Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments

alesimula97 t1_itslf2w wrote

Is not laziness as it's not laziness to cut the steak for you.

Unless otherwise specified, you're expected to be able bodied and mentally capable of using a fork and a knife and cut your own damn pizza

1

dasaint2020 t1_itsnhgf wrote

You paid for service, best pizza restaurants in the world slice your pizza and they stay blazing hot. I guess those pizza restaurants aren't in Italy, with well famous big chefs, not exactly known for making a rush in a kitchen, or low-fat ingredients. Figures they'd make the customer finish the order. And yes I do work at a Neapolitan pizza restaurant. Everything from made scratch.

1

alesimula97 t1_itspd14 wrote

First of all not everyone cuts or eats pizza the same way, and "you paid for the service" doesn't mean jack shit.

You paid to sit at the table, and to have your pizza cooked and served, no one guarantees slicing the pizza being part of the service, nor is it written in stone that it has to be. Is it so hard to understand that not everyone wants that service, nor is it standard in certain places to offer it?

It's like I went to a restaurant in Japan and complained there is no bread on my table

1

dasaint2020 t1_itsr24x wrote

Now you're comparing Japan's service skills to Italy? The speed and hard workers, working everyday. Hell cutting shit into bite sized pieces where you barely have to chew it? Then they will not except tips. It's near illegal and rude because of the excepted service. America and Italy both take tips, but America actually provides better service. This isn't a debate about side dishes. This is service not finishing the job, The point of restaurants is to rest and reserve with family, friends, or on break from work. Italy makes you think this is fancy...no it's lazy.

1

alesimula97 t1_itsseo8 wrote

No, this is not fancy, nor does it pretend to be, this is simply not treating you like an entitled karen or a special needs kid

And I simply compared the difference in service, most restaurants in Italy serve bread on the table, but if I went to a restaurant in Japan and complained of the lack of bread, like you are complaining about an unsliced pizza, I'd be rightfully seen as an i‎d‎io‎t

1