Man Accidentally Summons Entire Board Of Directors Of A Fast Food Chain With One Sarcastic Letter
It’s easy to feel powerless after having a bad experience with a big brand. We’ll complain to friends and family, sure, but actually hunting down the CEO’s email address and putting your feelings into words? Why bother, right?
Well, it could be worth your time, as one guy told an online community after his sarcastic complaint letter got the attention of the higher-ups at a fast-food chain. What followed left his jaw on the floor, but his surreal story had an even more unexpected ending.
More info: Reddit
When you complain to a big brand, you’re seldom more than another ticket in their overworked and underpaid customer support system
Image credits: senivpetro / Freepik (not the actual photo)
One guy, who noticed standards slipping at his favorite fast-food chain, decided he’d had enough and sat down to pen the most sarcastic letter of complaint he could
Image credits: dragonimages / Freepik (not the actual photo)
When he read it to his sister, she thought it was hilarious, so the guy mailed it, certified, not thinking he’d ever get a response
Image credits: The Yuri Arcurs Collection / Freepik (not the actual photo)
To his surprise, he got invited to a meeting with the top 8 executives, so he and his sister prepared a full pitch, going so far as to even get one idea patented
Image credits: Azwedo L.LC / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
As it turned out, the big bosses weren’t looking for ideas from them, but rather wanted the guy and his sister to best the test audience for some of their own innovations
Image credits: WordJauntSiblings
While none of their ideas landed with the CEO, the meeting sparked an entirely new career in creativity for the siblings, even if it meant having a useless patent
A sarcastic complaint letter meant to amuse the original poster’s (OP) sister accidentally hijacked his life. His family practically lived at a major chicken wing chain. Everyone loved it, but he had some issues. He slowly unraveled over one detail: wings served on flimsy cardboard boats instead of real plates – at a sports bar, no less.
He finally snapped and wrote a joke-filled, sarcastic complaint with real criticism inside. His sister laughed so hard she insisted they mail it certified, forcing corporate to read it. Weeks later, headquarters called requesting a meeting. Assuming they wanted help, the siblings wildly overprepared a full pitch, patents included.
Two months later, they walked in to face eight top executives, including the CEO. Panic followed. Then came the twist: OP’s letter had already reshaped the company. They weren’t there for new concepts. The bewildered siblings were a test group, awkwardly pitching ideas that were already obsolete, including their patented “wing separator”.
The night ended with laughter, the revelation of mutual meeting safe words, and a Vegas invite later wrecked by Covid. But something bigger stuck. A creative switch flipped. OP and his sister started inventing, writing, and building strange worlds together. The sarcastic letter hadn’t launched a product, but it did spark an exciting career in creativity.
Let’s be real: complaining to a big brand can seem pointless when you’re treated like just another ticket in a system stuffed with them. So, how do you make sure your complaint makes its way to the right people? We went looking for answers.
Image credits: WordJauntSiblings
The pros over at The Washington Post interviewed Carol Edgar, a public relations veteran specializing in customer service, who has successfully tracked down the higher-ups at IBM, Xerox, Alaska Airlines, Travelers Insurance, DirecTV and, most recently, Les Schwab Tire Centers.
Edgar says, “It’s not about threatening a lawsuit but trying to help a company know they have a problem and how they can learn from it.” Now, that’s a win-win and no-brainer at the same time. As it turns out, customer complaints can be a goldmine.
Experts at Forbes say that, if one customer is unhappy, it’s likely others feel the same way, but will just switch brands instead of telling you. When a customer complains, they’re basically providing helpful insights – the kinda stuff that could help fix your brand’s blindspots.
Marketing gurus, Breakthrough, say the trick is to see complaints not as criticism, but as real-time feedback. If you’re only measuring success through glowing reviews, you’re leaving something on the table. Complaints are basically friction, and friction sparks ideas.
So, the next time a brand grinds your gears, make the effort to track down the CEO and let them know. Who knows? You could be sitting on their next big idea… and the paycheck that comes with it.
Have you ever complained to a brand and gotten satisfaction, or are you still a disgruntled customer waiting for an answer? Tell us all about it in the comments!
In the comments, readers were surprised the guy got a patent as quickly as he did, and even responded with their own complaints against big brands
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I went to Reddit to find the letter (it's linked above under "More info: Reddit). It's just a bunch of paragraphs of complaint with a couple of jokes thrown in. And the "patent proof" is just an image, he says he won't link the actual patent because he doesn't want to give his real name away. Consensus on Reddit is that this one was AI or at *least* made up, which also explains why so many of this guy's comments and the comments complimenting him are heavily downvoted.
The story is somewhat funny, but if it's real they were complete morons to spend the money on a patent for a plate with a pop-up fence. Also, if they have a patent on something like that it wouldn't be hard to do a patent search to find out who owns the patent.
Load More Replies...Buffalo Wild Wings -- I worked there for about 3 years back in the day
Load More Replies...If this is real (which I find hard to believe), then good for them for finding inspiration and showing up prepared (rather than just complaining without constructive ideas), and good for the execs in taking things seriously and taking the time to listen to their customers. But I find it incredibly hard to believe that any such complaint wouldn't immediately get thrown in the bin, let alone be rewarded with a visit by 8 execs. Heck, I'm a senior lawyer and even I find it difficult to get a meeting with just one exec to discuss a very serious and urgent legal issue.
I went to Reddit to find the letter (it's linked above under "More info: Reddit). It's just a bunch of paragraphs of complaint with a couple of jokes thrown in. And the "patent proof" is just an image, he says he won't link the actual patent because he doesn't want to give his real name away. Consensus on Reddit is that this one was AI or at *least* made up, which also explains why so many of this guy's comments and the comments complimenting him are heavily downvoted.
The story is somewhat funny, but if it's real they were complete morons to spend the money on a patent for a plate with a pop-up fence. Also, if they have a patent on something like that it wouldn't be hard to do a patent search to find out who owns the patent.
Load More Replies...Buffalo Wild Wings -- I worked there for about 3 years back in the day
Load More Replies...If this is real (which I find hard to believe), then good for them for finding inspiration and showing up prepared (rather than just complaining without constructive ideas), and good for the execs in taking things seriously and taking the time to listen to their customers. But I find it incredibly hard to believe that any such complaint wouldn't immediately get thrown in the bin, let alone be rewarded with a visit by 8 execs. Heck, I'm a senior lawyer and even I find it difficult to get a meeting with just one exec to discuss a very serious and urgent legal issue.



















































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