1 /5
Évaluation
★
The apparent owner (male, tall, slim, shaved hair) makes fun of his staff 's lack of English skills, in front of the customers. Why did he employ them, then? Another thing is that one of the sandwiches at the menu is called GIOVANI, with one N, which means 'young people ' in Italian and has the O as the most stressed letter when you speak. I asked my sandwich with the correct pronunciation, but the cashier kept correcting me, forcing me to pronounce it as it was GIOVANNI, with two Ns instead, which means the name 'John ' in Italian, and has the most stressed letter as A when you speak. If they want to pronounce it the way they do, they should put an extra N there, otherwise stop stop forcing customers to say the name wrong. She intimidated me into not saying the name of their own sandwich properly, and gave me a quite creepy laugh when I tried to educate her. How chavvy... Shocking that no one has pointed this out before, I guess Italians don 't go to that place. Basically, the same attitude the owner has towards them, they have towards the customers. I 'm not coming back. People go out to have a good time, not to see owners humiliating their staff, or to be forced to pronounce something wrong and being laugh at.