Anonymous wrote:I was in NYC last week and the guy wouldn't put on the air. I didn't want to tip but the bill was something like $17.50 and I wasn't going to wait around for him to make change from a $20. It did feel like a furnance in the car...even with the windows rolled down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would probably still tip in that situation, like I tipped the cabbie yesterday even though he said he could take credit cards when I got in the cab at BWI and then his card reader was mysteriously broken by the time that he dropped me off.
The only time I can remember just not tipping was a cabbie who ignored my specific directions and ran up the meter to $15 on a $10 fare (which I knew was $10 because I was going back and forth every day to visit my baby at the hospital). He got a lecture about being a cheater, and I should have reported him but I was such a wreck that I couldn't be bothered. Having lived in a number of American cities, I have to say that I've had more bad experiences here than anywhere else.
Then why the hell would you tip. It's not like he isn't getting paid. He charged a fare. A tip is for exceptional service which he did not provide!
Honest question here, why is it ok to withhold tip for cabbie, but not a rude or incompetent waiter? I've heard you must tip wait staff no matter what.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would probably still tip in that situation, like I tipped the cabbie yesterday even though he said he could take credit cards when I got in the cab at BWI and then his card reader was mysteriously broken by the time that he dropped me off.
The only time I can remember just not tipping was a cabbie who ignored my specific directions and ran up the meter to $15 on a $10 fare (which I knew was $10 because I was going back and forth every day to visit my baby at the hospital). He got a lecture about being a cheater, and I should have reported him but I was such a wreck that I couldn't be bothered. Having lived in a number of American cities, I have to say that I've had more bad experiences here than anywhere else.
Then why the hell would you tip. It's not like he isn't getting paid. He charged a fare. A tip is for exceptional service which he did not provide!
Anonymous wrote:I would probably still tip in that situation, like I tipped the cabbie yesterday even though he said he could take credit cards when I got in the cab at BWI and then his card reader was mysteriously broken by the time that he dropped me off.
The only time I can remember just not tipping was a cabbie who ignored my specific directions and ran up the meter to $15 on a $10 fare (which I knew was $10 because I was going back and forth every day to visit my baby at the hospital). He got a lecture about being a cheater, and I should have reported him but I was such a wreck that I couldn't be bothered. Having lived in a number of American cities, I have to say that I've had more bad experiences here than anywhere else.
Anonymous wrote:I got in a cab at about noon and it was sweltering inside, like it had been sitting in the sun with the windows rolled up. I asked the driver to turn on the A/C and gave him my destination, and he told me the a/c was on. After a minute or two it was clear the a/c was not working, and I'm sitting in this oven with the windows rolled up, sweating. So when it came time to pay, I rounded up to the nearest dollar. He asked if I wanted the 25 cents change, which I thought was pretty clever. I told him that I wasn't paying extra to sit in an oven.
Was I right or was I a jerk?