He Gets Bad Service And Punishes The Bar With A 26-Minute Song

One dollar, one jukebox, and a very petty sense of justice.

Most people handle bad restaurant service in predictable ways. They tip less. They complain. They quietly decide to never come back.

This guy chose chaos. At many sports bars, there is a familiar machine on the wall. You drop a dollar, pick a song, and suddenly the entire bar shares your musical taste whether they like it or not.

For this Redditor, that machine became a weapon.

When service dips below acceptable levels, he reaches for a specific track. A long one. A confusing one. A song that never quite finds its rhythm and never lets you relax.

Twenty-six minutes long.

Once it starts, there is no easy way to stop it. Bartenders scramble. Patrons look around in confusion. Conversations die mid-sentence.

Sometimes he stays to watch the suffering. Sometimes he leaves immediately and lets the chaos unfold without him.

After one especially bad night at a large chain sports bar, he decided the jukebox deserved to speak for him. Reddit had feelings.

Now, read the full story:

He Gets Bad Service and Punishes the Bar With a 26-Minute Song
Not the actual photo

'If I get bad service, I play the world’s worst song on the jukebox and leave?'

I go to sports bars quite often to watch games and eat basic bar food.

At most of the bars I go to, they have a machine on the wall where you can spend $1 to purchase a song from Apple Music and play it...

On the Apple Music store, there’s a song called “tubular bells part 2”. It’s possibly the most rage inducing song I’ve ever heard, if you would even call it a...

I have no clue how it ended up on Apple Music, but I definitely use this fact to my advantage.

It’s basically just some dude jamming on random instruments, it’s not terrible, but the song has no real rhythm it’s trying to get in to and no specific beat it’s...

It’s like the beginning of a Pink Floyd song that just constantly builds up and the second you think he (or she) is gonna get in to rhythm or start...

they either change instruments entirely, or restart and continue playing different chords. It quite literally will drive you nuts if you’re forced to listen to it.

And the best part is it’s 26 minutes long.

I’ve been at a few bars where there was no way for the bartender or waiter to cancel the song out without flipping the breaker powering the sound system to...

I’ve stuck around a few times to see everyone suffer. But the last few times I’ve done it, I’ve immediately left as to not blow my cover.

Last month I went to a pretty large chain sports bar that I won’t name and got absolutely terrible service.

Food was bad, server came to refill our beers once in over an hour and we had to go to the bar a few times to top off.

And to make the matter worse, we got kicked out of our table after an hour and a half cause apparently our table was reserved for a specific time for...

No big deal though, I get it, so we just moved to the bar. I was a bit frustrated as I’ve been to this place many times before and we...

I wasn’t mad or anything, but I was annoyed enough where I decided I was gonna make everyone’s ears bleed for a little while

before they shut the music system down to play the ball game on the sound system across the restaurant.

Seeing the visible confusion and frustration across everyone’s face across the entire bar is a good way to make an OK night great..

To those of you who frequent bars and restaurants with the music box on the wall, you’re welcome.

This story walks the line between hilarious and deeply unhinged.

On one hand, bad service is frustrating. Long waits, empty glasses, and surprise table time limits can kill the vibe fast.

On the other hand, unleashing a 26-minute audio endurance test on innocent bystanders feels like punishing the entire village because the innkeeper forgot your drink.

The most fascinating part is not the song choice. It is the motivation.

This is not about getting compensation. It is about restoring balance. About turning annoyance into control. And psychology actually has a lot to say about why people do this.

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At first glance, this behavior feels petty.

Dig deeper, and it becomes oddly understandable.

Psychologists describe this as displaced retaliation. When people feel wronged but lack a direct or satisfying way to respond, they redirect frustration into symbolic acts.

According to research published in Journal of Applied Psychology, people who feel ignored or disrespected often seek indirect ways to regain a sense of agency. These actions are rarely about fixing the original problem. They are about emotional regulation.

In this case, the jukebox becomes a tool of control.

Bad service removes a sense of fairness. Playing an obnoxious song restores power. For one dollar, the OP controls the entire room. Everyone listens. Everyone reacts.

That feeling can be intoxicating.

There is also an element of benign rule breaking. The OP does not break any explicit rules. The jukebox exists. The song is available. He simply uses the system in a way it was never emotionally designed to handle.

Studies on moral licensing suggest that people justify disruptive behavior when they believe the system already failed them.

But here is the catch. The harm spreads outward.

The bartender likely has no control over staffing levels. The server may have too many tables. Other patrons had nothing to do with the service failure.

Social psychologists call this collateral frustration. When retaliation targets a group rather than a source, resentment shifts away from the original problem and toward the person causing the disruption.

That explains why commenters reacted so strongly.

Another factor is sensory overload.

Long, arrhythmic music increases stress levels. According to studies on auditory perception, unpredictable sound patterns increase agitation and reduce patience far faster than loud but rhythmic noise.

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That makes this song choice especially effective. It denies the brain resolution.

From an ethics standpoint, experts often differentiate between venting and punishing. Venting releases emotion without targeting others. Punishing imposes discomfort intentionally.

This behavior clearly falls into the second category.

Is it understandable? Yes.

Is it kind? No.

And most psychologists would argue that it does not actually reduce long-term frustration. It replaces it with momentary satisfaction and social fallout. In short, the jukebox revenge works emotionally in the moment. It fails socially in the long run.

Check out how the community responded:

Some Redditors leaned into the chaos and offered even more unhinged musical ideas.

[Reddit User] - Have you considered playing What’s New Pussycat eleven times in a row?

TameTomcat - I raise you a two-hour experimental track that never ends.

SnavlerAce - Baby Shark wins every time.

Outrageous_Act585 - I always thought Barbie Girl was enough.

Others focused on the cultural insult to the song itself.

Mombak - Tubular Bells is a masterpiece and tied to a famous horror movie.

Eat-Playdoh - How dare you insult this song.

Lone-flamingo - I am irrationally angry reading this.

[Reddit User] - I love Tubular Bells. Just not in a sports bar.

ScowlyBrowSpinster - It is a perfect what-is-happening choice.

A few pointed out the technological escalation potential.

Prof_Sillycybin - You can spoof GPS and play songs remotely.

Eat-Playdoh - Please do not give people ideas.

This story struck a nerve because it captures a very modern impulse. When systems fail, people look for ways to feel seen. Bad service makes customers feel invisible. The jukebox makes them impossible to ignore.

That does not mean the behavior is fair. Innocent patrons suffer. Staff scramble. The original problem remains unsolved.

Still, there is something oddly relatable about wanting the room to feel your frustration, even briefly.

The bigger question is where we draw the line between harmless mischief and collective punishment.

So what do you think? Is this clever, petty revenge that hurts no one long-term, or is it crossing into unnecessary cruelty toward strangers? And if you were stuck in that bar, would you laugh, rage, or quietly leave?

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