happy and change when you alive. You got a chance
I have been working as a waiter for nearly ten years and I can confirm that this video is 100% realistic!
lol. are you proud of it?
@@williamtaittinger4529 Why should I be proud of it?
I’ve been a fine dining server for the past year, from the outfit to the ridiculous requests, you hit this video SPOT ON. Love you Low Budget Stories!
Thanks! Glad you liked it
I empathize with Wojack. He possesses more intelligence than people acknowledge, yet he consistently grapples with stress. He serves as the embodiment of the everyday struggling individual in the 21st century, someone to whom life has dealt an unfortunate hand.
I love these animations too! I started my own, too! Please check some of my Wojak animations and let me know how you like it😅😅❤
After watching 3 videos from you channel I was FORCED to subscribe. These videos are too good! 🔥🔥🔥
I love these animations too! I started my own, too! Please check some of my Wojak animations and let me know how you like it😅😅❤
I’ve worked this miserable job for four years. Thank god I left it, some people get stuck in that job for decades and are no longer able to leave for something else.
No dude that’s why there’s school
how. dothey get stuck?
@@minimalistvlogger3467 Money's good enough to keep people afloat.
@@minimalistvlogger3467 they end up in a situation where they don’t have any skills outside the food industry, so they can’t transition, and they couldn’t invest in education or trade school due to financial or family obligations. The result is that they end up trapped in the industry, able to leave any given restaurant, but not the job of being a server.
Yeah I feel bad for people who get into a job like that when the times were better and you got more out of your money. Finding yourself getting close to retirement in these bad times and then finding yourself out of work because they let you go to replace you with a new hire is hard.
2:48 that got me in tears i knew it was coming ahaha
Me too as well
I can see someone who went thru it 😂. That cigarette break part brought back so many memories. On point.
2:01 that was very accurate as a former dishwasher 😂
The part where the kids walk in saying im hungry no cap this place bussin literally happened to me 5 mins before close last week. Exact words too
I quit my waiting job a few weeks ago and this vid was on point lol.
Oh shit I can’t wait! I am a server and I was hoping for this video so long :)
Ah yes. Customers saying one thing but then getting upset cause they meant another. Taking forever to decide. The fear of passing complaints to the cooks. The anxiety of knowing you're technically putting more work load on the cooks and they despise you for it. And the people who dont tip.
I can totally relate to the first point. When I was young and I worked as a waiter, it was honestly disturbing how customers would blatantly lie about being given the wrong order. I went from a nice guy in the beginning to dishing out sly revenge to anyone who infuriated me. Now that I'm older and working in the field that I graduated in, I always give waiters/waitresses respect. You never know what they can do to your food/drink lmao
@@moeymcbacon8604ain't reading that 💀
Tip should be a reward for going above and beyond your duty, not Up to the customers to pay the wages.
Not tipping is fine, it’s not mandatory. Want better pay? Get a better job or go to your boss, not to your customers 😂 also you’re just doing your job. bet you dont tip a doctor for curing you
Join the dark side and become a cook: 🦹
>Watch coworkers simp by slipping free food to that one hot waitress. Who also tries to get you to do her job at closing. Or interrupt your flow to grab something she can easily reach.
>have a karen order her steak medium rare and then accuse you of undercooking because she meant well done
>feed your anger as the prep guys constantly missplace the ingredients you need or forget to restock
>have the manager blame you for making to large batches of fries when they just yelled at you to do that exact thing.
You know you want to.👹
0:15 aw he’s smiling! 😂❤
People who ask for their steaks well done and complain when its dry always gets me.
My aunt likes cheap rosé and white Zinfandel. She ordered Chardonnay, copying my other aunt, then complained that it was strong and sent it back. She did it on a couple of occasions and I finally told her Chardonnay is aged in oak barrels and has a strong flavor. I told her to other Pinot Grigio. That took care of that. She had a new sophisticated-sounding favorite. 🙄
Or stare at you like a hawk wondering what's taking so long 🙄
I just straight-up warn people that it may be dry and that they may want to try it medium well at least because they can always get it brought up a temp. A good server always knows when to warn a guest about something like that.
