‘Bitchy Waiter’ Author and Actor Darron Cardosa Talks Tipping and Impolite Clients



‘Bitchy Waiter’ Darron Cardosa and the Tipping Conundrum

Welcome to Season 2, Episode 25 of Tinfoil Swans, a podcast from Meals & Wine. New episodes drop each Tuesday. Hear and observe on: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you pay attention.


Tinfoil Swans Podcast

On this episode

Since 2008, actor and author Darron Cardosa has been setting the web ablaze along with his pioneering weblog “The Bitchy Waiter” — which he has since spun right into a rollicking guide and stage present of the identical title. Darron can be certainly one of Meals & Wine’s most prolific and common writers, and on this inspiring and emotional dialog, he shares his emotions about bizarre buyer requests, being a voice for the service business, his upcoming film We’re So Lifeless, and why it is so impolite to go away a penny tip.

Meet our visitor

Darron Cardosa is a meals service skilled with over 30 years of restaurant expertise. He has waited tables in diners, pubs, chain eating places, neighborhood bistros, golf equipment, and had a brief stint in a celebrity-owned restaurant earlier than he was fired for running a blog about his expertise.

During the last 15 years, he has written greater than 1,500 articles and weblog posts, every one in regards to the meals service business. He has written for Meals & Wine, Plate, The Washington Publish, and others. Darron has been seen on NBC’s the Right now present and CBS Sunday Morning discussing the service business. His guide, The Bitchy Waiter, was printed in 2016, and his years as an expert actor finally led to the creation of his one-man present, The Bitchy Waiter Present, which excursions across the nation.

Meet our host

Kat Kinsman is the manager options editor at Meals & Wine, creator of Hello, Nervousness: Life With a Dangerous Case of Nerves, host of Meals & Wine’s Sign Award-winning podcast, and founding father of Cooks With Points. Beforehand, she was the senior meals & drinks editor at Additional Crispy, editor-in-chief and editor at giant at Tasting Desk, and the founding editor of CNN Eatocracy. She received a 2024 IACP Award for Narrative Meals Writing With Recipes and a 2020 IACP Award for Private Essay/Memoir, and has had work included within the 2020 and 2016 editions of The Finest American Meals Writing. She was nominated for a James Beard Broadcast Award in 2013, received a 2011 EPPY Award for Finest Meals Web site with 1 million distinctive month-to-month guests, and was a finalist in 2012 and 2013. She is a sought-after worldwide keynote speaker and moderator on meals tradition and psychological well being within the hospitality business, and is the previous vice chair of the James Beard Journalism Committee.

Highlights from the episode

On the primary time he performed waiter

“I used to be most likely in highschool, caring for my youthful brothers and I used to be requested, , by my mother and father to observe my brothers and make lunch. I believed at some point it could simply be enjoyable to play restaurant. So I made a menu with my calligraphy set and it had macaroni and cheese and peanut butter and jelly and Steak-umms and Kool-Support and water and milk. Desserts had been Chips Ahoy and Jell-O. I known as them in and I gave them their menus and I had my mother’s apron on, they usually had been like, ‘What are you doing?’ I used to be like, ‘We’re enjoying restaurant. I am your waiter.’ They weren’t into it. I used to be 16, 15, perhaps 14. They had been a lot youthful than me. They had been like, “No.” So they only instructed me what they needed they usually ran off to play Atari. I used to be simply so disenchanted. I threw away the menu, and I made lunch for them, and I cleaned it up. As I say in my present, it was the primary time that I ever served meals to a few (bleep) who did not go away me a tip.”

On the function of eating places

“I feel [restaurant work] simply has progressively gotten increasingly significant to me. Throughout Covid is when it actually began to click on even additional for me, as a result of it was all taken away from us. (I’ll cry. Am I going to significantly cry?) We could not go to eating places, and also you simply began to comprehend how essential that’s. It wasn’t simply consuming in a restaurant, it was going to your eating places with your pals or your loved ones or seeing folks and the way essential a restaurant is to your life. As soon as it was taken away for these months in 2020, you understand, ‘Wow, I actually, actually miss that.’ Yearly it simply will get a bit bit extra essential to me. I do not know what it’s going to be like 10 years from now. I am unable to think about respecting the business any greater than I do now, however I feel I’ll.”

On service

“I bear in mind going to a restaurant and I will need to have been 5 or 6 and we had been at this little restaurant, and my youngest brother was crying. I bear in mind the waitress providing to carry my brother in order that my mother may eat. I bear in mind sitting on this restaurant watching this waitress carry my brother round and patting him on the again so he would cease crying and simply pondering like, like, that is — I used to be simply baffled by it. Who is that this woman that is holding my brother and why is my mother okay with it? Now I feel again like, what an incredible waitress that was who did that for my mother.

