I love how everyone else has a decent camera setup, and then there's just jay sitting in his car, looking like some sort of boogieman with bad connection
I had a landlord once who was really pedantic about paying rent, insisted on cash, and delivered to them, none of us had a car and they were about an hour bus trip away. One week I was fed up, so paid entirely with coins. It required a pillow case. Strangely enough, we got given a bank account number for the next rent.
Back in college I worked in a pizza place. Right before closing around midnight, a group of very drunk students came in and ordered a large (16") pizza to go. I made it up an put it in the oven. In the meantime, one of the students went to the restroom and barfed all over, which I was shortly going to have to clean for closing. Learning of this, I was NOT happy. We had already rung them up, so after the pizza had baked about 10 minutes (about half the required time), I took it out, cut it in half, put it in the box and handed it over. They walked out, and we locked the door behind them. Never heard anything about it. It was my most spiteful slice ever.
Making a guess as soon as the term "spite slice" was mentioned but before any further watching: The customer paid with a bunch of small coins, so the sandwich was cut into a bunch of pieces, using the same logic (the total amount is the same).
Where I live, most service staff, taxi drivers etc love receiving small change. Because people often pay with big notes, the staff find it hard to make change for them and there is a whole hassle as the staff run around asking coworkers or even other customers if they wouldn’t mind helping out with some small change.
My first thought was that I was reminded of the story of a guy who was in a bar when a stranger bought him eighteen beers and one empty shot glass. Turns out the recipient was a member of the 2007 New England Patriots, who famously won their first 18 games before losing the Super Bowl, and the guy buying the drinks was making a joke at the player's expense.
Working in retail for many years, I've had plenty of customers pay with large amounts of small change. usually either kids who saved their pocket money or adults who won on the pokies the night before. I never had a problem with it. If you work with enough cash, you get very fast at counting it. My tip would be to just hand over the pile of coins and let the retailer count it. they will be much quicker.
I will be much quicker and I have to count anything that goes into my drawer anyways, so if *you* count it then we're going to sit here as it gets counted a second time. I really have no problem with people giving me large amounts of change, so long as there isn't a big line, and we're not too close to closing time. Honestly I have far more problem with people walking up to me and buying something for $10, and handing me a $50 or $100 when they literally watched me walk up to the counter and just put my till in. C'mon, I don't have the money to break that, you'll wipe my drawer.
This reminds me of when I was on residential. There was a woman who cut the pizzas. She asked for a number between 1 and 100. A friend of mine said 99 and got their pizza cut into 99 slices. I said six and got a hexagon. But the last kid who got all the leftover toppings had his pizza cut into a salad without even having the question asked.
Brings back memories, this... One time, about 15 years ago, in a big store in Amsterdam, 3 persons kept 2 cashiers busy and quite a number of people, with us in front, waiting, paying for a flatscreen TV, a mediaplayer (could it have been a bluray?) and a car stereo for €1200. They paid with €20 bills, and one cashier grouped them in 5 bill fans, so the other cashier could scan them faster. Good thing none of the bills caused a FAIL alarm...
In England we have £50 notes as the highest denomination but they're so rare I don't think I've seen one since before the pandemic. A £1200 cash purchase would nearly always be in £20s here. In Scotland they have £100 notes so that could be done in 12 notes instead of 60 in England. In Europe though you can do it with 3 notes with your €200 & €500 notes
@@Jack-us6wl 200€ and 500€ notes are a bit like bigfoot and UFOs. Your weird cousin swears they exist because he read it on the internet but nobody you know has ever seen one.
I really enjoyed the dynamic of this group. There were a few really good ones, but this one really stood out. May be people to work with some day. Also Jason, is that a random Belgian license plate you got there? That's usually something the Dutch literally steer clear of, Belgian license plates, especially when attached to cars, and on the road.
Yes! It is the license plate of the last car that I owned. I sold it in 2013, while living in Belgium. There's your little nugget of NJB lore for the day.
my guess was some american had asked for a double quarter pounder, and the shop interpreted that to mean a 1 pound sandwich cut into quarters twice (recursively).
