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I work at a drive-thru: If you do this, you're the worst customer ever.

What kind of drive-thru customer are you? After posting a video detailingdrive-thru customers of type A customer who orders while talking on the phone.

TikToker's Audrey Kahn identified her worst customers: person on the phone.

"I didn't want to say where I work either, but imagine where," she captioned a clip of people serving caffeine-based drinks. Understated hashtags #Starbucks.

Khan details each customer and gives examples of what she faces in each scenario. I acted out a scenario.

A 'yell' is literally a customer who orders loudly, and a 'disrespectful' customer who ignores the cheers and jumps right into the order.

Khan points out that a man of few words is the one who has to get the driver to order, and a "gaslighter" is someone who adamantly claims you gave him the wrong thing. she said. actually ordered.

Karn identified 6 of the worst habits drive-thru customers have.
TikTok/plz_stfu0
She didn't specify where exactly she worked but the comments made it clear it's a universal experience for all drive-thrus.
TikTok/plz_stfu0

A "cheapskate" is someone who receives an incorrect order and requests a change — they want to keep the original order anyway — and the final drive-thru Fear of 'callers', people who refuse to answer the phone and pause the conversation while ordering - sometimes say to callers, 'Drive-thru people are so irritating'.

She gave a special shoutout to customers asking for recommendations or favorite drinks, but told them to trust the person serving them if that was their intent. rice field. conduct.

"We love this, but trust me if you're going to ask," she wrote in the clip. Employees commented on clips and shared their experiences to add to the list.

"I forgot who let the kids order themselves from the back seat," wrote one user.

"When they check bags and sandwiches in front of you after they take so long to get paid and put the entire line on hold," another shared.

"Or just yell hello hello when they stop the car and you're doing something until you answer," one user commented.

TikTok has become a haven for service industry workers to share their frustrations. Last week, a Starbucks employee blew up her customer while she was making a drink.

Not everyone uses the app to chastise customers, but earlier this month baristas used the app to whine about