AITA for my “cheeky suggestion” to the customer when they ask me what they should eat?

The phone rings at Pizza Hut, and a raspy voice crackles through the line, dripping with frustration. It’s 11 a.m., and a delivery worker braces for another routine order, only to be met with a feverish rant and a demand: “What should I eat?” This isn’t your typical pizza craving—it’s a customer service showdown that ends with a complaint letter and a manager’s sigh. The employee’s cheeky reply? Suggesting medicine. Was it rude or just a fumble under pressure?

The Reddit community has weighed in, and the story’s mix of humor and relatable workplace woes makes it a perfect tale to unpack. From the customer’s fiery outburst to the employee’s bewildered response, this clash sparks a bigger question: how do you handle impossible demands with a smile? Let’s dive into the chaos and see who’s really at fault.

‘AITA for my “cheeky suggestion” to the customer when they ask me what they should eat?’

I work in a Pizza Hut and my manager just told me that I somebody wrote a complaint to the customer service about me. It was a customer who called yesterday. So I recieved this call about 11am, it was a woman with a very raspy voice. The conversation, according to my memory went like this.. Me:

Hello, Pizza Hut delivery! May I take your order please?. C: I have a fever. (Pause). Me: Uh are you alright mam? C: And I have been coughing, had a s**tty day too (and went on ranting about something I couldn't remember). Me: So... what would you like to order?. C: (raised voice, even more raspy) I AM VERY SICK OKAY?! WHAT SHOULD I EAT?

YOU TELL ME!. Me: (dumbfounded) Um... medicine maybe? Panadol? I don't know, maybe a doctor can answer that? C: I DIDN'T CALL F*CKING PIZZA HUT DELIVERY FOR PANADOL! (Said a bunch of things I din't quite catch before hanging up)

I thought it was a prank call of sorts, never knew that the woman would write a complaint letter about me. My manager said I am not in trouble, but should not have said what I said, that was cheeky and rude. AITA?

Customer service can feel like navigating a minefield, especially when a customer’s emotions explode like a shaken soda can. This Pizza Hut tale highlights a classic clash: a sick, stressed customer versus an unprepared employee. The customer’s demand for menu advice, laced with anger, put the worker in an impossible spot. Suggesting “medicine” was a misstep, but was it rude? Not quite—it was more a reflex to an absurd question.

The opposing views are clear: the customer, battling a fever, likely craved empathy, not sarcasm. The employee, caught off-guard, defaulted to logic over tact. According to Psychology Today, stress can amplify emotional reactions, making small slights feel like major insults. The customer’s rant suggests she was projecting her bad day, while the employee’s quip shows inexperience handling heightened emotions.

Zooming out, this story reflects a broader issue: the emotional labor demanded in customer service. A 2021 Gallup study found 74% of service workers face daily stress from customer interactions. Dr. Amy Wrzesniewski, a Yale professor, notes, “Service roles require emotional regulation, often without training” . Here, the employee lacked tools to de-escalate, and the customer’s complaint may stem from feeling dismissed.

For solutions, experts suggest active listening and neutral responses. The employee could’ve said, “I’m sorry you’re feeling unwell—maybe a light pizza would help?” Training in empathy, as Wrzesniewski advocates, could prevent such flare-ups. Both sides deserve grace: the customer was sick, the worker was blindsided. Reddit’s take leans toward the employee, but empathy could’ve cooled this pizza-fueled feud.

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Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

The Reddit gang didn’t hold back, serving up a spicy mix of support and snark for the Pizza Hut worker. Here’s the raw scoop from the crowd:

Poekienijn − NTA. Ask stupid questions get stupid answers.

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onookel11 − NTA I mean to me this seems like you thought she was actually asking you what to eat to make herself feel better. Why else mention her sickness? Suggesting medicine doesn't seem rude at all to me and also, she proceeded to be rude after that so f**k her.. Edited to change gender pronouns because I missed that she was a woman.

GerFubDhuw − NTA, she has a fever. Why is that an excuse for her being immature and shouting at you? I've had a fever it didn't mean I was compelled to yell at waiters.

