• Rentlar
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    4 hours ago

    I don’t really care for what, if you are requesting something from someone you don’t know in a way that’s intentionally stupid or roundabout, you need to be prepared to get exactly what you asked for.

    Fast food doubly so, they give no shits. Ask for a burger but hold the burger? Expect an empty wrapper.

  • @ohwhatfollyisman
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    95 hours ago

    tell me about it! i ordered a cherry π and received three and some bits of cherries instead!

    that’s totes the fault of the guy who can’t understand what i mean when i’m trying to be esoteric!

  • @[email protected]
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    77 hours ago

    We probably would’ve dragged it at the bar I work at and not serve cherries for the rest of the night lol

  • @Fosheze
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    22416 hours ago

    Yeah, that’s on the customer. If you write that you want a bunch of fuckin cherries then you’re getting a bunch of fuckin cherries. Now go eat the pile of cherries you ordered.

    • @Organichedgehog
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      13 hours ago

      Honestly I’d work under the assumption that restaurant employees knew what “86” meant. I’d still prob just write “no cherries” lol but the assumption isn’t that crazy. It’s common restaurant lingo.

      Edit: people that never worked in a restaurant downvoting me “I NEVER HEARD OF NO 86, DOWNVOTED FOR SHARING AN ANECDOTE” lol this site is cancer. There’s a reason lemmy will never take off, and it’s the user base

      • @Sanctus
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        267 hours ago

        Downvotes mean nothing here. You dont have to get upset. Writing 86 cherries when you mean no cherries on a piece of paper with no context is a dumbass thing to do. Write what you mean and be concise. Nobody writes down the number 86 when they mean no. The separation from the vocal component is enough to be confusing.

        • @[email protected]
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          02 hours ago

          nobody writes down the number

          um the guy in this post CLEARLY did so. i just proved you wrong pal

      • @TrousersMcPants
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        157 hours ago

        Bro these are high schoolers working fast food

      • darkstar
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        258 hours ago

        You’re downvofed because dude. Just no…

        “86 cherries” means eighty six cherries, “no cherries” means no cherries… If people learnt to communicate clearly this world would be a better place

        • @MutilationWave
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          116 hours ago

          It’s usually used in the context of a restaurant kitchen. Like if they run out of olives they would yell eighty-six olives. So don’t sell anything with olives without warning and don’t go looking for them.

      • @Fosheze
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        6111 hours ago

        It’s common resturant lingo but fast food is completely different from resturant work. Also “86” literally has the same number of characters as “no”. They could have put down “no cherries” with the exact same ease. They decided to play a stupid game so they won a stupid prize, a stupid amount of cherries.

      • Miles O'Brien
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        8513 hours ago

        In my 30s, and while I’ve heard “let’s 86 the _____” numerous times, I honestly wouldn’t have connected that to “86 cherries” on an order.

        I’ve worked in food, fast and fancy, and nobody would say “86 cherries” instead of “no cherries”. Clarity is conducive to a smoothly flowing kitchen.

      • @Wolfram
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        5312 hours ago

        As someone who’s worked a few fast food jobs, no, I’d have no fucking clue what is meant by that. Piss and cry in your edit all you want.

      • The Snark Urge
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        4413 hours ago

        It is absolutely common restaurant lingo. I can use it with anyone I know from restaurants seamlessly.

        That said, fast food work is a different subculture.

        • Laurel Raven
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          13 hours ago

          Yeah, I’ve never once heard it when I worked fast food, only full service

        • @[email protected]
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          3912 hours ago

          But wouldn’t the common restaurant lingo be “86 THE cherries?”

          86 is a verb. To 86 something is to exclude it. But 86 alone is a number like any other. Just as 50 alone isn’t pronounced “five-oh” and doesn’t mean the Hawaii State Police. If I said “I’m 50,” you’d assume it’s my age, not my profession.

          If I said, “That’s the shit!” I’d mean the opposite of “That’s shit!”

