Posted on 11/30/2009 10:29:46 AM PST by big black dog
Youd think with all their money, celebrities would be good tippers. This isnt always the case. Certain celebrities are notoriously bad tippers. Check it out:
1. Madonna - Doesnt always leave a tip, when she does its a cheap one.
2. Kelly Presten Notoriously bad tipper. Most of the time she doesnt leave a tip at all.
3. Gwyneth Paltrow Doesnt leave a decent tip. Its speculated she has trouble calculating the proper percentage.
4. Barbra Streisand Doesnt always tip. When she does its $10 for a bill of over $450. Shes very high maintenance and demanding and no one ever wants to wait on her.
5. Tobey Maguire Doesnt always leave a tip, and when he does it isnt generous.
6. Bill Cosby Once left a $3 tip on a $350 order. He probably thinks the waitstaff needs to stop taking from others and get a real job.
7. Ricki Lake Once left a tip of $8.00 on a $142.44 bill. This after she let her young son run around the restaurant unattended and he supposedly made a big mess.
8. Bobby Brown Rude to wait staff, lets his kids run amuk and left a $10 gratuity on a $250 restaurant tab.
9. Sean Penn - He and three others had New Orleans waiters waiting on them hand and foot. The tip left on a $450 tab? Absolutely nothing. There are lots of instances of Sean Penn stiffing waitstaff. How many people do you think have spit in his food by now?
10. Kirsten Dunst According to one server shes whiny and smells bad. Left nothing behind after racking up a $223 bill.
11. Dan Marino Wouldnt talk to server directly, had to have a member of his entourage handle it. Tipped $10 on $210.
12. David Lee Roth Is known to be demanding and send food back. Tips 10%.
13. Duane Dog the Bounty Hunter Chapman He and his wife are considered to be very high maintenance. They expect the VIP treatment and only tip %5. At a TGI Fridays in Waikiki they paid $10 for a $250 tab.
14. Rupert Everett Listed as one of the worst tippers ever.
15. David Byrne The Talking Heads frontman is considered one of the worst tippers ever because he doesnt leave anything, ever.
16. Molly Ringwald Bar tab was the equivalent of twenty-five cents for each round of drinks her large entourage consumed.
17. Diddy Left a $40 tip for his meal a dinner for 15 people.
18. Richard Dreyfuss Bad tipper and high maintenance whiny client.
19. Michael Moore Once left less than $20 on a bill totally $452.52.
20. Jesse Jackson Left $20 on a $228 tab.
21. John Kerry Left $20 on a tab of over $700!
22. Britney Spears Once tipped a valet by dropping change on the ground and telling him theres your tip. Also paid a $26 tip on a $500 tab.
23. Tiger Woods Doesnt tip because he says he doesnt carry cash.
24. Usher - Never tips and always tries to get someone else to pick up the bill.
25. Rachel Ray Tipped $1 on a $10 tab. Probably didnt want to go under her $40 a day allowance.
26. Victoria Beckham and Katie Holmes Dined together in an upscale restaurant and didnt leave a tip.
27. Tom Green Once left $15 on a $175 tab.
28. Paul McCartney Once left a restaurant too drunk to leave a tip.
29. Regis Once left cruise staff a $60 tip for an entire weeks worth of personal service. His wife is said to be very high maintenance and the ships crew was happy when she left two days early.
30. Marty Stuart Leaves 7% his wife is very demanding.
31. Don Henley Very demanding, keeps staff members on their toes, tips 15%.
32. DAngelo Once left $7.00 on a $250 tab. The tab should have been over $500, mind you, but the r&b singer and his entourage nagged until they got a discount . 33. Mariah Carey Once had her people call ahead to a restaurant to let them know she was arriving with a very large party. The restaurant stayed open late, and Mariah and crew were very diva-ish with their demands. Despite keeping staffers jumping and a high tab, no one left a tip.
34. Marion Jones Left $3 on a $45 tab.
On their feet?
Yes because the same thing never, ever happens in the USA. /s
But here YOU DON'T HAVE TO PAY FOR IT? Leave a minimal tip.
What do you think restaurant owners in the US will do to their prices if, instead of half of minimum wage, they now had to pay all their waitstaff enough in wages to attract good workers?
Think about it a minute.
“Fine Dining” is a bourgeois concept, FRiend, and the dictatorchip of the proletariat will not shed a tear when the last vestiges of it are driven from our glorious revolutionary democracy.
