A shopper walks into a retail store and scans an item at self-checkout. It rings up for $0.01. He knows “penny items” usually mean damaged or discontinued products that employees are supposed to pull from the shelves, but it was still sitting there. He pays the penny, prints the receipt, and starts to leave. An employee rushes over, frustrated, saying those items aren’t meant to be sold and should have been removed.
Penny pricing is often a system signal, not a public sale. But from a customer’s perspective, if it’s on the shelf and the register accepts payment, it feels like a completed contract. The real issue might be better inventory control because confusion at checkout only creates tension on both sides. If an item scans for a penny and the transaction goes through, should the store honor the price, or does internal policy override what the register says?
Imagine being homeless and stopping in at a local McDonalds to warm up and grab a bite to eat.
An employee calls the cops thinking you look like someone that is wanted by the FBI. The cops show up and start questioning you and you just want to be left alone.
Things escalate and you end up arrested. Adan was not the man the FBI was looking for but because he refused to give his name and his behavior ended up serving jail time.
Katt Williams is happily confirming something Michael Jackson confirmed many moons ago.
"All I wanna say is that THEY DON'T REALLY CARE ABOUT US!"
Tieing his shoelace was reaffirming himself that he'd say what he knew and got off the stage alive.
Woman who works out says she wouldn’t take any type of advice from someone who’s overweight, wouldn’t date a man who isn’t physically fit, and says women who are out of shape don’t deserve to be in a relationship. 👀 🤔🏃♀️