I think all this tipping shit is getting out of hand.
It's one thing if I go to a restaurant and I know the server is getting paid only $2.13 per hour and possibly has to kick some of their tip money back to the kitchen crew regardless if they got tipped or not. But more and more types of businesses I wouldn't expect are asking for tips at the cash register. A certain level of fatigue and even anger starts setting in with so much of this crap. I really don't like these little automated touch screen kiosk devices. They always have these inflated tip amounts. I might have paid $20 for a haircut and their lowest tip amount is $7 and it goes up from there. $7 is a more than 33% tip. You have to go to extra effort to manually put in the tip amount you want to pay, like $5. A 25% tip ain't bad.
The March 2 episode of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver centered its main story around tipping. I thought it covered a lot of good points, including some that have been mentioned in this thread.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=89R9ZxKaIOw
Tipping is a somewhat uniquely American thing. It's not common in most other countries. Tipping doesn't seem to be going away any time soon either. That's because if businesses like restaurants raised their prices the equivalent of a tip (a 15%-25% bump) customers would say the prices were too high. So it's kind of our fault this tipping shit is sticking around.
It's one thing if I go to a restaurant and I know the server is getting paid only $2.13 per hour and possibly has to kick some of their tip money back to the kitchen crew regardless if they got tipped or not. But more and more types of businesses I wouldn't expect are asking for tips at the cash register. A certain level of fatigue and even anger starts setting in with so much of this crap. I really don't like these little automated touch screen kiosk devices. They always have these inflated tip amounts. I might have paid $20 for a haircut and their lowest tip amount is $7 and it goes up from there. $7 is a more than 33% tip. You have to go to extra effort to manually put in the tip amount you want to pay, like $5. A 25% tip ain't bad.
The March 2 episode of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver centered its main story around tipping. I thought it covered a lot of good points, including some that have been mentioned in this thread.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=89R9ZxKaIOw
Tipping is a somewhat uniquely American thing. It's not common in most other countries. Tipping doesn't seem to be going away any time soon either. That's because if businesses like restaurants raised their prices the equivalent of a tip (a 15%-25% bump) customers would say the prices were too high. So it's kind of our fault this tipping shit is sticking around.
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