I’d outlaw sauce bottles which make getting it all out harder, especially the ones which don’t have the opening at the bottom and make it impossible to put the bottle with the opening facing downwards.
I’d outlaw sauce bottles which make getting it all out harder, especially the ones which don’t have the opening at the bottom and make it impossible to put the bottle with the opening facing downwards.
It’s a fair point that it can be racist and sexist. I’m sure the attractive get paid more. After all, strippers are the ultimate in tipped workers. They have to pay for the opportunity to work for tips.
We do need to get over this “poor tipped workers”, though.
There’s a reason why no tipping restaurants end up failing and returning to tips.
It’s because you make much more in tips than you’d make otherwise.
It’s like no one has ever worked for tips and honestly calculated what they made.
I worked for tips in high school. I didn’t make that much money again until people started calling me doctor.
Yeah, you can’t have tipping and no tipping side by side. Customers will like the appearance of lower prices and many front house workers will make bank. I’ve worked back of house and front and worked twice as hard and actually used culinary skills in the back and made less than I did receiving tips in the front. I think that’s pretty messed up. The post was about making things illegal. I think most forms of tipping should be. That levels the playing field.
Illegal?
This place is so toxic.
*This place is so different to my outdated opinions ftfy
That article says the workers are unhappy with their $30 per hour because the restaurant is only open part-time so they’re not getting the hours they need to make a good wage. The restaurant plans to open full time though
It doesn’t support your argument in any way whatsoever
How do restaurants in every single other country survive then, according to your theory?
So what you’re saying is that they would get more money by being tipped?
Because there is not a tipping culture in those countries, and they wouldn’t make more money from tips?
I’m not sure why this is so hard to understand.
He’s saying the restaurant in the article needs to be open more, and asking how come restaurants in places where tipping is not the norm are doing just fine.
Also, blaming things on “culture” is a handwaving non-argument. I am certain there are some systemic things that make tip-free restaurants work, that could be replicated in the US. Like, as the article describes, raising staff wages. And keeping the hours reasonable.