How the change issue flipped on its head since cashless payment went big. Usually, shopkeepers would love to receive change, since they were often paid with big bills so after half day of work they started running low on change. I'm not sure how many he needed to count, but it's a sandwich, so with 10p it would probably be not that many.
If they'd paid in 1p pieces then I'd say that's a pretty big issue. But 10p? A sandwich isn't super expensive, so there wouldn't have been all that many 10p coins involved. And at least around here, most stores appreciate receiving exact change since they run out of it all the time for customers who pay only with larger bills. So although it depends on the price of the sandwich, I'd say that the customer probably wasn't the asshole.
I've never worked food service retail, but I would assume that a very large factor (which doesn't seem to be recorded here) is what day it was, what time of day, and how busy the shop was. If it was a super-slow period, then fine, if you're running the register/till you just count it up and dump it in the drawer. But if it's the lunch rush, and there's 10 people in line, and this yoik throws down dozens of coins to pay for a sandwich instead of a reasonable bill (or a credit card) then they've completely broken the flow and wasted a bunch of people's time. At that point I would absolutely punitively cut up their sandwich.
@@Gamesaucer Being harmlessly petty to someone who was an utter berk to me in a professional situation where it wasn't appropriate to call them an idiot? Sounds like a perfectly good coping mechanism to me.
@@fsodn "was an utter berk to me in a professional situation" I'm sorry to hear you are so deeply offended by having to interact with poor people. We don't have all the facts, let's not assume malice of complete strangers.
@@Poldovico Yes. I was assuming the payer was doing so just to be a jerk. It hadn't occurred to me that that's the only denominations they had the money in. Point very well taken; thank you for pointing that out.
In the U.S. at least, you can order a burger (or maybe...sandwich?) with four patties and four slices of cheese, by asking it "four by four," which I think would be very apt!
i thought it might be a pedant sandwich barista who received an order along the lines "i want a sandwich with tomatoes and mozzarella, and make it the same for my 15 friends"
My initial thought was, if you cut a sandwich into 16 slices, you usually would do that so that you can take them with a fork, and not need to use a knife. So my train of thought would go into checking if the knife was absent or something like that.
3:45 - That story about how crisps (that Americans call chips) were invented proves that French fries were sliced potatoes, not batons (i.e. not what Brits call chips)
So because the sandwich artist had to fiddle with the change he decided to fiddle even more cutting the sandwich? I'm totally with the customer here - money is money
@@UngodlyFreak In the grand scheme of things - it doesn't matter. But if I'm pissed by someone because he arguably made me do more work the last thing I'd want to do is do even more work in a petty attempt to teach him a lesson.
Worked in a cafe once and this guy on two occasions, complained that his sandwich wasn’t hot enough despite the fact that one of them was hot enough to burn me through the plastic gloves He was incredibly rude about it both times So next time he came in we loaded it with an immense amount of Tabasco What made it better was when he came back to complain about it, our manager just replied, “oh sorry, we wanted to make sure it was extra hot this time”
My first assumption, don't know if it's correct To have 16, you'd take your standard 2 bread slice sandwich like in my PFP, half it, half those halves, so you've got little crusty corners, and then you'd have to half all of those halves I feel like when it comes to catering and stuff like that, the crusty quarters are the ideal size in my opinion, but maybe it's some stingy catering thing where the person ordered as many sandwiches as 2 slices of bread gets you, and they go 16 mini sandwiches that would usually have toothpicks in them at a buffet or something
I'm on the side of the customer. Before I started paying for everything with a card, I used to make a point of always sticking lose change into a piggy bank rather than carry it with me. One day I realized I had more than enough change in there for a large pizza, I counted it out, made sure there was enough for a decent tip, and ordered a pizza delivery. I remember the driver taking it in good humour but pointing out he now knew where I lived if he got back to the restaurant and there wasn't enough 😀 Like what else should I do, spend 4 hours in a queue at the bank to exchange it?