@@rumrunner8019 A restaurant I like has a warning printed right on the menu: they don’t guarantee steaks ordered past medium.
Or idiots who asked for medium well/ rare and complaining why it was a bit of pink. Seriously i couldn't take their bullshit
3:32 for the first time i see chad with 2 eyes lol
As someone who also works a 12 hour shift without fixed overtime…. this is so relatable.
That sounds not legal
I’m just hoping you are salaried, and that they pay you decently enough. Otherwise, fixed overtime sounds sketchy.
That is not good, file a complaint to the legal department or find a union job
server jobs don't usually follow legal, you work when they need you for as long as they need you and you get days off when they can give you days off, You also go home when they don't need you and don't make money that day often@@meroinheroin
Spot on mate, used to work at a fancy restro pub during broke college days, and man that fake smile while being treated like dog sh!t from both the rude customers and manager is so true! Glad i left after a few months, you go mental !!
man its wild how real some of these stories are, like i swear the admin of this channel must have worked at every job at some point to have this level of realism in the videos😂😂😂
I was working in hotel, very similar job. At least in 12-16h shift you don't have time to think about anything so you don't have time for depression or anything, also after your shift you can get some coke in glass and eat dinner for free, $per hour was also higher than mcdonald so in the end some profits but it takes so much time that you literally live for work.
lol very accurate. I don’t work as a restaurant server/waiter but I observe their work when I go to restaurants and treat them with respect. Tipping is not required since I live in a developing country but I do tip them most of the times specially if they look busy yet serve you properly, I tip them more. There are almost no Karens here fortunately, I hope it’s just a Western thing.
Kinda, there will be Karens every now and then, it's just a matter of luck. I remember I had to deal with 2 different ones in separate times. And a guy that was the most Karen being ever, only because guy was a renowned painter from the country or something like that. Guy was not humble at all...
These are getting better. Well done
Thanks!
I worked a bit in a restaurant as a student, most depressing job experience of my life. All the people that work there are depressed alcoholics or drug addicts or both who hate their life
This channel is phenomenal. Spot on 👌🏾
I was once told I could never work as a server. I’d be harshly criticized all the time.
You have a cursed barbie doll as a pfp. It's pretty blatant you don't care about criticism
Don't know if that is a blessing in disguise to be told that or a passive insult to call you softie... but yeah, outside of overworking during heavy times, you'll get some awful treatment from costumers and sometimes coworkers alike. You kinda grow desensitized to it over time some times
On the plus side, if you survive a few months in a server job you'll be pretty thick-skinned and immune from most criticism for the rest of your life.
@@abrahammesrajecorrea2349it might’ve been a blessing in disguise. Typically the tips are good money, but if the company is a bad place, they’ll take it out of the paycheck. And you must be very hard on the coworkers that treat you like sht, with customers just be tough but not enough in where you’ll be the bad guy
100% I was sensitive and had social anxiety and now I am an impenatrable rock who is unable to care about anyone saying anything to me@@Raskolnikov70 Getting older I am really doen with not being able to site down at all for 7-8 hours, my feet and legs hurt end of day. Like 5 minutes to just sit down a day would be nice.
@2:57 as a waiter can 100% agree. this is what me co-workers are talking 24/7 straight. jokes about funny guest requests. what is missing is that waiters always drop cutlery and still giving it to the guest. happens every singel day
THIS IS IT, IT'S EXACTLY A VIDEO LIKE THIS SHIT THAT I WAS HOPING TO SEE!!!! Thank you for bringing this to light for other people.
Glad you liked it :)
Calm down wagie
I look back at my Waiter days as old war stories that I so desperately glad I survived from , I sometimes still have nightmares of being triple sat and given a large party
I really like wojak's videos, I like him very much and I find him very endearing when he smiles. keep creating!
The first day of working for a new job is always a unique and interrsting story to be told.
touch grass
2:39 joke and laugh is gold 🤣
I worked as a porter in hotel once, which is basically being server, barman, room service/delivery and whatever the fuck the boss needs at the moment that doesn't involve cooking.