They would raise them of course. But restaurant customers already pay more as a result of tipping. If the raised prices were comparable to the existing price and tips, there would be no difference.
Well, in America, you do.
By virtue of waitstaff being exempted from minimum wage laws, you, as a customer are assuming some payment for their services.
Now you know what all that cussing was about when you left a US restaurant without tipping. The poor sap had to cough up income tax on 8% of your bill, also. It's almost like you stole his services.
He’s also dead.
So, the price would be the same, but the service would be worse.
Sounds like a European solution, but, again, you seem to lack faith in the marketplace, along with some Canadians and other Commonwealth subjects.
I have trouble tipping when they constantly tell me that my needs and my requests are “no problem.” I’m glad to know that I’m not a problem to them, but it doesn’t make me happy.
They probably think that it’s a PRIVILEGE to serve them, so why isn’t that enough.
"It's not tipping I believe in. It's overtipping. "-Vinnie Antonelli
I broke some contract? Then he can see me in small claims.
Look, it's not like I don't tip, I do. But I tip for service and good work, not because some snarky waiter demands it. In Canada, you see, waiters already are at minimum wage - often above - so it's much less of an issue. That may be why your experience with Canadians was as bad tippers. They don't see how little American wait staff are paid. I do see it, and I tip well in the USA especially. But not if the server are obnoxious jerks as they too often are.
Some ethnic groups expect the wait person to leave THEM a tip. I’ll leave you to guess which one.
Thanks for the tip...
You don’t even round up?
Ah-HA! You have seen through my lamentably transparent attempt at humor!
If you have bad service, by all means tip poorly or not at all. But be very sure to speak to a manager (or owner if possible) and tell them precisely what you didn’t like about the service.
A bad waiter hurts their business and the other wait staff’s income. No one in the restaurant is sad to see a bad waiter leave.
Your point is well taken. I had always thought 15% was the standard, but had taken to tipping 17-18-20% when I was happy and the dollar amount wasn’t too painful, but then someone “informed” me that the standard was now 20%, and I was like, by who’s authority? And as the other poster (maybe you) pointed out, tipping by percentage means that inflation covers itself. I think all the waitpeople better get used to 10% again or a lot of them are going to be out of work.
I like how you laugh off your own provincialism by trying to make fun of what I said.
> You dont even round up?
Never. Because our lowest coin in NZ is the ten-cent piece, it would be seldom necessary to round up, even if we wanted to. And because GST is built into the price of restaurant meals, the price is the price is the price. That’s the amount of money you take out of your wallet, that’s the amount you pay.
Works for me!
> If the waiter doesn’t make the sale, he doesn’t get paid.
I think you’ve answered your own question there. Waiters don’t “make” sales. At best they up-sell and cross-sell.
The waiter generating any sales activity at all: the decision to purchase was already made the instant you walked into his employer’s restaurant. From that point on, there is no competition: he is either going to order from the waiter (become a customer) or on the rare occasion, he is going to walk (not become a customer). The only decision he will be making is deciding how much he is going to spend, and what on.
That is the difference between an order taker and a salesman. Order takers should not / usually do not receive commission because they generate no sales activity.
> If the waiter doesn’t make the sale, he doesn’t get paid. Heck, sometimes he makes the sale and still gets screwed, which seems like something awfully unlike “charity.”
If the waiter (who is an order taker and not a salesman) “gets screwed”, who is “screwing” him? It isn’t the customer, it is his employer. His employer makes his margins regardless The Tip is an entirely optional act of charity by the customer for the waiter: it is actually the employer’s responsibility to ensure his staff is paid adequately.
Why should the wait staff carry the business risk for the restauranteur? If you opened a gas station, would you expect your staff to be paid by customers tipping them? Of course not: paying your staff would be your business risk.
If you opened a hobby shop, would you expect your customers to pay your staff a percentage in addition to the cost of the model aeroplane they just bought? No, that would be silly: staffing is a business risk borne by the business owner.
So why should restaurants be immune? Paying underpaid restaurant staff via tips is an act of charity.
LOL, got it.
That is the difference between an order taker and a salesman.
Then it must have been some kind of remarkable bit of randomness that always had the same waiters in my restaurants racking up the most sales.
As for the other comments, what should be is an interesting thought experiment, but ultimately irrelevant. The wage structure for waiters is set up by law. Employers could pay more than required by law(some do), but the food biz is extremely competitive and low margin, and they would be putting themselves at a disadvantage.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.