When you buy groceries, before it's your turn take a peek into your wallet and approximate what you can muster up. When it's time to pay, pay with whatever bills are necessary and the exact value in cent/pence if possible. You get an easy full euro/pound/dollar value back which might eventually mean you can get the entire amount straight. Obviously, the peek is crucial, because you can say right away "Oh, I got 27 cents for sure", know that there's a 20c, 5c and a 2c and fish them out instead of rummaging and holding the line up.
But then I couldn't have fed the 63 pennies of change I accumulated over a year at uni into the self-service machine to buy a chocolate bar on my last day.
We do have such a law in the UK but it's quite a bit more permissive. You can pay with 1p and 2p coins up to 20p value, 5p and 10p up to £5 value, 20p and 50p up to £10 value. So someone could well pay for something costing £5 with a hundred tiny 5p coins.
and here I was thinking that paying with small coins is what the foodchains want... at least the one where we usually go for lunch, when I pay with a larger bill (e.g. 10 € for 6,70 € meal) they always ask me if I have some change instead. It's probably because lot of people pay with bigger bills and they need to change to give them back... so I would guess paying with 0,1 € coins would make them happy... Of course, not 67×10cent coins... or, If I were to pay like that, I would arrange it in columns by 10 coins so they can easily count it
Nah that's a dick move, i've been in that situation where i've had to dig in my coin jar to get change for a sandwich to avoid adding an extra 20min on to the walk to go to a cashpoint.
If the sandwich buyer was poor/a beggar, it would make sense that he/she would accummulate and save the coins to aggregate to the cost of the sandwich? On the seller's side, it would give change for those who would pay with large size value coins (obvioulsy not bitcoins!)/bank notes.
My guess (wrong, obviously) was that the man had gone to the sandwich shop and ordered 16 sandwiches for his group... right before closing. Anyone who's worked in food prep would think this a just response.
Never thought about it before but I think triangular ones do taste better. I think it's the width, a lot of it is narrow enough to come at it sideways and you get all the bits and crust at the same time.
I thought perhaps somebody asked for a bi-lateral cut, and the order just put "bi", and then the next person saw it upside down, or backwards? and saw 1-6. 🙂
"non-crusty hypotenuse " ... "surface area - to volume - ratio" ... unfortunately Matt Parker, the expert on squares, was not participating in this episode
If the guy was paying with small coins to be a dick, I'm on the sandwich artist's side. If he apologised and it was all he had, don't make his day worse.
So from "spite slice" I jumped straight to malicious compliance - thinking maybe he rudely asked for "extra lettuce - as many slices as possible" or something like that... Disappointed that wasn't the answer.
I mean he paid the correct amount with legal tender, he should receive the same product as anyone else, so regardless of the 'awkwardness' of counting the change, they should receive the same product....?? I feel like an ego got in the way here 😆
iam on the side of the buyer... because you paid with real money, just because you dont like the work of counting it you cant just ruin the product you sold. i always had the opposite problem when i worked in a photo shop some 25years ago,.. it was near a bank... so everyone coming in to photocopy (yeah that was still a thing) paid the 10p for a copy with a 100DM bill.. just because i didnt like it and had to close the shop down regularly to exchange money at the bank to have new change again doesnt mean i can just cut the copy to pieces..
Within reason. Yeah, I can understand paying for a sandwich with loose change, but if you're trying to buy something that costs more than 20 euros by emptying your piggy-bank on the counter, we're going to have a problem.
I mean, I was seriously sitting here … "Guy on twitter … 16 small pieces … Fast food … Did someone slice up Donald Trump's sandwich into tiny pieces to match his reportedly tiny hands?" I mean it's not right I figured, but … what's more important here? Being right or laughable memes? That's correct: Laughable memes. Always laughable memes. And non-crusty hypotenuses. Hypotenusii? Whatever.
