I hate tipping for so many reasons. I will always leave a good tip because I’ve been a waitress and I know how bs it is to get 2.13 an hour while working 12 tables an hour. But tipping is a thing because racism. It started during the civil war era because black men and women weren’t paid wages, so people were encouraged into tipping them, simply so that employers didn’t have to pay them. And it stayed in place until it was just customary, and then it was used an excuse to make it so servers weren’t included in the regular minimum wage. The fact it’s been decades and there are still places that ONLY pay 2.13 is insanity, and it’s insane because most people can’t afford to tip. if someone working a regular minimum wage job can’t afford a tip, how can someone making 2.13 an hour afford anything?
I’m interested to see how long they keep the series going for. They’re going at a level a day and aren’t too far off unlocking all there is to unlock already. Maybe Kara will convince him to stay around a bit longer than he would if he was playing it alone.
as a server, i appreciate your guys takes on tipping. it’s the standard in the us and there’s literally nothing we can do about it. i can’t just tell my employer to pay me more. it’s never been that way and unfortunately most likely never will be. its exhausting having to explain this to people who have 0 knowledge about the food service industry
Tipping actually has a very interesting history. It came over from Europe in the 1800s from the rich who had traveled and come back, some states then out right banned tips (straight up calling them bribes), but what really got tips rolling was prohibition at hotels, and the US hasn't looked back at removing the tipping culture since.
Watching Jardoon stress out at the overload of orders reminds me of my good old days of high school and college working at Dairy Queen in State College, PA. You are right, people LOVE their ice cream. Even during blizzards.
Love the tipping talk! My mom is a waitress and lives on her tips as her base pay is just over $3 an hour now. As far as delivery, I always tip as it’s a convenience to have food delivered. I’ll tip more if the weather is poopy too.
The tipping conversation is interesting, so many wildly different viewpoints from Jordan’s and Kara’s chats. No one should ever tip, only rich people can afford to tip, minimum 30% tip…I’m in between these extremes, as I suspect most Americans are.
As a Brit, we're conditioned/taught to tip waiters in restaurants based on how 'above and beyond' their service was compared to the bare minimum that is expected of them in their job. If you're my waiter and you took my order and brought it out, that doesn't immediately mean you deserve some huge tip. You'll get one because I'm a good person, but it'll be like 5%. If, however, you're super friendly, offer smiles constantly, maybe make some recommendations on what is good, perhaps interact with my younger family members etc. That's going above what is already expected of you and you'll earn a larger tip. The culture of the US to have to tip big money just for existing is something that needs to be revised but I also understand why people feel they need to, given how restaurant owners under pay their staff.
It’s when people get upset about their tip and think they deserve more. A tip is for a service it’s not a wage and shouldn’t be set as a specific number but based on your experience. If you order a $20 pizza and get a $5 tip don’t complain.
@@austingibson9933 You say that, but waitstaff and delivery people are so criminally underpaid that whether or not you tip could be the difference between the workers being fine for this week and having to choose whether they want to buy food or medicine this week. Tips SHOULD be just as a bonus for exceptional service. But here in the US, a large amount of people rely on them to get by. Like Kara said, if you can't afford to order delivery and still tip, then you can't afford to order delivery. Ditto for if you can't afford an Uber on a night out. If you can't afford a ride there and back, you can't afford to go drinking.
Yeah, there's definitely a lot of guilt tripping and entitlement that seems to come along with tipping in the US. Specific rules and percentages seem dumb to me because then it's just a mandatory fee or service charge. I try not to tip begrudgingly because in my mind that defeats the entire purpose, but at the same time I'm conscious of the fact that some people do rely on tips even if I believe it's a broken system.
i usually mix a lemon/lime soda like sprite or 7-up with a sports drink. unless its early, then i either get Barqs rootbeer or Dr. Pepper depending on availability.
I love these fast food videos they are my comfort videos! Keep up the awesome vids and stay safe!!!! Also I 100% agree with you guys on the tipping stuff. If you can’t afford to tip delivery people do NOT get food delivered to your house. It’s idiotic to say you can’t afford to tip someone 3 bucks for driving 20 minutes to your house just to give you a single ice cream or crumbl cookie. If you can’t afford to tip delivery people then go get the food yourself. These people saying that if they couldn’t afford tipping if they had food delivered are madmen and complete A**holes.
I tip all the time. Yet, it is not the customers' responsibility to do so or feel obligated to tip more than they think they should, as that is an American custom. If they are working with a company, it should be the company's responsibility to pay workers better, not the customer's.
As someone who can’t drive so I con only get delivery or wait till someone who can can take me. I still always tip. I can’t always give as big of a tip as I like. But I always give something.
