chgoeditor wrote:Teresa wrote:That story set of my b.s. o-meter. I think the reason it was so widely shared and talked about is because it plays on all of our peeves and annoyances about how people behave with cell phones in restaurants these days. It reeks of an urban legend. As far as any kind of valid empirical study ... until the actual source is revealed, I'd take it all with many many grains of salt.
Nevertheless, it has got a lot of people talking, and that can't be a bad thing.
Mine, too.
Customers get seated and is given menus, out of 45 customers 18 requested to be seated elsewhere.
I probably ask to be reseated twice a year, usually because I want to be further from a door on a particularly cold day or in the shade if I'm on a patio on a hot day. In all of my restaurant-eating experiences, there's no way that one-third of diners ask to be reseated.
7 out of the 45 customers had waiters come over right away, they showed them something on their phone and spent an average of 5 minutes of the waiter’s time. Given this is recent footage, we asked the waiters about this and they explained those customers had a problem connecting to the WIFI and demanded the waiters try to help them.
An average of 5 minutes to troubleshoot wifi connections? Just sit and stare at the clock for 5 minutes. Yeah, no. Impossible.
26 out of 45 customers spend an average of 3 minutes taking photos of the food.
14 out of 45 customers take pictures of each other with the food in front of them or as they are eating the food. This takes on average another 4 minutes as they must review and sometimes retake the photo.
LTH is full of people who take pictures of their food. When was the last time you spent 3 minutes taking pictures of a dish? Time yourself next time you decide to photograph a meal. I'm guessing you spend less than 20 seconds per dish. And who are all of these people taking photos of each other with food? I took one picture of my friend holding Next: Chinese Modern's enormous fortune cookie, but other than that, I can't think of the last time I saw a picture that any of my friends posted on FB where they were posing with food they didn't personally cook.
It's not uncommon, especially in winter with tables that are in a drafty place, for requests to be re-seated. Multiple times. I have never counted, but it happens quite a bit. We call them Teflon Tables because nothing will stick to them

After repeated failures seating the same table, we just avoid it if possible.
I would not be surprised if on certain nights, 1/3rd was indeed the case.
Photos are very common as well. I don't time it, but it's not unusual at all for people to photograph everything in front of them--glassware, linen, food, bev, especially logo'd glassware--and then have their friends pose with items for even more photographs. That's why we say don't Tweet it, eat it.
So, I agree that the times in this article do seem exaggerated. But whether they're exaggerated or not, the cell phone
has changed the nature of service from our POV.
One thing the article didn't mention is the number of times a guest will be dissatisfied with something and will Yelp it or Tweet it WHILE THEY ARE STILL SEATED IN THE DINING ROOM. Instead of giving us a chance to correct the matter, the Tweet flies up "I'm at such-and-such right now and the food sucks." That's obviously an exaggeration but it does happen.
I'm surprised all restaurants haven't banned cell phones from non-management floor staff. I've written people up for being on their phones during service in the past, and I'm sure I will do so again.