Popeye's Chicken Sandwich (3 Viewers)

she needs to be mad the people who sold her those shorts..
But she Fd around and found out, that's for sure..
Popeyes employees are not the ones to front on, they not afraid to throw hands..
exactly, you try that mess down at Chick Fil A (although they’d never cause you to be that mad)
 
Chick-Fil_A manager (formerly from Popeyes,.....probably) calls cops over sauce
=======================================

Some negative customer service experiences can keep people from ever giving their business to a store again. For one TikToker, this may very well be the case at a Chick-fil-A location she says called the police on her. The alleged reason? Sauce.

In a TikTok video that's garnered over 134,000 views, user @adelelaresee says that a Chick-fil-A manager was adamant about enforcing a 5-sauce limit on a $60 order she placed with the fast-casual chain.

She recorded the manager on the phone in a clip and wrote in several text overlays: "Chik fila employees let me know is this protocol? Chik fila manager calls police on a 60$ order says we are only allowed 5 sauces. Don't go to chik fila on Eastern & Ione Lv, Nv."

According to the text, the incident took place at a store location in Henderson, Nevada..........

"Now we had a full order. We had two spicy chicken deluxe sandwiches, we had two macaroni and cheeses, we had a waffle fry, she got a salad, we had a thirty piece nugget, lot of food," the man in the video says.

The manager then allegedly told them that they would only get five sauces for the nuggets that they ordered "and that would be all." When they asked for more sauces, they claim the manager announced he would be enforcing the strict sauce-count policy moving forward, "starting with" the couple who recorded the video.

"He tried to put his hand in my food and grab it and tell me I'm gonna get a refund..." the TikToker says, before her partner adds that they were "rushing" and trying to get home to their kids so they could have a meal together.

They went on to say that they "didn't really get loud" with the manager and were simply asking for more sauce before the manager said that he was going to call the police on them. However, they say another employee gave them more Chick-fil-A sauce while the manager was on the phone with local authorities explaining the sauce conundrum...........

 
You wanna know why CFA is better? Consistency. The Popeyes sandwich is superior when done right. But half the time it isn’t. You end up with that rubber section that just feels gross and makes me stop eating.

Never had that at CFA. You just get a solid sandwich made the same way every time.
 
You wanna know why CFA is better? Consistency. The Popeyes sandwich is superior when done right. But half the time it isn’t. You end up with that rubber section that just feels gross and makes me stop eating.

Never had that at CFA. You just get a solid sandwich made the same way every time.
Lol, good thing I've never eaten at or will never eat at cfa...
 
You wanna know why CFA is better? Consistency. The Popeyes sandwich is superior when done right. But half the time it isn’t. You end up with that rubber section that just feels gross and makes me stop eating.

Never had that at CFA. You just get a solid sandwich made the same way every time.
So growing up in NO one develops a 6th sense about finding good/great food in ramshackle locations
This was a skill that I found very useful on tour - I could usually spot a good, homey place off the beaten path
When I moved to Texas I had to recalibrate- I had to learn how to find hidden gems in strip malls bc seemingly that’s the only architectural style allowed
But those gems were there - the human spirit is indomitable - it will create beauty even in the most drab locations
Of course not every discovery is going to reveal winsomeness, but it’s a gamble worth taking
If someone doesn’t want to discover beauty, there’s always Olive Garden and I suppose that’s fine; but I’ll always take that chance for the sublime bc that’s how I know I’m alive
 
So growing up in NO one develops a 6th sense about finding good/great food in ramshackle locations
This was a skill that I found very useful on tour - I could usually spot a good, homey place off the beaten path
When I moved to Texas I had to recalibrate- I had to learn how to find hidden gems in strip malls bc seemingly that’s the only architectural style allowed
But those gems were there - the human spirit is indomitable - it will create beauty even in the most drab locations
Of course not every discovery is going to reveal winsomeness, but it’s a gamble worth taking
If someone doesn’t want to discover beauty, there’s always Olive Garden and I suppose that’s fine; but I’ll always take that chance for the sublime bc that’s how I know I’m alive
While true, I think it largely depends on where you're at and what's readily available. Like, where I live, there are those places with that sublime experience, most of those smaller, standalone places here have actually been pretty crummy experiences. Not many stand out here. I'm spoiled a bit though because I knew where those gems were in Lafayette before I move to NOVA.

I like CFA every now and then. I enjoy Popeyes every so often as well. Lately, I've been cooking and eating at home a lot more because eating out prices are getting absurd. Hard to find anything for less than $15 here these days. Grocery prices have gone up a lot, but it's still a lot cheaper to eat at home than even CFA or whatever.

And he's not wrong about CFA consistency. We've eaten at a lot of different locations over the years and I can't recall ever having a bad experience at one. I did get a wrong order via drive through once and they gave me a new order pretty quickly.

Ultimately, to each his own. While I can't eat at the same restaurant more than a couple of times in a given month because I love variety, I still appreciate that CFA is a reliably consistent experience.
 
Never had a bad Popeye's sandwich. Some better than others, but none I ever thought, "I wish this was Chick-Fil-A".
I have, but that's been rare. The bad experiences at Popeyes have been more related to customer service than the food. On more than one occasion, they were out of chicken sandwiches, or out of spicy chicken, or the cashier was rude, or the restaurant was dirty, etc, etc. When it's good though, yeah, it's much better than CFA.

Edit: I just remembered one of the Popeyes here was actually shut down for a while because they failed inspections or something like that. They supposedly were infested with rats or mice. It happened like 4 or 5 years ago and was down the street from my house. They gutted and completely renovated it and iirc hired a new manager to run the store. I've tried it a couple of times since then and no issues.
 
So growing up in NO one develops a 6th sense about finding good/great food in ramshackle locations
This was a skill that I found very useful on tour - I could usually spot a good, homey place off the beaten path
When I moved to Texas I had to recalibrate- I had to learn how to find hidden gems in strip malls bc seemingly that’s the only architectural style allowed
But those gems were there - the human spirit is indomitable - it will create beauty even in the most drab locations
Of course not every discovery is going to reveal winsomeness, but it’s a gamble worth taking
If someone doesn’t want to discover beauty, there’s always Olive Garden and I suppose that’s fine; but I’ll always take that chance for the sublime bc that’s how I know I’m alive
I travel a lot for work and honestly the best Mexican food I have ever had came from a joint in a strip mall. I am always on the look out for the local place vs the National chain.
 

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