I live in a country where tipping is not a normal culture. But i agree with tipping for deliveries, even parcels (if cod) Doesnt has to be much, if your food/parcel is between $15-$20, just give them a $20 bill Or if you cant afford it, no problem, parcel comes for 17.25, give them 18 and keep the change. Usually they don't mind, its the thoughts that counts. And no i never tips via apps, at least for my country, i know the apps also deduct more the delivery person's earning from our order because they have tips.
Delivery apps like door dash, Uber eats, ECT (so not directly from the store) only pay $2 per order, no matter how far the order is, no matter how long the wait for the food is. For those apps, tips are necessary for the driver to get their money's worth. While yes, servers and delivery drivers should get paid fair wages, currently we have a president that's trying to make things more expensive by bringing in tariffs, so that'll never happen unfortunately.
If I must have a "swamp juice" then it needs some form of fruit juice (like Hi-C, for instance) mixed in to compliment the clear Sprite or "Generic Lemon-Lime" soda taste. Cola's _can_ work, but generally aren't as cooperative for mix-ins with the 'usual' offerings here in the usa, because most FF places offer either Coke, _or_ Pepsi products, with both almost never overlapping. If the colas exist with a fruit infused option, that may go into the swamp juice as a light splash. So 1/2 'Sprite' base, lots of orange soda, and maybe a lemonade to bring it close to full, and if I want that cola with a cherry twist, add that splash in that's enough to color the whole drink (not hard since they are way over dyed.) Aside this, my most basic go-to order is a good ole Dr P, though. Safe to say my "swamp juice" is a rather safe, anyone can make/enjoy it, 'recipe' 😛 I'll probably add more to my remark on the Kara upload later if I think of anything else. (Yes; she uploads her pov, in case this side of the internet failed to notice this. It's a nice bit of extra rounding to see what else is going on in Kardon's Kitchen, imo.)
I live too far out in the country for delivery but when we are at a hotel or something, I certainly tip the driver. They deal with too much stuff to not be tipped. I know how much I can spend and adjust what I order to be able to make sure they get a decent tip.
I don’t know if they have Panera bread in California but I worked at a Panera for a few years in high school and they already have their own training software program called Baguette University. It’s full of bread puns and at the end you get a fake degree
Tipping on doordash and the sorts is 100% necessary 😂 if you cant afford to be tipping, you cant afford to eat out, go buy your groceries and make your food in bulk. Sure it sucks cooking for yourself but realistically, if youre ordering food direct to your door, you should be able to afford a tip.
I mean I won't order fries for delivery, but I will get fries every rare often if I am already in town. Also on the tip talk, I'm pretty sure I agree with their stances fairly well. Tip with delivery because the driver is coming to YOUR house.
Yes coming from someone in fast food management they cost anywhere from $35-$75 depending on what kind of oil you use. When I worked at chilis we used canola oil and it was a $70 jug and then when I worked at tacobell they were about $40/45. Now that I’m at Culver’s it’s a $35 jug 😂 they are pretty hefty jugs tho
I do not see delivery of food as a luxury, at all. I have my groceries delivered nearly every week cos I'm disabled. I do not tip the delivery person. I felt personally attacked listening to the tipping chat. But I am the UK so maybe it's just different here.
I used to do doordash... people who didn't tip on small orders literally lost me money. Worst people hands down Edit: there's even people who remove their tip... criminal >:(
In our place if they got 10% service charge on the bills We don’t pay tips But for deliveries will do a $10 tips, otherwise I will just take the delivery myself
38:30 if the driver is doing that Independent like door dash or uber eats then yes you should tip. but if that driver is employed by the Restaurant he should get a living wage by the restaurant. so its ok if you dont tip.
People were getting spicy in the discord chats that day. 😅😅 In the end - the person/people who suffer from lack of tipping are not the people who the non-tippers WANT to suffer - aka, the business/corporation. It is the lowly person doing the delivery. And the business is only required to pay them UP TO the minimum wage of the state/fed/etc. Additionally, businesses will often fire people who don't make good tips because 1. they view it as the employee must not be good and 2. that employee is now costing them money. In the case of parties like doordash? This does not apply at all. So not tipping mean those drivers are making like...two bucks, to bring you your meal. The rest goes to the restaurant and doordash. Yes, somehow this is legal because lack of regulation concerning "contractual employees". If you don't like tipping culture, the best practice is to tip until it is changed legally. At least, to not hurt your neighbor. Until then, you are ONLY hurting those who actually need those tips.
I'm curious, does the u.s. food deliveries services charge extra for the delivery upfront (ex.: the final order itself is 30 and they charge extra 7 or something for the service)? Or its the same price and you are expected to tip to pay for the wages of the delivery person?
