In my 15 years in the restaurant business, I’ve dealt with plenty of entitled guests but Meghan was next-level. One packed Friday before Christmas, she showed up with five friends, demanding a table. “We’re friends with the owner,” she said with a smug smile.I am the owner. But instead of calling her out, I decided to play along.
I seated them in our VIP section, offered complimentary drinks, and let them order freely from our premium menu white truffle risotto, A5 Wagyu, oysters at $10 a piece. The menus had no prices. They didn’t ask. They treated me like a servant, openly mocking me: “He’ll be scrubbing toilets after this,” “Can you imagine dating a waiter?” Still, I kept the service flawless. When I finally dropped the bill—$4,320—Meghan’s face went pale.
She tried to bluff again: “I’ll speak to the owner. He’ll fix this.” I calmly handed her my card.“I’m Peter. My grandparents started this place in the ’70s. I’ve been the sole owner for the past seven years.”Dead silence. Then panic. Then tears. She paid.
As they shuffled out, I added, “Next time you name-drop the owner—make sure he’s not the one bringing your drinks.”