          • The Snark Urge
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            612 hours ago

            Mileage varies. I’ve seen “86 [thing]” written on whiteboards more often than not, grammatically speaking.

            • @[email protected]
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              12 hours ago

              Also, a single cherry is the norm, perched decoratively atop the whipped cream. So “86 the cherry” would have been clear, and they could maybe get away with “86 cherry” according to you, but “86 cherries” might as well be “69 cherries.” You wouldn’t expect that to mean mutual oral sex.

              • @[email protected]
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                6 hours ago

                You’re right, that would have been the “correct” way, with the “the.” When spoken it’s almost always said, or in the past tense like “cherries are 86’d.”

                Of course, “no cherry” is leagues superior when you’re the customer, I mean really. He was just asking for a high ass employee who fully knew to just do it because they think it’s absolutely hilarious (and that would have been the right move lol.)

                The other commenter is also right, the whiteboards in the kitchen always leave out the “the,” but that is a shorthand on a shorthand. They also probably write like “86 B.O” for “We are currently out of black olives,” and you don’t want to know how they abbreviate Jalapeños. The whiteboard is not a reliable source in that respect, it’s almost code, or like a Chef’s Cant.

      • Mr. Satan
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        1811 hours ago

        TIL, cool

        But, yeah, I would read it as pretentious little thing even if I knew the lingo. Honestly I approve the person getting 86 cherries. Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.

      • @[email protected]
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        2112 hours ago

        Sorry dog I worked in food service as a teenager and didn’t learn what 86ing was until I heard Gordon Ramsay say it in an episode of kitchen nightmares.

      • @[email protected]
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        3714 hours ago

        I’m 46 and it’s the first time I hear it. I would probably ask a manager what to do as 86 cherries is a lot but my AuDHD is ok with counting exactly 86 cherries lol

        • @Organichedgehog
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          -2014 hours ago

          I’m guessing you’ve never worked in a restaurant? Like I said, in my experience it’s common in the industry

          • @chuckleslord
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            4613 hours ago

            Yeah, but a fast food restaurant run by teenagers is not synonymous with a kitchen full of cooks lead by a chef.

          • @[email protected]
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            2913 hours ago

            Working in fast food is pretty different from full restaurants. I worked fast food first, never heard the term until I started waiting tables a few years later. In fast food, there’s not as much of a chain of communication that requires pass phrases to get info across quickly. Just one kid with an order terminal and another kid assembling the order as it was entered.

            All of that aside, if I hear someone use that term IRL, it does tend to sound pretentious because you’re basically using jargon outside of its typical area of use and expecting everyone to know wtf you’re talking about. It’s almost like you want someone to ask, so you can be like “you don’t kNoW???”

            Probably people don’t mean to come off that way, but that is the vibe I catch most of the time.

            • @Organichedgehog
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              -1013 hours ago

              you’re basically using jargon outside of its typical area of use and expecting everyone to know wtf you’re talking about

              I mean, the guy who used the restaurant term was giving directions directly to a restaurant.

              Like I said, I would personally just say “no cherries”, but messaging restaurant lingo to a restaurant isn’t some crazy reach. Not enough to warrant the original comment that I responded to, basically saying “fuck that guy, eat your fuckin cherries”.

              • Null User Object
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                2312 hours ago

                I mean, the guy who used the restaurant term was giving directions directly to a restaurant.

                A “fast food joint” is not a restaurant in that sense. Nobody with any common sense would expect a bunch of kids working their (likely) first job for spending money to be up on, or care about, restaurant jargon.

                • @MutilationWave
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                  36 hours ago

                  So many people in here saying teenagers. It’s often older people who work these shit minimum wage jobs. How could McDonald’s be open at noon on a Wednesday if it was being run by a bunch of high school kids?

                  Didn’t mean to single you out really it’s just the fourth time in this thread I saw someone say fast food is a bunch of kids. It’s really fucking poor adults. Trust me I was one.

      • @[email protected]
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        1112 hours ago

        Here’s where the ‘86’ came from.