It used to be a delivery driver with a optional *within reason* tip but a bunch of companies got together and built Uber eats so they could fire delivery drivers and front the cost onto consumers without lowering their prices
@@ro8827 I see. Thanks for the clarification. Technically where I live is the same, but no one (that I've heard of) would frown at you if you dont tip for the delivery e-e
I don't know if it's all companies or not, but I (and the drivers) prefer tips in cash on delivery. Their main reason being - they don't get the whole tip, the company takes some of it off the top. I'm not talking taking tax deductions off - I mean straight up taking some of their tip, yet reporting the WHOLE tip as income and ALSO taking deductions off that... Some companies 'pre-tipping' is scamming drivers...or at least was as of a few years ago...
@greenglenda13 which is dumb, the company does no more work for delivery than dine in. Not saying I don't also tip, just that corporate greed is too rampant
then work your butt off at a restaurant as a waiter/waitress or a barista/bartender making less per hour to make those tips. you don't earn(deserve) tips making pizzas at dominos or pizza hut.
@Deadeye90 I'm not dumbing down the fact that waiters/waitresses etc make less than minimum wage. As a delivery driver our pay gets cut in half while delivering so is it undeserving to receive a tip because it's not technically a restaurant?
i'd rather be charged more than be forced to tip to make up for the shortfall of your employer. and the guilt of not tipping needs to end as well, not everyone has the luxury of tipping 30% just to have someone grab a burger and drive 2 miles to give it to me.
Sooo tipping in the UK. Generally most places accept them but a lot of waiters don’t get them directly it goes in a pot, when I trained in hairdressing as juniors we got tips but those tips went straight to the pot that paid for staffs xmas do that the junior WEREN’T invited on our tips funded the main staffs meals and drinks. We never saw a penny so I stopped bothering accepting tips after I just thought if I dont benefit from it I cant accept it. In the uk they changed the law to tipping should be given directly to the person who provided the service. The national minimum wage for someone my age (33) its close to starting at £12 per hour so our wages are generally good enough. Me and my friend went for a meal and it came to like £50 for us both and the cheeky bastards put on an optional payment of £20 tip on it and then there was and extra £17 charge on it that was also optional. The second charge was a big no go. We chipped in £5 each for a tip for the waitress and it was all we were willing to pay; the second charge we totally refused to pay as it was 1 person who served us throughout not the entire staff. I want to say it was the waiters individual tip and then restaurants shared tip. We didnt agreed with the shared one as we never saw anyone else. But the UK drivers/restaurant services generally don’t expect the tips, its just a kind gesture that someone can afford to. If we have £1-£5 change on order we usually leave it for the waiter, its not expected and we certainly dont shame people for not being able to afford to tip. Did waiting myself for a long time never expected it and I still dont expect it now as a hairdresser, it’s just a kind gesture if someone does!
My bare minimum tip has always been $5 or 10%, whichever is more. So if I go to someplace where tipping makes sense and only spend $2 I will often still tip $5. Rarely have I ever tipped less than that, and it has always been that service was abysmal. If service was amazing I will often do more than 10%. I think I have done $30 on a $100 order before because of how great my server was.
Like bruh, just add 15-20% to your prices, pay your employees 15-20% more, and don't accept tips. It's ridiculous to me how complicated and convoluted they make it
@@GoodGamer3000 a few months back i was on a reddit thread, it was about the tipping culture in the u.s. asking for the viewpoint of americans and non americans, and there were americans in the replies talking about that because tipping isn't always getting declared on taxes, a lot of people who work in industries that have tipping prefer to keep the tipping culture, because they can make a lot of money from tips that they don't have to declare on taxes
@@Ray_Vun, ah, I guess I can see that. Although, I would think tips are still technically considered taxable income. Are they just admitting to tax fraud lol
@@GoodGamer3000 yeah jordan even mentions in the video that if the tip is in cash, people probably aren't deducting it. the whole digital tipping options have probably screwed over a lot of people who do this tho, because it's probably much harder to hide that money
IF YOU CAN ORDER DELIVERY OR GO OUT TO EAT YOU CAN TIP EDIT: And if your country doesn't have tipping culture, then OBVIOUSLY this comment doesn't apply to you.
God I WISH Walmart would allow tips when you pay through PayPal for grocery deliveries, my mom and I share an account because its easy for me to explain stuff for her when I can just see it happening on my end too. Also, unfortunately EBT cards do not allow tipping, which does suck for the driver. I can only hope some people who use EBT (aka food stamps) are able to tip a little now and then, because I know some disabled people on food stamps just can't afford it at all. The downside to not using Paypal is that it would save my card (or my partner's card) to her account and it doesn't give me a paper trail of refunds for out of stock items, and she may accidentally pay using limited money :/. Otherwise when I'm forced to use a card for some reason, I normally do actually tip and just hope I can remove the card before my mom does an order. The plus side is being able to have PayPal try all my accounts before using my emergency savings account! So I don't have to worry about payments not going through. My mom is disabled and uses Walmart for grocery deliveries since she can't physically drive some days, and she does try to tip when she can. There's very very very limited reasons why it's ok to skip tipping in the US for deliveries.