So the sandwich "artist" was angry for being paid in change, never once considering that the man (or woman) was some poor homeless person that had been collecting coins to finally get a meal? Yes I've seen this happen and paid for the poor guys food myself, knowing there but for the Grace of God.
It's legal to buy with a certain amount of loose change and the poor guy might have scraped together all he had to get something to eat. May have been homeless.
After this I will forever use the term "non-crusty hypotenuse" to describe the optimal place to bite into a sandwich.
And make sure to always use nice slices rather than spite slices ;)
212 likes, in the video video with only one reply? Lemme fix that
I was disappointed to so quickly lose the hypotenuse hypothesis.
I love how everyone else has a decent camera setup, and then there's just jay sitting in his car, looking like some sort of boogieman with bad connection
However, he has BY FAR the best audio quality! 😂
Calling in from the Bohemian Rhapsody dimension
He said he had a human baby in the house and the small human wouldn’t like the podcast noise.
His car? I thought he was in a cave or something.
He's calling in from the same dimension that Tom lives in before being summoned by windswept infrastructure.
I had a landlord once who was really pedantic about paying rent, insisted on cash, and delivered to them, none of us had a car and they were about an hour bus trip away. One week I was fed up, so paid entirely with coins. It required a pillow case. Strangely enough, we got given a bank account number for the next rent.
"insisted on cash" = wasn't paying his taxes
Haha, I'd forgotten Jay was in a car by the end of this podcast. It's nice to see the video settings of this.
Why was he? Didnt listen to the podcast.
@reneg8 he has a newborn baby and didn't want to wake it
@@27pattywhack2 fair enough
That's hilarious but very relatable
Back in college I worked in a pizza place. Right before closing around midnight, a group of very drunk students came in and ordered a large (16") pizza to go. I made it up an put it in the oven. In the meantime, one of the students went to the restroom and barfed all over, which I was shortly going to have to clean for closing. Learning of this, I was NOT happy. We had already rung them up, so after the pizza had baked about 10 minutes (about half the required time), I took it out, cut it in half, put it in the box and handed it over. They walked out, and we locked the door behind them. Never heard anything about it. It was my most spiteful slice ever.
They probably didn't even realise
@@cat1554should’ve made it a really weird cut. Like, a single crooked 30/70 ratio cut
@@whyamiwastingmytimeonthis Cut it into 8 slices, straight across for every slice.
Jay has lightning-quick wit even on awful car connection and with a four-second delay 😂
We'll never know if the sandwich was spicy, but the sandwich artist was surely bitter.
So it's possible it was a spiced spite slice 🤔
So happy you had 'not just bikes' on there! Love it!
I was convinced the customer had ordered a sandwich cut into "four square(d) pieces."
Making a guess as soon as the term "spite slice" was mentioned but before any further watching: The customer paid with a bunch of small coins, so the sandwich was cut into a bunch of pieces, using the same logic (the total amount is the same).
Well, not exactly. There's more sandwich stuck to the knife that way 😂
@@DerMarkus1982 What do you mean? They got it right
@@cipherhex Assertion: "The total amount is the same." Response: "Not exactly. There's more sandwich stuck to the knife."
A kind slice, or as Received Pronunciation has it, a council house.
I expected Jay to have recorded his side of the call at daytime
Tom was hosting from Canada in these recordings.
Makes sense why he didn't want to wake the baby up now
@@lateralcast Ohh, that's the missing piece of the puzzle
Where I live, most service staff, taxi drivers etc love receiving small change. Because people often pay with big notes, the staff find it hard to make change for them and there is a whole hassle as the staff run around asking coworkers or even other customers if they wouldn’t mind helping out with some small change.
My first thought was that I was reminded of the story of a guy who was in a bar when a stranger bought him eighteen beers and one empty shot glass.
Turns out the recipient was a member of the 2007 New England Patriots, who famously won their first 18 games before losing the Super Bowl, and the guy buying the drinks was making a joke at the player's expense.