        Back in the day, there was a speakeasy with two doors. The entry door was through a small courtyard and the exit door was onto the street. If you knocked on the street door, which had the address on it, you couldn’t get in. If you got obnoxious, you’d be thrown out the street door. That door had an ‘86’ on it.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chumley's

        • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘
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          7 hours ago

          I have never heard of either 86 nor this speakeasy. What a cool thing to learn! Thanks for sharing this historic nugget!

          Edit, autocorrect on grammar

  • @uservoid1
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    11917 hours ago

    Never heard of it so I had to look

    https://www.merriam-webster.com/wordplay/eighty-six-meaning-origin

    Eighty-six is slang meaning “to throw out,” “to get rid of,” or “to refuse service to.” It comes from 1930s soda-counter slang meaning that an item was sold out. There is varying anecdotal evidence about why the term eighty-six was used, but the most common theory is that it is rhyming slang for nix.

    • @StrongHorseWeakNeigh
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      5416 hours ago

      Yeah 86 doesn’t really mean to get rid of something. At least in my time in the restaurant industry I never heard it used that way. It just means that we were out of something.

      • subignition
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        2415 hours ago

        “86 the chef special” == get rid of it [from the menu]

        • @CascadianGiraffe
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          23 hours ago

          No, “86 the chef special” means 'kitchen is out of chef special.

          Yes, your task is to remove it from the menu.

          But you aren’t 86ing it.

          You’re marking it as 86’d because the quantity is below minimum threshold (usually zero).

        • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘
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          27 hours ago

          str 86;

          str itmTo86;

          86='get rid of';

          info(strFmt('%1 %2',86,itmTo86));

          (This won’t actually work, since you can’t assign ints as variables, but whatever. It was fun)

      • @Carrolade
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        3116 hours ago

        That was my experience as well. Though we would also refer to a banned customer as “86’d.”

        • @CascadianGiraffe
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          13 hours ago

          Same meaning in my experience. The patron is kicked out. 86’d is the past tense. ‘they have been 86’d’

          You no longer have any of that product, ingredient, or in this case customer.

      • Captain Aggravated
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        1013 hours ago

        In a workshop environment I’ve heard “86 it” to mean “get rid of it.” synonymous with “shitcan it.”

        • @HomerianSymphony
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          5 hours ago

          And that’s the joke behind Agent 86’s number on Get Smart. He’s a bad agent, and someone should have gotten rid of him.

    • The Picard ManeuverOP
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      2016 hours ago

      Maybe!

      But this is still fairly common shorthand for waiters.

    • @gerbler
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      212 hours ago

      Universal expression in the hospitality industry

    • @[email protected]
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      4117 hours ago

      86 is a slang term that means to get rid of something. See the Green Day song ‘86’ as an example. The origin is from a really long time ago, when it meant a menu item at restaurants was no longer available.

      • @Agent641
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        2 hours ago

        It’s rhyming slang with ‘nix’ which is Latin, and means to nullify or cancel. Because there layers of meaning hidden in english, Latin, and arabic numbers is not possible to be confusing.

        And not to be confused with ‘deep 6’ which means to destroy, kill orr bury something 6 feet deep.

        Instructing kitchen to deep 6 the cherries, the line cooks gonna need a gun and a shovel.

      • @StrongHorseWeakNeigh
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        2816 hours ago

        It still means that and is still used in that capacity at restaurants.

        • @[email protected]
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          1416 hours ago

          Good to know; I only knew that usage from movies and whatnot, had no idea it was still used like that!

    • Boxscape
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      16 hours ago

      Why would 86 mean none?

      I like the theory that it’s like Cockney rhyming slang—eight-six, nix.

      Like what Don Cheadle’s character do in Ocean’s Eleven.

      • @[email protected]
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        615 hours ago

        That portrayal was so bad that the leading theory is his character was actually an American faking it

  • Sabata
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    614 hours ago

    Jokes on you, I just got a week supply of cherries.