Also my thing on tipping: I tip for services, i.e. prompt delivery, table service that is attentive but not overbearing, artist commissions, that sort of thing. If I am ordering from the counter to go? Don't put that tip shit in front of me. You are not providing any additional service other than "Item in hand, I leave now". And sure as HELL do not put a "Tip" menu on a damn grocery order. ESPECIALLY if I'm doing self-check.
Also also two things: 1: The amount they get if you don't tip isn't as abysmal as you think. Federal regulations on minimum wage state that any tipped employee paid below minimum wage, if they don't make the full amount of minimum wage after tips, the employer is required by law to pay the difference. 2: Tip suggestions are market research. Companies are selling that information back to the company specifically to say "You can get away with hiking your prices this much and customers will still pay it."
Also ALSO also... lawsuits hinge on whether or not you can collect. Even if you Win, it doesn't mean you'll get anything if there's nothing to actually collect from the person you've sued. Delivery drivers don't tend to have a TON of money to throw around, and most of them don't own a lot of assets aside from maybe the delivery vehicle. So even if you can put someone in bankruptcy, even if they auction off all their stuff, your lawyer's getting paid first, and you're likely to end up with a big fat nothing.
the problem with tipping culture is making the companies stingy and they encouraged to not giving their employees an acceptable wage bc they say "well, they will get it from the costumer anyway" and that's the problem the costumer is not responsible for paying ur employees' salary . thank god i dont live in america even if my country wages actually less then america minimum wages sometimes, without the tips also. we still dont have to tip .
The tip depends on order and distance from order location. Sorry dawg, you ain't getting $10 for driving like 2 miles. Online ordering of anything has artificially increased the cost of all goods by at least 40%. You may have bought something for $30 but shipping/tipping actually adds a mandatory $5-$10 *before tax* Shipping costs should be given back to at income tax season if the item was shipped via USPS which the majority of products are
Don't do delivery if you can't tip ? How is that even a thing ? They chose a job that's paying 'em why should I pay them even more? Am I getting paid extra just for doing my job ?! No. Then why has tip become mandatory for delivery and not for every other job as well?
jrodan freaking out over every little thing, meanwhile kara is just eh it's fine
"It has to be perfect"
"As long as its burger shaped it'll be fineeeeeee"
style energy with these 2
this series is so lovely they’re just hanging out and occasionally locking in it’s so watchable
I hate tipping for so many reasons. I will always leave a good tip because I’ve been a waitress and I know how bs it is to get 2.13 an hour while working 12 tables an hour. But tipping is a thing because racism. It started during the civil war era because black men and women weren’t paid wages, so people were encouraged into tipping them, simply so that employers didn’t have to pay them. And it stayed in place until it was just customary, and then it was used an excuse to make it so servers weren’t included in the regular minimum wage. The fact it’s been decades and there are still places that ONLY pay 2.13 is insanity, and it’s insane because most people can’t afford to tip. if someone working a regular minimum wage job can’t afford a tip, how can someone making 2.13 an hour afford anything?
I’m interested to see how long they keep the series going for. They’re going at a level a day and aren’t too far off unlocking all there is to unlock already.
Maybe Kara will convince him to stay around a bit longer than he would if he was playing it alone.
Jordan just having a break down is making me laugh more than it should.
Jardon is going to need therapy because of the anxiety. Kara is going to need therapy because of Jardon.
Spoke too soon. Trash talking the bad tippers counts as group therapy, they good.
Jordan's too worried to offend someone he won't even say his favorite soda 😭
That struck me more as a "My favourite Soda is whoever's willing to sponsor me, Kara"
@@farshnuke Ahaha so fair!
You're lucky you don't have to restock the soda machine. You need another employee, I think Xeen would be perfect! 😊
Xeen and Peter doing front of house while Kara does fries and chicken burgers while Jardon does beef burgers,
As a member of the rent-a-peasant delivery service group i was happy to hear jardon understands how to properly tip the rent a peasant
Such chaos! Jordans anxiety is so relatable
as a server, i appreciate your guys takes on tipping. it’s the standard in the us and there’s literally nothing we can do about it. i can’t just tell my employer to pay me more. it’s never been that way and unfortunately most likely never will be. its exhausting having to explain this to people who have 0 knowledge about the food service industry
Tipping actually has a very interesting history. It came over from Europe in the 1800s from the rich who had traveled and come back, some states then out right banned tips (straight up calling them bribes), but what really got tips rolling was prohibition at hotels, and the US hasn't looked back at removing the tipping culture since.
absurd the amount of things americans are made to believe are normal
Finally, Lemonand and Sprite are good for Subway. Cranberry Pepsi is also nice
I would LOVE to see an episode with @karacorvus, @xeen, @petezahhuttvods, and the captain. I think it would be absolute chaos!