Let me tell you, this hits way too close to home.
The most stressful and annoying jobs are the ones which you directly deal with people and you always need to be polite even when they are rude to you
Altijd goede video's, blijf ze maken man😊
Dude, you somehow made me miss my days working as a waiter.
As rough as those jobs are, there's a camraderie that you don't find in most other places.
@@Raskolnikov70 true... I miss joking around with the guys from time to time. Or sometimes shitting one another
Literally every Server job rejected me. Oh well atleast Valet Parking is just "pls have driving experience and manual transmission knlowedge, thx." And you earn almost the same as Waiters in tips while just parking cars.
I still wish I was a server during my special prime years man, not old yet but not young enough to look great as a server.
@@Raskolnikov70not in every place
of course there's camraderie when you're in the trenches 😅
Don’t forget the part where you’re closing in 10 minutes but still have an hour left of sidework.
Great stories as per usual. My favorite wojak channel. Keep it up :)
Thank you! 😁
It's not just my favorite, it's the only one worth watching.
Same. I come here all the time.
Lol the end where more just come right when its about to close is wild
10 years in the industry, this was so ptsd inducing ,
liked and subscribed 👍
Insane how 100% of this is true it hurts hahaha
I've just quit a job really JUST like it after being tired of being a hotel receptionist thinking it couldn't be worse... at least the pay was better but at what cost? Especially 12h a day without even sitting lol
Now I'm going to start in a consultant company... they hired me in 5 minutes... may this time be slightly less worse pls.. (also worked on sales, teacher.. you name it...) thats why people say R.I.P when we die, 'cos it's the only time we do haha
55 Likes before it even starts.
Wojak MUST work at a swanky restaurant where he has to serve Bogdanoff, Chad, and Emily who is with Chad at the table. Bogdanoff offers to leave a lot of the latest crypto as his tip instead of cash. Wojak accepts. After Wojak clocks out, Chad calls Bog to tell him that Wojak just left. "Dump It" is the reply. Wojak's tip money is all gone.
4:58
Karen previously: i only want vegan food
Karen now: i hate vegetables
These keep getting better and better. Great work. 👍
Thanks!
I knew the job would be BS when they asked if he can start tomorrow lol 😆
I been a server before but tips weren't a thing so was paid $14 it was at a retirement home but i have terrible memory it didnt last long and ended up working in production assembly but always respected servers because i have social anxiety.
In my fast food days, I would do any job but cashier. I had stage fright and couldn't do it. I washed dishes and worked in the kitchen and handled the trash but, I couldn't work the front.
0:28
the immediate worry on his face after landing a job in first second of phone call ahahahahaha
Oh shit what i got into, whats the catch
The crack at 4:35 cracks me up everytime
AHHHHHHHHH! This was my temp job in my first year in college. Goddamn truck driver / travel plaza and buffet! I was the dishwasher. And yes, breaks were EXACTLY like that at @3:05.
EDIT: that ending.... 30 min to close, bus from CANADA arrives.. 40 souls.. and you JUST got done cleaning all the dishes and scrubbing the soup pans!.
I feel lucky. I waited at an a neat old school Italian restaurant where the owner talked to the guests like family but was surprisingly stern and made sure to close out reservations a half hour before the kitchen closed. Long hours and hard work, but its what got me through college
I've done this job when I was in my early 20s. Now I'm a civil servant. I think I'll rather die than being a server again. Worst job ever.
As a server who watch this while taking a break, this one fuckin real
As a former kitchen porter the bit where he does the last dish only for a mountain of shit to be brought before you all at once honestly made me spit my cereals out 😂😂😂
Scrolling this morning I found this channel. A great one indeed.😂
I love these animations too! I started my own, too! Please check some of my Wojak animations and let me know how you like it😅😅❤
I love your videos to pieces. Im not sure how but me and Wojak seem to be kindred spirits. I like to see it work out for him. Thanks for making these!
Whoever makes these videos has actual talent.
These videos are clever, relatable, and witty. Refreshing to see actual good content on youtube.
