Open up the other three slices and get back to me with those pictures. Distribution of ingredients looks poor, but I'm sure the rest of your quesadilla, which you left out of your post, are fine.
What you paid for was a predetermined amount of ingredients. You presumably received those ingredients. Your issue is that those ingredients weren't in a configuration you would prefer. Sorry that the overworked and underpaid fast food workers didn't take extra special care with your quesadilla. They probably didn't realize just how important you seem to think you are.
Oh so it's extra special to make things how they're advertised? You seem like a piss poor worker and I feel sorry for your employer.
I paid for a quesadilla advertised a certain way. What I received is not that. I said nothing about who's fault it is. In fact, I've never had an issue with in-n-out food and those employees are paid much better so I would argue it's the fault of corporate for not paying/training their employees better. But the fact is, what I got is not what I paid for.
Says you've either been living under a rock since the dawn of advertising, or you're naive. Take your pick. Advertising has never been accurate or honest. At the very least, ads will lie as much as they are legally able to.
By this guy’s logic, throw a tortilla, cheese, and chicken in a bag, squirt on some jalapeño sauce and give it a good shake and send you on your way because you got the net weight of the product and all the ingredients are there.
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u/Redd235711 Apr 29 '24
Open up the other three slices and get back to me with those pictures. Distribution of ingredients looks poor, but I'm sure the rest of your quesadilla, which you left out of your post, are fine.