Watching Jardoon stress out at the overload of orders reminds me of my good old days of high school and college working at Dairy Queen in State College, PA. You are right, people LOVE their ice cream. Even during blizzards.
Love the tipping talk! My mom is a waitress and lives on her tips as her base pay is just over $3 an hour now. As far as delivery, I always tip as it’s a convenience to have food delivered. I’ll tip more if the weather is poopy too.
The tipping conversation is interesting, so many wildly different viewpoints from Jordan’s and Kara’s chats. No one should ever tip, only rich people can afford to tip, minimum 30% tip…I’m in between these extremes, as I suspect most Americans are.
As a Brit, we're conditioned/taught to tip waiters in restaurants based on how 'above and beyond' their service was compared to the bare minimum that is expected of them in their job.
If you're my waiter and you took my order and brought it out, that doesn't immediately mean you deserve some huge tip. You'll get one because I'm a good person, but it'll be like 5%. If, however, you're super friendly, offer smiles constantly, maybe make some recommendations on what is good, perhaps interact with my younger family members etc. That's going above what is already expected of you and you'll earn a larger tip.
The culture of the US to have to tip big money just for existing is something that needs to be revised but I also understand why people feel they need to, given how restaurant owners under pay their staff.
It’s when people get upset about their tip and think they deserve more. A tip is for a service it’s not a wage and shouldn’t be set as a specific number but based on your experience. If you order a $20 pizza and get a $5 tip don’t complain.
@@austingibson9933 You say that, but waitstaff and delivery people are so criminally underpaid that whether or not you tip could be the difference between the workers being fine for this week and having to choose whether they want to buy food or medicine this week.
Tips SHOULD be just as a bonus for exceptional service. But here in the US, a large amount of people rely on them to get by. Like Kara said, if you can't afford to order delivery and still tip, then you can't afford to order delivery. Ditto for if you can't afford an Uber on a night out. If you can't afford a ride there and back, you can't afford to go drinking.
Yeah, there's definitely a lot of guilt tripping and entitlement that seems to come along with tipping in the US. Specific rules and percentages seem dumb to me because then it's just a mandatory fee or service charge. I try not to tip begrudgingly because in my mind that defeats the entire purpose, but at the same time I'm conscious of the fact that some people do rely on tips even if I believe it's a broken system.
@karagames it’s crazy how right you were his crash out was wild 😂😂 the overload got to him
yess a new ep, this series is soo good
Most restaurants have a way to filter frying oil to make it last longer
We can also sell old oil in the uk it gets recycled into biofuels al of the McDonald’s trucks run on recycled oil from there restaurants
never this early on a vid, in nearly 12 years of watching. by far my fav yt channel since i was 9
I'm really enjoying this series with Kara and love when they play games together. Also my favorite drinks are Dr.Pepper and sweet tea
Dr. Pepper , root beer, or lemonade. Sometimes I mixed lemonade and iced tea.
i usually mix a lemon/lime soda like sprite or 7-up with a sports drink. unless its early, then i either get Barqs rootbeer or Dr. Pepper depending on availability.
Oh god as a barista I can’t wait to yell at Jordan over his milk steaming skills
It was entertaining listening to them educate the chat on tips. Sounds like at least one person was pretty scum baggy when it comes to tipping lol
Love this game. I don't do minecraft so this is probably the only series I watch. Keep em coming.
I love myself a lovely chilled 'divine love'
I love these fast food videos they are my comfort videos! Keep up the awesome vids and stay safe!!!! Also I 100% agree with you guys on the tipping stuff. If you can’t afford to tip delivery people do NOT get food delivered to your house. It’s idiotic to say you can’t afford to tip someone 3 bucks for driving 20 minutes to your house just to give you a single ice cream or crumbl cookie. If you can’t afford to tip delivery people then go get the food yourself.
These people saying that if they couldn’t afford tipping if they had food delivered are madmen and complete A**holes.
I tip all the time. Yet, it is not the customers' responsibility to do so or feel obligated to tip more than they think they should, as that is an American custom. If they are working with a company, it should be the company's responsibility to pay workers better, not the customer's.
My swamp drink is mixing every dark soda, Dr pepper, diet coke, coke, mr pibb, a&w, and barqs
As someone who can’t drive so I con only get delivery or wait till someone who can can take me.
I still always tip.
I can’t always give as big of a tip as I like.
But I always give something.
I live in a country where tipping is not a normal culture.