Working in retail for many years, I've had plenty of customers pay with large amounts of small change. usually either kids who saved their pocket money or adults who won on the pokies the night before.
I never had a problem with it. If you work with enough cash, you get very fast at counting it. My tip would be to just hand over the pile of coins and let the retailer count it. they will be much quicker.
I will be much quicker and I have to count anything that goes into my drawer anyways, so if *you* count it then we're going to sit here as it gets counted a second time.
I really have no problem with people giving me large amounts of change, so long as there isn't a big line, and we're not too close to closing time. Honestly I have far more problem with people walking up to me and buying something for $10, and handing me a $50 or $100 when they literally watched me walk up to the counter and just put my till in. C'mon, I don't have the money to break that, you'll wipe my drawer.
This reminds me of when I was on residential. There was a woman who cut the pizzas. She asked for a number between 1 and 100. A friend of mine said 99 and got their pizza cut into 99 slices. I said six and got a hexagon. But the last kid who got all the leftover toppings had his pizza cut into a salad without even having the question asked.
Wait, what do you mean by "cut into a salad"?
Brings back memories, this... One time, about 15 years ago, in a big store in Amsterdam, 3 persons kept 2 cashiers busy and quite a number of people, with us in front, waiting, paying for a flatscreen TV, a mediaplayer (could it have been a bluray?) and a car stereo for €1200. They paid with €20 bills, and one cashier grouped them in 5 bill fans, so the other cashier could scan them faster. Good thing none of the bills caused a FAIL alarm...
In England we have £50 notes as the highest denomination but they're so rare I don't think I've seen one since before the pandemic. A £1200 cash purchase would nearly always be in £20s here.
In Scotland they have £100 notes so that could be done in 12 notes instead of 60 in England. In Europe though you can do it with 3 notes with your €200 & €500 notes
@@Jack-us6wl 200€ and 500€ notes are a bit like bigfoot and UFOs. Your weird cousin swears they exist because he read it on the internet but nobody you know has ever seen one.
I really enjoyed the dynamic of this group. There were a few really good ones, but this one really stood out. May be people to work with some day.
Also Jason, is that a random Belgian license plate you got there? That's usually something the Dutch literally steer clear of, Belgian license plates, especially when attached to cars, and on the road.
If I recall correctly, he has previously lived in Brussels. So it might be his own license plate from that time.
Yes! It is the license plate of the last car that I owned. I sold it in 2013, while living in Belgium.
There's your little nugget of NJB lore for the day.
sadly no one made a Rye bread joke at 2:08
Ohh, that would’ve been perfect.
I just love the concept of a "sandwich-slicing factory". The factory has one purpose, one function: to output slices of an input sandwich.
I would like the other 15 pieces of this episode now ;)
my guess was some american had asked for a double quarter pounder, and the shop interpreted that to mean a 1 pound sandwich cut into quarters twice (recursively).
Yeah, I was thinking of some power of two "half and half again" kinda thing!
I'm guessing someone ate it
Now I'm just thinking of some kind of fractal dimension sandwich. 😆
Anyone else hoping for the Technical Difficulties for the series finale or Christmas special.
Non-crusty hypotenuse sounds like that 3 piece scifi jazz ensemble your brother played in at college 😅
It'd be apt if the sandwich had costed £1.60 and he used sixteen 10p pieces to pay for it, so ended up with the sandwich cut into 16 small squares!
How the change issue flipped on its head since cashless payment went big. Usually, shopkeepers would love to receive change, since they were often paid with big bills so after half day of work they started running low on change. I'm not sure how many he needed to count, but it's a sandwich, so with 10p it would probably be not that many.
Jay never fails to surprise
If they'd paid in 1p pieces then I'd say that's a pretty big issue. But 10p? A sandwich isn't super expensive, so there wouldn't have been all that many 10p coins involved. And at least around here, most stores appreciate receiving exact change since they run out of it all the time for customers who pay only with larger bills. So although it depends on the price of the sandwich, I'd say that the customer probably wasn't the asshole.