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[Reddit User] − You're definitely NTA. Some people are just crack

dharmachapeau − NTA, this is hilarious, unless the person calling was delirious or demented, in which case it’s sad.

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Joey-Pope − NTA even if she wasn’t sick if someone calls and asks what should I eat, how are you supposed to answer? You don’t know of her dietary requirements she could have allergies or abstain from certain foods for religious reasons. You’re not a mind reader nor are you being paid to be one.

She claims to be too sick to choose what she wants to eat yet managed to write to your manager with a complaint. Sounds to me that she took her feeling sick out on you, perhaps she should stick to ordering online if she can’t be civil.

MedusaExceptWithCats − NTA. Some managers feels as though every customer complaint needs to be met with a response, which is false. For example, I used to work at Sears, and the biggest factor as to whether you ever got a raise/promoted/written up/fired was the amount of credit cards you convinced people to open.

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If you were caught neglecting to ask a customer at the register to open a card, you were written up on the spot. One day, I had two people in my line. The first opened a credit card, which takes about five minutes. Right away, the second person in line got fidgety, so I told her that the other register, which was about ten feet away, was available if she didn't want to wait (I was polite).

She went to the other register and then used our customer survey which was advertised on our receipts to complain about the fact that I opened a card for the person in line in front of her and held her up. My manager confronted me about it. I responded, 'Okay. In the future, should I not offer cards if there is a line?'.

He replied, 'No, you should always offer cards. Just try to be better about it next time.' I said, 'I offered her to move to a short line, which she did, so what would you have me do in the future to avoid this?'. 'Just try to be better about it.'. Edit: Corrected formatting and a typo.

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Dr_Fluffybuns2 − NTA. Customers will literally complain about anything and everything if you don't act like a perfect robot. You can't call up a pizza hut and talk nonsense about your personal life and ask 'what should I eat' to a place that you know sells pretty much just pizza.

PurpleVein99 − NTA. Lmfao. What is Panadol? But besides that... wow. Some people. 'I'm sick,' but not sick enough to call and fish for commiseration and then write a complaint letter just cause she didn't get what she fished for. It's Pizza Hut not a hotline, sheesh.

kerriwhite1217 − NTA, some customers are just off their rocker. I work in storage. The way my company operates is that when a new tenant calls for any information regarding renting a unit, they get sent to our call center. The call center then proceeds to send us the 'new opportunity' and it is our job to seal the deal.

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So one innocent day I receive a notification for a new opp for a 'Dolores'. Barely any info is provided so I mistakenly assume it was a rookie agent who took her call. I regrettably call 'Dolores' and am met with the angriest woman I have ever spoken with.

She off the bat is SCREAMING about how incompetent our call center is, how she hates the location, hates the pricing, hates the features, etc. However, she still wants to rent with us! I start attempting to help this lady when she suddenly hangs up on me.

I'm like, 'Thank God that is over!' and put down the phone. She calls back! Angrier then ever that I had the audacity to hang up on her and started berating me. I finally lost it and said, 'Ma'am I am trying to help you but I can't with you yelling at me.' She replies,

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and I still remember these words... 'WELL AINT THIS SOME F*CKING BULL SH*T!!!! I KEEP CALLING PLACES AND ALL OF YOU HAVE THE SAME SH*TTY ATTITUDE! I CAN'T BELIVE...' I proceeded to hang up on her.. Customers suck, she filed a complaint too.

These Redditors rallied behind the employee, roasting the customer’s overreaction. Some saw the “medicine” quip as a fair jab at a vague demand; others questioned why a feverish customer was ordering pizza at all. But do these hot takes capture the full picture, or are they just tossing fuel on the fire?

This Pizza Hut saga is a slice of life in customer service—messy, heated, and all too human. The employee’s cheeky suggestion sparked a complaint, but Reddit’s verdict leans toward innocence. It’s a reminder that tempers flare when expectations clash, and a little empathy can go a long way. Have you ever faced an impossible customer demand? What would you do if you were stuck on that Pizza Hut phone line? Share your thoughts and stories below!

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