But i agree with tipping for deliveries, even parcels (if cod)
Doesnt has to be much, if your food/parcel is between $15-$20, just give them a $20 bill
Or if you cant afford it, no problem, parcel comes for 17.25, give them 18 and keep the change. Usually they don't mind, its the thoughts that counts.
And no i never tips via apps, at least for my country, i know the apps also deduct more the delivery person's earning from our order because they have tips.
Delivery apps like door dash, Uber eats, ECT (so not directly from the store) only pay $2 per order, no matter how far the order is, no matter how long the wait for the food is. For those apps, tips are necessary for the driver to get their money's worth. While yes, servers and delivery drivers should get paid fair wages, currently we have a president that's trying to make things more expensive by bringing in tariffs, so that'll never happen unfortunately.
Love the math. Jordan: 9, 4 with cheese, 4 without. 😅
I'm awful at maths and even I noticed that lol.
If I must have a "swamp juice" then it needs some form of fruit juice (like Hi-C, for instance) mixed in to compliment the clear Sprite or "Generic Lemon-Lime" soda taste. Cola's _can_ work, but generally aren't as cooperative for mix-ins with the 'usual' offerings here in the usa, because most FF places offer either Coke, _or_ Pepsi products, with both almost never overlapping. If the colas exist with a fruit infused option, that may go into the swamp juice as a light splash. So 1/2 'Sprite' base, lots of orange soda, and maybe a lemonade to bring it close to full, and if I want that cola with a cherry twist, add that splash in that's enough to color the whole drink (not hard since they are way over dyed.) Aside this, my most basic go-to order is a good ole Dr P, though.
Safe to say my "swamp juice" is a rather safe, anyone can make/enjoy it, 'recipe' 😛
I'll probably add more to my remark on the Kara upload later if I think of anything else. (Yes; she uploads her pov, in case this side of the internet failed to notice this. It's a nice bit of extra rounding to see what else is going on in Kardon's Kitchen, imo.)
So ummm...Jardon and Kara....those yellow question mark sticky notes aren't just there for show or decoration......
I order water. Free tap water.
I live too far out in the country for delivery but when we are at a hotel or something, I certainly tip the driver. They deal with too much stuff to not be tipped. I know how much I can spend and adjust what I order to be able to make sure they get a decent tip.
Games you can smell 😅
Also my fave brew is half coke half raspberry fanta
if i can get it: 1/2 cherry coke and dr pepper. its good. if not, just dr. pepper is my go to soda
I don’t know if they have Panera bread in California but I worked at a Panera for a few years in high school and they already have their own training software program called Baguette University. It’s full of bread puns and at the end you get a fake degree
Tipping on doordash and the sorts is 100% necessary 😂 if you cant afford to be tipping, you cant afford to eat out, go buy your groceries and make your food in bulk. Sure it sucks cooking for yourself but realistically, if youre ordering food direct to your door, you should be able to afford a tip.
I mean I won't order fries for delivery, but I will get fries every rare often if I am already in town.
Also on the tip talk, I'm pretty sure I agree with their stances fairly well. Tip with delivery because the driver is coming to YOUR house.
Cherry Coke X Sprite goes hard 🫡
Jordan makes these videos so incredibly stressful to watch.
Yes coming from someone in fast food management they cost anywhere from $35-$75 depending on what kind of oil you use. When I worked at chilis we used canola oil and it was a $70 jug and then when I worked at tacobell they were about $40/45. Now that I’m at Culver’s it’s a $35 jug 😂 they are pretty hefty jugs tho
As a former DoorDash driver you make literally like $1-4 per order on avg without tipping so tips are absolutely important
I always get a rootbeer or a mtn dew lol
Ditto! Mtn dew from Taco Bell’s the best. Like coke from McDonald’s
@austingibson9933 Yep
Peach Minute Maid always. If not available then fruit punch or equivalent
I do not see delivery of food as a luxury, at all. I have my groceries delivered nearly every week cos I'm disabled. I do not tip the delivery person. I felt personally attacked listening to the tipping chat. But I am the UK so maybe it's just different here.
Vanilla milkshake with orange crush or orange Hi-C depending on what they have for a dreamsicle flavor
Wouldnt it be easier if 1 does all of front house orders and 1 does drive through full orders? :)
Omg one is at work does some of everything it looks vile 😂😭 I am a cherry coke or Pepsi gal oooohh or those flavored lemonades
When I used to work at. Wendy's. People would order a single thing French fries. With a frosty. To dip the French fries in.
They mean the tray for the raw burgers
I used to do doordash... people who didn't tip on small orders literally lost me money. Worst people hands down
Edit: there's even people who remove their tip... criminal >:(
My soda order is Coke Zero, or diet pepsi depending on what brand they stock
In our place if they got 10% service charge on the bills
We don’t pay tips
But for deliveries will do a $10 tips, otherwise I will just take the delivery myself
Strawberry Orange Mellow Yellow is my favorite, however if that is not available I’ll get Coke or Mountain Dew.