I've never worked food service retail, but I would assume that a very large factor (which doesn't seem to be recorded here) is what day it was, what time of day, and how busy the shop was. If it was a super-slow period, then fine, if you're running the register/till you just count it up and dump it in the drawer.
But if it's the lunch rush, and there's 10 people in line, and this yoik throws down dozens of coins to pay for a sandwich instead of a reasonable bill (or a credit card) then they've completely broken the flow and wasted a bunch of people's time. At that point I would absolutely punitively cut up their sandwich.
@@fsodn That's not healthy. Please find a therapist.
@@Gamesaucer Being harmlessly petty to someone who was an utter berk to me in a professional situation where it wasn't appropriate to call them an idiot?
Sounds like a perfectly good coping mechanism to me.
@@fsodn "was an utter berk to me in a professional situation"
I'm sorry to hear you are so deeply offended by having to interact with poor people.
We don't have all the facts, let's not assume malice of complete strangers.
@@Poldovico Yes. I was assuming the payer was doing so just to be a jerk. It hadn't occurred to me that that's the only denominations they had the money in. Point very well taken; thank you for pointing that out.
In the U.S. at least, you can order a burger (or maybe...sandwich?) with four patties and four slices of cheese, by asking it "four by four," which I think would be very apt!
The Non-Crusty Hypotenuse sounds like a mathematics-themed sandwich restaurant. I love it.
3b1b making a video on non-crusty hypotenuse specifically to make Tom's joke true would be a mad lad move
i thought it might be a pedant sandwich barista who received an order along the lines "i want a sandwich with tomatoes and mozzarella, and make it the same for my 15 friends"
My initial thought was, if you cut a sandwich into 16 slices, you usually would do that so that you can take them with a fork, and not need to use a knife. So my train of thought would go into checking if the knife was absent or something like that.
"That's what you should do in that situation" Guess none of them have been poor or on hard times and had to pay with change.
5:11 lol laughed through the camera
3:45 - That story about how crisps (that Americans call chips) were invented proves that French fries were sliced potatoes, not batons (i.e. not what Brits call chips)
4:14 Several layers deep 🤣
So because the sandwich artist had to fiddle with the change he decided to fiddle even more cutting the sandwich? I'm totally with the customer here - money is money
Good point, however, it was funny
Well it seems like the customer was good sport about it and the sandwich gets all mushed up in the digestive tract anyway, so what does it matter?
@@UngodlyFreak In the grand scheme of things - it doesn't matter. But if I'm pissed by someone because he arguably made me do more work the last thing I'd want to do is do even more work in a petty attempt to teach him a lesson.
Customer: please cut in 4 square pieces
Sandwich artist : sure, 4^2 pieces = 16
Worked in a cafe once and this guy on two occasions, complained that his sandwich wasn’t hot enough despite the fact that one of them was hot enough to burn me through the plastic gloves
He was incredibly rude about it both times
So next time he came in we loaded it with an immense amount of Tabasco
What made it better was when he came back to complain about it, our manager just replied, “oh sorry, we wanted to make sure it was extra hot this time”
It isn't normally the same person on the till as in the kitchen. You usually order and pay at the till, and the staff in the kitchen make the order.
Did the tweet have pictures? Can I see it if so?
My first assumption, don't know if it's correct
To have 16, you'd take your standard 2 bread slice sandwich like in my PFP, half it, half those halves, so you've got little crusty corners, and then you'd have to half all of those halves
I feel like when it comes to catering and stuff like that, the crusty quarters are the ideal size in my opinion, but maybe it's some stingy catering thing where the person ordered as many sandwiches as 2 slices of bread gets you, and they go 16 mini sandwiches that would usually have toothpicks in them at a buffet or something
Guess at 4:36 did they pay for the sandwich in pennies or other small coins?
I thought it was going to be that he asked for a double quarter, so the insulted sandwichier quartered it double.