I love these animations too! I started my own, too! Please check some of my Wojak animations and let me know how you like it😅😅❤
Stay strong to all the waiters out there!
as a former waiter at a family owned restaurant my diet was monster,cigs,and occasional double shots of jager during my shifts. the zoomers coming in right before closing was accurate asf! I would usually get a “break” but that literally meant I could sit down eat and the second the fork is down I’m right back to the 8 people table with three full trays and probably a semi torn rotator cuff
5:23 that’s illegal. Working that long without breaks I believe
Depends on state labor camps.
As a former IHOP server the "can you check table 24", "that table's not even in my section" can definitely relate lol
We had a bouncer his name was Mike and the last 15 minutes before closing was his final break (idk why maybe because of safety reasons) but Mike would let no one into the restaurant during those 15 minutes.
Our saving grace.
As someone who in the past worked as wiatress in a sea restaurant, I can huge relate
like a restaurant in the ocean?
@@kenspearsy7954 with the terrace. Im in Santa Maria di Leuca. Search for "Santa Maria di Leuca" on google. Italy
@@kenspearsy7954they meant "seafood restaurant", I'd wager
@@kenspearsy7954 Like the baratie, she knows Sanji
Oh nice, did Squidward serve you?
Working in a job where the title has nothing to do with the treatment.....Hospitality.😂😂
I missed the part when, after dealing with all those demanding people, you have to clean the toilet and get to hate them even more.
I worked in a 4 star hotel It made me hate the katering industry, now I work in a pizzeria and now I love it I like to sell.
Wojak's first mistake was thinking that going from a fast food job to a restaurant was an upgrade. His second mistake was taking the job anyway when he got hired on the spot lmao
As a former waiter,this is pretty accurate.
0:45
'We hope you raised a lot of money for mcwages' as a response to resignation notice
AHAHAHAHA
Was wondering if anyone else also noticed Lmao
Surprised it didn't include "P.S. You'll be back" at the bottom.
Was that Nathan from Millennial Thinker making a cameo appearance? 04:10
People coming in 10 or 15 minutes before you close up is SO true! Wild! We close the dining area 30 minutes ahead of time every day for deep cleaning except when customers are already here or any online take out orders have been taken. Any new orders are not taken. That way, we can sustain a clean environment before heading out.
Moral of story: if you hate people, standing/walking all day, and terrible pay, DONT work at a restaurant.
imagine giving McDonalds a letter of resignation....
I've been a server for almost 20 years, on and off. The only thing I disagree with is the length of the shifts. Usually you only work a five to six hour shift and if you're on a double you always have that downtime between lunch and dinner to eat or chill or whatever. If you get good at it and get into fine dining, you can make good money, and some better houses even offer benefits. Of all the "low budget" jobs, this one is probably the best. I work at a Michelin starred restaurant and I make a minimum of $70,000/year, and I only work like 25-30 hours a week. But that's because I learned all I could, worked my way up, and even got my level two sommelier card.
All and all, it isn't a bad gig. A lot of people in this industry either go into management or work in sales. A solar company hired a couple servers from a restaurant I worked at to sell solar panels to clients (no cold-calling needed) Or you could go into event planning. It's a fast-paced job, yes, but it's good money.
Interesting, every time I dine in a Michelin starred restaurant waiters are somethings else. They are like super proud of what they do and happy. I'm glad to read they are properly compensated.
@@JohnnyEscopeta Usually a restaurant that goes out of its way for a pedigree awawrd wont take a shmuck. I could count on one hand the times I've come across wait staff with exceptional manners and menu skill - they where at very reputable fine dining restaurants.
One waitress knew ENTIRE 20 item dessert menu and every ingredient in them while the owner could do the same with the main menu. They're all versed in table wait etiquette, and so on. It's like a different world in terms of going to eat, but its rare to find such a place, and you really pay for it.
Now, imagine doing this for a decade, plus...
Omg, this even brings back memories of working at Panera. How tired I got doing dishes all day and not being able to have a break until the busy time of the day was over (lunch/dinner time). So glad I got out after 3 months. That’s all I could take
Amazing job.