38:30 if the driver is doing that Independent like door dash or uber eats then yes you should tip.
but if that driver is employed by the Restaurant he should get a living wage by the restaurant. so its ok if you dont tip.
People were getting spicy in the discord chats that day. 😅😅 In the end - the person/people who suffer from lack of tipping are not the people who the non-tippers WANT to suffer - aka, the business/corporation. It is the lowly person doing the delivery. And the business is only required to pay them UP TO the minimum wage of the state/fed/etc. Additionally, businesses will often fire people who don't make good tips because 1. they view it as the employee must not be good and 2. that employee is now costing them money.
In the case of parties like doordash? This does not apply at all. So not tipping mean those drivers are making like...two bucks, to bring you your meal. The rest goes to the restaurant and doordash. Yes, somehow this is legal because lack of regulation concerning "contractual employees".
If you don't like tipping culture, the best practice is to tip until it is changed legally. At least, to not hurt your neighbor. Until then, you are ONLY hurting those who actually need those tips.
I'm curious, does the u.s. food deliveries services charge extra for the delivery upfront (ex.: the final order itself is 30 and they charge extra 7 or something for the service)?
Or its the same price and you are expected to tip to pay for the wages of the delivery person?
It used to be a delivery driver with a optional *within reason* tip but a bunch of companies got together and built Uber eats so they could fire delivery drivers and front the cost onto consumers without lowering their prices
There is an extra charge and then you are also encouraged to give your driver a tip.
@@ro8827 I see. Thanks for the clarification. Technically where I live is the same, but no one (that I've heard of) would frown at you if you dont tip for the delivery e-e
I don't know if it's all companies or not, but I (and the drivers) prefer tips in cash on delivery. Their main reason being - they don't get the whole tip, the company takes some of it off the top. I'm not talking taking tax deductions off - I mean straight up taking some of their tip, yet reporting the WHOLE tip as income and ALSO taking deductions off that... Some companies 'pre-tipping' is scamming drivers...or at least was as of a few years ago...
delivery fee and tip feels like double dipping when it comes to ordering stuff.
But that delivery fee doesn’t go to the driver most the time it goes to the company.
@greenglenda13 which is dumb, the company does no more work for delivery than dine in. Not saying I don't also tip, just that corporate greed is too rampant
I've worked at dominos for 20 years and I still don't understand why people don't tip. I'd be happier than a pig in shit if they just gave me $1 tip.
then work your butt off at a restaurant as a waiter/waitress or a barista/bartender making less per hour to make those tips. you don't earn(deserve) tips making pizzas at dominos or pizza hut.
@Deadeye90 I'm not dumbing down the fact that waiters/waitresses etc make less than minimum wage. As a delivery driver our pay gets cut in half while delivering so is it undeserving to receive a tip because it's not technically a restaurant?
Root beer if I'm at A&W
Kara not changing back to her former uniform is only reminding me of how she was cheating on Jordan 😢
I ordered a pizza, went and picked it up and as I was leaving the counter lady was mumbling about no tip. Like??? You DO get paid to make the pizza
Dr Pepper or pib extra
Dr Pepper or orange Fanta
i'd rather be charged more than be forced to tip to make up for the shortfall of your employer. and the guilt of not tipping needs to end as well, not everyone has the luxury of tipping 30% just to have someone grab a burger and drive 2 miles to give it to me.
Sooo tipping in the UK. Generally most places accept them but a lot of waiters don’t get them directly it goes in a pot, when I trained in hairdressing as juniors we got tips but those tips went straight to the pot that paid for staffs xmas do that the junior WEREN’T invited on our tips funded the main staffs meals and drinks. We never saw a penny so I stopped bothering accepting tips after I just thought if I dont benefit from it I cant accept it. In the uk they changed the law to tipping should be given directly to the person who provided the service. The national minimum wage for someone my age (33) its close to starting at £12 per hour so our wages are generally good enough. Me and my friend went for a meal and it came to like £50 for us both and the cheeky bastards put on an optional payment of £20 tip on it and then there was and extra £17 charge on it that was also optional. The second charge was a big no go. We chipped in £5 each for a tip for the waitress and it was all we were willing to pay; the second charge we totally refused to pay as it was 1 person who served us throughout not the entire staff. I want to say it was the waiters individual tip and then restaurants shared tip. We didnt agreed with the shared one as we never saw anyone else. But the UK drivers/restaurant services generally don’t expect the tips, its just a kind gesture that someone can afford to. If we have £1-£5 change on order we usually leave it for the waiter, its not expected and we certainly dont shame people for not being able to afford to tip. Did waiting myself for a long time never expected it and I still dont expect it now as a hairdresser, it’s just a kind gesture if someone does!