Did that one way or the other simply instill in me the necessity to serve? I do not know, however I do not forget that vividly and no person else in my household remembers it. Generally you hope which you can be that sort to different folks as a server. To make that type of reminiscence for somebody would simply be wonderful.”

On being a voice for the business

“I get loads of messages. I get loads of DMs day-after-day, and I learn each single certainly one of them. I reply to nearly each single certainly one of them. I am all the time in search of one thing that I can create content material about. Typically any individual sends me one thing and says, ‘This occurred at my restaurant, and I do not know who else to inform as a result of I do not assume prospects are understanding that is the way it works, or that is the way it impacts me.’ After I see that, I am like, excellent, I can write a narrative about this. I can do a video, I can put it in my present. I can put it right into a Meals & Wine article. After I put that on the market and I get messages from individuals who really feel validated by what I put on the market — I assume that is what I do for the remainder of my life, trigger I am unable to cease doing it. I really feel an obligation and I find it irresistible. It makes me really feel actually glad and lucky to be that individual.”

On having to placed on a courageous face

“If you find yourself a server and you’re the face of the restaurant and your wage relies on how your prospects understand you, they wish to see somebody who’s glad to be at their job and never solely doing a great job however trying like they’re having fun with doing it. Even if you happen to’re in a nasty temper, and also you’re ready tables, you’ll be able to’t present that as a result of your ideas will present that. I’ve all the time thought it is unfair as a result of in case you are a financial institution teller, and you’re in a nasty temper, and also you selected to not smile or to not be chit chatty to your prospects who’re coming as much as the window, you are going to receives a commission the identical as you’d, whether or not you’re tremendous pleasant or not. As a server, that is not the case. You are not going to make the information that you’d make if you happen to let your persona present the way you’re really feeling. It may well get exhausting, and I can consider many instances that I’d be so upset with a buyer or they might say one thing so hurtful that you’d simply must swallow it after which end up service and go outdoors or go into the walk-in and scream or cry.”

On taking pleasure within the job

“I need folks to be pleased with the job that they do. For lots of people, particularly of a sure age who’re ready tables, it is regarded on as ‘that is all you are able to do’ or ‘I assume nothing else labored out, so that is the place you ended up.’ That is not the case for loads of people who find themselves ready tables previous school. I all the time need people who find themselves working in eating places to be pleased with it. Individuals love eating places and I want prospects would admire the individuals who work in them simply as a lot as they appreciated the restaurant expertise itself.”

On wanting

“I do need all of it. I actually do decide up pennies and want on them. I picked up one this morning after I got here again from my run, was proper in entrance of my house, and I picked it up and I mentioned out loud, ‘I want this podcast was so nice at the moment.’ I really like writing and I really like being Bitchy Waiter, however actually my ardour continues to be to be on a stage and to make folks chortle. That is what I nonetheless need, is to have the ability to audition for a business or be in a TV present or simply be a working actor. I nonetheless do not imagine that it is too late. I am 57 and lots of people simply quit on these desires. I won’t attempt as exhausting as I used to, however I nonetheless try to I nonetheless need. I need a Tony Award. I need a present. I need my very own podcast. I need folks to say please and thanks. And I need kindness. I am by no means going to cease dreaming or hoping. You may all the time need extra. It doesn’t suggest that you simply’re egocentric. It simply signifies that what you need and also you wish to be glad as everybody deserves to be.”

In regards to the podcast

Meals & Wine has led the dialog round meals, drinks, and hospitality in America and all over the world since 1978. Tinfoil Swans continues that legacy with a brand new collection of intimate, informative, stunning, and uplifting interviews with the largest names within the culinary business, sharing never-before-heard tales in regards to the successes, struggles, and fork-in-the-road moments that made these personalities who they’re at the moment.

This season, you will hear from icons and innovators like Daniel Boulud, Rodney Scott, Asma Khan, Emeril and E.J. Lagasse, Claudia Fleming, Dave Beran and Will Poulter, Dan Giusti, Priya Krishna, Lee Anne Wong, Cody Rigsby, Kevin Gillespie, Pete Wells, David Chang, Raphael Brion, Christine D’Ercole, Channing Frye, Nick Cho, Ti Martin, Kylie Kwong, Pati Jinich, Yotam Ottolenghi, Dolly Parton and Rachel Parton George, Tom Holland, Darron Cardosa, Bobby Flay, Joel McHale, and different particular friends going deep with host Kat Kinsman on their formative experiences; the dishes and meals that made them; their joys, doubts and desires; and what’s on the menu sooner or later. Tune in for a feast that’ll feed your mind and soul — and loads of knowledge and quotable morsels to savor.

New episodes drop each Tuesday. Hear and observe on: Apple PodcastsSpotify, or wherever you pay attention.

These interview excerpts have been edited for readability.

Editor’s Observe: The transcript for obtain doesn’t undergo our normal editorial course of and should include inaccuracies and grammatical errors.



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