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“That’s not normal”: Lidl employees get angry at the sight

2024-03-08T07:57:55.442Z

Highlights: Kevin Kublik is deputy branch manager in Fürth (Bavaria) in his main job. He is also an influencer, informing and entertaining viewers on TikTok and other portals such as Facebook. The incident has not been confirmed, but it does not seem to be made up either. “That’s not normal”: Lidl employees get angry at the sight.“If everyone thinks of themselves, everyone is thought of. Just sad, hate that too”



As of: March 8, 2024, 8:44 a.m

By: Armin T. Linder

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A Lidl employee, who is usually in a good mood, publicly lets go: What he found in his branch in Bavaria stunned him.

Fürth - Kevin Kublik, as reported by thesmittel -Zeitung

among others

, is actually deputy branch manager in Fürth (Bavaria) in his main job.

But he is also an influencer, informing and entertaining viewers on TikTok and other portals such as Facebook.

He's not alone: ​​a Lidl store manager from Nettetal (North Rhine-Westphalia) has also made it big and reveals some savings tricks.

“As long as I make my daughter laugh with my videos, from my point of view I’m doing everything right,” Kublik once told the

LZ

.

But unlike his other videos, one with the title “Just Sad” is anything but a laugh for him.

He uploaded it to Facebook on March 6th — although it might be older — with part 1 and part 2.

The incident has not been confirmed, but it does not seem to be made up either.

Kublik uncovers a common case of mindless food waste by supermarket customers.

Two screenshots from the Lidl employee's video.

© Screenshots Facebook

“You can throw everything away”: Lidl employees talk themselves into a rage

“I just found the car outside,” he explains to the filmmaker.

“Everything is warm, Helena!

Everything warm!

Take a look at this. You can throw everything away.

Here, everything is cooled.” The car has been parked “for probably two hours, I have no idea, I haven't seen it,” he suspects.

He is stunned: “How did you come up with the idea of ​​just leaving the car behind?

Do you think to yourself: 'Oh, no, I'd rather go to Aldi.'”

Kublik adds: “Now those are coming back who say: 'Oh, now the big company has lost a bit of sales'.” But he sticks to it, even talking himself into a rage: “That's not normal.

You can throw everything away.

It's all food waste.” The anger is understandable - and is consistent with various discoveries by customers who have discovered meat left behind on supermarket shelves.

Lidl employees are annoyed about the car being left behind – and they are not alone

There is also dissatisfaction in the comments.

“I work at Rewe and have the same problem, people just think about themselves,” one person said angrily.

It also says: “If everyone thinks of themselves, everyone is thought of.

Just sad, hate that too”.

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A user could imagine a possible emergency: “It can also happen that the alarm goes off from friends in the blue light family and therefore the shopping cart stops.

It's happened to me too.

It's not always intentional.” But even then you can just let the team know, say users.

Maybe Lidl employee Kublik's video will make people more aware of how to handle the goods in supermarkets more carefully.

A Rewe customer once felt patronized by her supermarket and became stinky.

(lin)

Source: merkur

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