My bare minimum tip has always been $5 or 10%, whichever is more. So if I go to someplace where tipping makes sense and only spend $2 I will often still tip $5. Rarely have I ever tipped less than that, and it has always been that service was abysmal. If service was amazing I will often do more than 10%. I think I have done $30 on a $100 order before because of how great my server was.
i could not live in america. what do you mean i already paid for my food and now i gotta give you more money because you brought it to me?
Like bruh, just add 15-20% to your prices, pay your employees 15-20% more, and don't accept tips. It's ridiculous to me how complicated and convoluted they make it
@@GoodGamer3000 a few months back i was on a reddit thread, it was about the tipping culture in the u.s. asking for the viewpoint of americans and non americans, and there were americans in the replies talking about that because tipping isn't always getting declared on taxes, a lot of people who work in industries that have tipping prefer to keep the tipping culture, because they can make a lot of money from tips that they don't have to declare on taxes
@@Ray_Vun, ah, I guess I can see that. Although, I would think tips are still technically considered taxable income. Are they just admitting to tax fraud lol
@@GoodGamer3000 yeah jordan even mentions in the video that if the tip is in cash, people probably aren't deducting it.
the whole digital tipping options have probably screwed over a lot of people who do this tho, because it's probably much harder to hide that money
The fact that self service tills ask if you want to leave a tip. Where is that tip going? I scanned and bagged my own items!!
Yooo
hi
IF YOU CAN ORDER DELIVERY OR GO OUT TO EAT YOU CAN TIP
EDIT: And if your country doesn't have tipping culture, then OBVIOUSLY this comment doesn't apply to you.
God I WISH Walmart would allow tips when you pay through PayPal for grocery deliveries, my mom and I share an account because its easy for me to explain stuff for her when I can just see it happening on my end too. Also, unfortunately EBT cards do not allow tipping, which does suck for the driver. I can only hope some people who use EBT (aka food stamps) are able to tip a little now and then, because I know some disabled people on food stamps just can't afford it at all.
The downside to not using Paypal is that it would save my card (or my partner's card) to her account and it doesn't give me a paper trail of refunds for out of stock items, and she may accidentally pay using limited money :/. Otherwise when I'm forced to use a card for some reason, I normally do actually tip and just hope I can remove the card before my mom does an order. The plus side is being able to have PayPal try all my accounts before using my emergency savings account! So I don't have to worry about payments not going through. My mom is disabled and uses Walmart for grocery deliveries since she can't physically drive some days, and she does try to tip when she can. There's very very very limited reasons why it's ok to skip tipping in the US for deliveries.
My drink order is a venti latte with brea-(and the keyboard was taken away from the dork)
Also my thing on tipping: I tip for services, i.e. prompt delivery, table service that is attentive but not overbearing, artist commissions, that sort of thing.
If I am ordering from the counter to go? Don't put that tip shit in front of me. You are not providing any additional service other than "Item in hand, I leave now".
And sure as HELL do not put a "Tip" menu on a damn grocery order. ESPECIALLY if I'm doing self-check.
Also also two things:
1: The amount they get if you don't tip isn't as abysmal as you think. Federal regulations on minimum wage state that any tipped employee paid below minimum wage, if they don't make the full amount of minimum wage after tips, the employer is required by law to pay the difference.
2: Tip suggestions are market research. Companies are selling that information back to the company specifically to say "You can get away with hiking your prices this much and customers will still pay it."
Also ALSO also... lawsuits hinge on whether or not you can collect. Even if you Win, it doesn't mean you'll get anything if there's nothing to actually collect from the person you've sued. Delivery drivers don't tend to have a TON of money to throw around, and most of them don't own a lot of assets aside from maybe the delivery vehicle. So even if you can put someone in bankruptcy, even if they auction off all their stuff, your lawyer's getting paid first, and you're likely to end up with a big fat nothing.
the problem with tipping culture is making the companies stingy and they encouraged to not giving their employees an acceptable wage bc they say "well, they will get it from the costumer anyway" and that's the problem the costumer is not responsible for paying ur employees' salary .
thank god i dont live in america even if my country wages actually less then america minimum wages sometimes, without the tips also.
we still dont have to tip .
The tip depends on order and distance from order location. Sorry dawg, you ain't getting $10 for driving like 2 miles.
Online ordering of anything has artificially increased the cost of all goods by at least 40%. You may have bought something for $30 but shipping/tipping actually adds a mandatory $5-$10 *before tax*
Shipping costs should be given back to at income tax season if the item was shipped via USPS which the majority of products are
YOO
Don't do delivery if you can't tip ? How is that even a thing ? They chose a job that's paying 'em why should I pay them even more? Am I getting paid extra just for doing my job ?! No. Then why has tip become mandatory for delivery and not for every other job as well?