I once paid for a sandwich in quarters, but I asked first if that would be okay. It was mainly because she needed quarters.
I love watching these
5:48 Ahhh.. He insisted on paying with pennies or something
I mean, I like to cut along both diagonals for 4 triangles so that ONLY the hypotenuse has crust
16bytes or 16 bits?.. haven't gotten to the end yet.:)
I was thinking 16 nibbles
In case you're wondering: a nibble is 4 bits or half a byte
@@nicjansen230 yup ;)
I'm on the side of the customer. Before I started paying for everything with a card, I used to make a point of always sticking lose change into a piggy bank rather than carry it with me. One day I realized I had more than enough change in there for a large pizza, I counted it out, made sure there was enough for a decent tip, and ordered a pizza delivery. I remember the driver taking it in good humour but pointing out he now knew where I lived if he got back to the restaurant and there wasn't enough 😀 Like what else should I do, spend 4 hours in a queue at the bank to exchange it?
I used to just pay for things exactly whenever I could. I rarely had large amounts of loose change because I got rid of it fast enough like that.
When you buy groceries, before it's your turn take a peek into your wallet and approximate what you can muster up. When it's time to pay, pay with whatever bills are necessary and the exact value in cent/pence if possible. You get an easy full euro/pound/dollar value back which might eventually mean you can get the entire amount straight.
Obviously, the peek is crucial, because you can say right away "Oh, I got 27 cents for sure", know that there's a 20c, 5c and a 2c and fish them out instead of rummaging and holding the line up.
I would love a bunch of little sandwich bits like that.
More countries need to copy Denmarks "Coinlaw". You are allowed to deny anybody paying with more than 25 units of any coin.
But then I couldn't have fed the 63 pennies of change I accumulated over a year at uni into the self-service machine to buy a chocolate bar on my last day.
We do have such a law in the UK but it's quite a bit more permissive. You can pay with 1p and 2p coins up to 20p value, 5p and 10p up to £5 value, 20p and 50p up to £10 value. So someone could well pay for something costing £5 with a hundred tiny 5p coins.
As funny as it is I do think the sandwich maker was in the wrong. A person paying with small change is usually not very well off.
I would happily watch a video about a non-crusty hypotenuse.
My chip shop literally bought all my small change off me once because they were running short.
and here I was thinking that paying with small coins is what the foodchains want... at least the one where we usually go for lunch, when I pay with a larger bill (e.g. 10 € for 6,70 € meal) they always ask me if I have some change instead. It's probably because lot of people pay with bigger bills and they need to change to give them back... so I would guess paying with 0,1 € coins would make them happy...
Of course, not 67×10cent coins... or, If I were to pay like that, I would arrange it in columns by 10 coins so they can easily count it
I find it hilarious that Jason ruled out them being Catholic 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I was thinking that they had asked for it to be cut into 4 squares.
Nah that's a dick move, i've been in that situation where i've had to dig in my coin jar to get change for a sandwich to avoid adding an extra 20min on to the walk to go to a cashpoint.
why does it look like jay foreman is calling in from the blair witch project
If the sandwich buyer was poor/a beggar, it would make sense that he/she would accummulate and save the coins to aggregate to the cost of the sandwich? On the seller's side, it would give change for those who would pay with large size value coins (obvioulsy not bitcoins!)/bank notes.
I thought he ordered a 16 inch sub and got served 16 inches of sub
Jay Forman!!!❤
My guess (wrong, obviously) was that the man had gone to the sandwich shop and ordered 16 sandwiches for his group... right before closing. Anyone who's worked in food prep would think this a just response.
Triangle vs. Rectangle -- a battle for the ages.
Leaves out the people who prefer other shapes - why don't trapezoidal sandwich slices get any love?
Never thought about it before but I think triangular ones do taste better. I think it's the width, a lot of it is narrow enough to come at it sideways and you get all the bits and crust at the same time.
Jay Foreman has been kidnapped and held hostage by Tom Scott for the show. Enjoy you heathens.
