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Manager called to check if I was coming for my shift... I've never worked there, lady
Man smiling at his phone on a city street, like an unexpected work call turned out to be absurd
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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Man smiling during a phone call on a city sidewalk, like an unexpected work call has taken a strange turn
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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The guy who slammed the door open yelling across the room mid-interview wasn't a red flag, he was the whole flag, the pole, and the flagpole ceremony. That's not "casual workplace energy," that's a business operating like a group chat that occasionally sells groceries on the side. When strangers can interrupt your interview to ask who you are, the company hasn't hired anyone yet and somehow already has zero structure to lose.
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Declining that job took about five minutes of thinking, the same amount of time it takes to notice a raccoon making unsettling eye contact and decide not to pet it. And the payoff for trusting that instinct arrived months later in the form of an angry Thanksgiving phone call demanding accountability for a shift at a job that was never accepted, never signed, never real. A business treating “we offered, therefore you’re already staff” as a binding contract nobody bothered to write down is its own kind of chaos.
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The real joke here is a company confident enough to guilt someone for missing a shift they never had, while simultaneously being disorganized enough to let random coworkers wander into interviews uninvited. Somewhere between chaos and entitlement, Harris Teeter built an entire management style out of assuming everyone around them was already on payroll, whether they’d agreed to it or not.
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