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Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Server Rant!

"Why did SHE get chips and salsa and not ME?"

You're probably thinking these words were uttered by a small child who hasn't developed an understanding of social norms, a child who is still in the ego-centric sociopathic stage known as ages 2-5. You would be wrong. These words were uttered by a grown ass woman at a restaurant on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.

As most struggling actors in NYC, I waited tables to pay the bills and worked at a little southwestern style restaurant, Cilantro, on the Upper East Side. I hung my hat at a few restaurants in different parts of the city and I have to say that the customers at Cilantro had the distinction of being the 2nd worst of any of the restaurants where I worked (David Burke @ Bloomingdales had hands down the worst customers. ever.).

And when I say awful, I mean throwing chunks of ice at busboys because they dared to send them water that had ice in it awful. Most of my co-workers were from Mexico and, while they each had their own unique style, they all looked the same to the customers and so they never bothered to make the distinction between their server or a bus boy or the bartender. Instead they would just hand their check to any brown person that walked by (it got SUPER awkward when they handed it to another customer).

At Cilantro, chips and salsa were complimentary and were cranked out to new tables with assembly line precision. Granted, when it was really busy customers sometimes had to ask for the chips and salsa, but they would get them eventually--even assembly lines malfunction. And while it was understood that one table generally received one serving, we were more than happy to supply refills upon request.

On this particular day, there must have been a glitch in the matrix because it was a slow lunch and one of the servers had failed to deliver the sacred chips and salsa to an older lady sitting by herself. She flagged down her server after sitting at her table for maybe three minutes and, rather than asking for the coveted, complementary item she exclaimed, "Excuse me! Why does SHE get chips and salsa and not ME?" as she pointed at another lone diner who was chomping down on some chips, oblivious to the controversy.

Her server responded with, "Oh I'm sorry ma'am, would you like chips and salsa?" To which the woman replied,"I want to know why SHE got chips and salsa and not ME?"

At this point the manager noticed something had gone awry and went in to diffuse the situation. The woman was convinced that something conspiratorial had transpired. She was legitimately angry and, despite the fact that chips and salsa were quickly brought to her table, she believed that the mistake was intentional. This woman was upset because a complimentary item was not given to her the second she wanted it and someone else got it first.

I guess the reason this still stays in my mind is because this woman (who came in often and was usually pleasant) reduced herself to a petulant child over chips and salsa. I'm not going to offer platitudes like, there are starving children in Africa...but...why is that bitterness and anger and sense of being treated unfairly present in a wealthy white woman. And it's not like she's an isolated case. This sense of entitlement persists within the wealthy class.

On a broad level, the customers often mistreated the servers and staff so it was particularly frustrating when entitled customers acted as though they'd been wronged. I remember an older man who had ordered a cobb salad and was mistakenly sent a chopped salad. He flagged me down and demanded to know where the egg and avocado were. It was like he didn't understand that sometimes mistakes happen. He threw a fit and demanded this be sent back immediately. I obliged and asked him if it was in fact a cobb salad that he wanted (to avoid any further miscommunication). He looked at me incredulously and replied with, "Do you want to get paid?" This pissed me off to no end but I remained calm and explained that I wasn't his server to which he replied, "Oh right, so does he understand English?" You insult me, fine. You insult my paisano? No bueno. I explained to him that yes, his server does in fact speak English, but that even Americans often get cobb and chopped confused, especially in a noisy restaurant. THAT'S being wronged and mistreated.

These two examples of awful customer behavior weren't the norm, but there were a lot of terrible, terrible people who came into that restaurant. And while I'm not going to turn this into a 1% issue, it should serve as a reminder to treat people with respect and kindness, even if you think they've wronged you. You never know where someone is coming from or what they've experienced. I'm sure that the angry chips and salsa lady was experiencing fear of the inevitable prospect of dying alone or something and while, she was awful, mi paisanos and I were graceful and respectful. Plus, when you meet anger with kindness, the culprit can't help but feel like an asshole. It's such a satisfying feeling. So don't do it to be a better person, do it to make them feel like a worse person:)



Friday, August 3, 2012

Chik-Fil-A and the American Way

Chik-Fil-A

I'm not going to say what you think I'm going to say. I am a huge fan of consumers using their purchasing power to make a statement. It just sucks when it's used to support a fast food chain and for dubious reasons at that. P.S. I'm also a big fan of boycotting as well.

What if we used this...trying to be diplomatic here...passion to support companies that are doing great things. Our government is financed by.... well the financial sector and big business so the one ace in whole the middle class has is its buying power.

We can stop purchasing cheap crap made in China. We can! If it doesn't sell, then the manufacturers of our favorite products will stop outsourcing US jobs! We can demand that US jobs be repatriated.

We complain about the economy and our politicians' limited solutions like tax cuts and stimulus packages. We complain that American jobs have been shipped over seas but guess what? We are the ones buying the products! We are the ones who have sat on the couch, unemployed watching TV on a Samsung.

My significant other works for a construction management company. Right now they are in the process of buying plumbing fixtures for a particular project. One of the executives traveled to China to visit a factory that produced a certain fixture they were interested in purchasing. While visiting the site, he was unable to stand the noxious fumes and was informed that the men who worked at the factory had to work in 6 month rotations because their lungs couldn't take it. And he was unfazed.

He was unfazed because that's the way the world works in our buy cheap and throw away culture. It doesn't have to be this way. Congress has an approval rating of 17%, but what about the American public? What's our approval rating? We want easy platitudes that will fit on a bumper sticker, not real change. We don't want to pay $1,500 for an IPAD. So instead we buy it for $500 and sleep at night in willful ignorance. Who cares if they have to put netting on the sides of the building at the Apple factory so if people attempt suicide they won't DIE and can work in the morning. Can't be losing workers, when there's so much demand for bright shiny things.

I say these things not be dictating from on high. I write them because I have been attempting to fill out a wedding registry with American made or ethically produced items and it's not easy. But that's another blog topic for another time. The point is, rather than buying ourselves into type II diabetes, why not buy free range chicken and grass fed beef made in America. Let's put ourselves back to work by supporting local businesses. Let's do more than complain and fight over how "right" we are.