I keep expecting the answer to be it was the persons 16th birthday.
I thought perhaps somebody asked for a bi-lateral cut, and the order just put "bi", and then the next person saw it upside down, or backwards? and saw 1-6. 🙂
A divisive topic🤣
At first, I thought maybe it was his spouse who did it… lol
"non-crusty hypotenuse " ... "surface area - to volume - ratio" ... unfortunately Matt Parker, the expert on squares, was not participating in this episode
Could of got Geoff Marshall involved in this as well 😅
Is Jay in Witness Protection or something?
the car was the only room in the house where he wouldn’t wake the baby up.
Wait… this channel has been here the whole time?
Tom I didn't know about this channel please advertise it more
Jay!!
My guess is that he was the inventor of those annoying sliding tile puzzles.
A nice riddle but I seriously doubt that it happened.
I have never been to a shop that requires payment before they start making your food.
It's quite common in British cafes and sandwich shops where the food is made to order.
If the guy was paying with small coins to be a dick, I'm on the sandwich artist's side. If he apologised and it was all he had, don't make his day worse.
Puzzling as always, man.
Triangles are easier to eat as you can bite from the corners.
Rectangular sandwiches have more corners, so they should be even easier.
So from "spite slice" I jumped straight to malicious compliance - thinking maybe he rudely asked for "extra lettuce - as many slices as possible" or something like that...
Disappointed that wasn't the answer.
Why is Jay Foreman clearly in his car?
If you couldn't do that, change wouldn't really be money, would it?
“Munch” by spice slice
What's the sandwich spicy?
16 spicy bites
I mean he paid the correct amount with legal tender, he should receive the same product as anyone else, so regardless of the 'awkwardness' of counting the change, they should receive the same product....?? I feel like an ego got in the way here 😆
Sandvich
iam on the side of the buyer... because you paid with real money, just because you dont like the work of counting it you cant just ruin the product you sold.
i always had the opposite problem when i worked in a photo shop some 25years ago,.. it was near a bank... so everyone coming in to photocopy (yeah that was still a thing) paid the 10p for a copy with a 100DM bill..
just because i didnt like it and had to close the shop down regularly to exchange money at the bank to have new change again doesnt mean i can just cut the copy to pieces..
I will be sad the answer wasn't because he asked for 4 squared cuts.
Money is Money. doesnt matter if its 1000 tiny coins or one big note
Within reason. Yeah, I can understand paying for a sandwich with loose change, but if you're trying to buy something that costs more than 20 euros by emptying your piggy-bank on the counter, we're going to have a problem.
Sandwich is sandwich. Doesn’t matter if it’s 16 tiny slices or one big slab.
@@JayForeman actually...fair enough :D
Kip means chicken in dutch
I mean, I was seriously sitting here … "Guy on twitter … 16 small pieces … Fast food … Did someone slice up Donald Trump's sandwich into tiny pieces to match his reportedly tiny hands?" I mean it's not right I figured, but … what's more important here? Being right or laughable memes?
That's correct: Laughable memes. Always laughable memes. And non-crusty hypotenuses. Hypotenusii? Whatever.
I spice lice? Or whatever...
So the sandwich "artist" was angry for being paid in change, never once considering that the man (or woman) was some poor homeless person that had been collecting coins to finally get a meal? Yes I've seen this happen and paid for the poor guys food myself, knowing there but for the Grace of God.
It's legal to buy with a certain amount of loose change and the poor guy might have scraped together all he had to get something to eat. May have been homeless.
Nah, debatable who was in the wrong. Hungry guy could have been broke and needed to use his change jar.
Why is Jay in a car?!
Because his baby would not like it if Jay would be talking will it tries to sleep.
why is Jay in a car?
These highlights sound a lot like what happens when a bunch of DnD players hyperfocus on something completely irrelevant 😄.
MAP MEN
Too bad if the guy had run out of money for the fortnight, and he only had loose change until his social security came through.