Some office stories are so juicy they feel like a sitcom pilot waiting to happen. One Reddit user shared a tale about working in a chaotic, duct-tape–held-together company where computers were ancient, the boss called him “Kiddo,” and organization was a foreign concept.
After years of quietly automating work that should have required six employees, he was abruptly fired, only for the boss to immediately demand critical files and contacts. What followed was a masterclass in malicious compliance, legal maneuvering, and sweet, sweet karma.
Curious how this employee went from nearly jobless to being paid twenty times his old rate? Let’s dive into the original Reddit saga.
An employee digitized critical State-regulated records, got fired mid-meeting, refused to access the network as a non-employee



OP wrote an update:

OP provided another update in another post:

This one reads like a Netflix miniseries that somehow mashed The Office with Succession and sprinkled in a little Breaking Bad paranoia for flavor.
OP’s boss made the classic mistake of starting the meeting with the “you’re fired” hammer drop, forgetting that once those words leave your lips, you don’t get to reel them back in. You can’t dine-and-dash at a restaurant and still expect the waiter to serve dessert, and you can’t cut off employment while demanding sensitive deliverables.
OP, on the other hand, had been quietly setting the chessboard for years. By digitizing records, building custom tools, and backing up everything, they reduced a six-person workload into a one-person symphony. The boss only saw “no paperwork = no work,” which shows just how allergic some managers still are to automation.
According to a 2022 McKinsey report, companies that embrace automation improve efficiency by up to 30% but bosses who don’t understand it often misinterpret it as idleness.
That misinterpretation is where family-run or cowboy-style businesses tend to implode. Instead of recognizing efficiency, they cling to busywork as proof of labor.
Harvard Business Review has documented how mistrust in digital workflows often drives talent out the door, especially when leadership lacks basic technical literacy. OP’s story is the ultimate case study: a boss who couldn’t distinguish between real productivity and visible paper shuffling ended up paying twenty times the going rate to recover from his own shortsightedness.
What makes this tale deliciously ironic is how it reflects a broader social issue: America’s reliance on “at-will employment.” Bosses often think it gives them unchecked power, but sometimes, it gives employees just enough leverage to turn the tables.
“When you terminate someone, you’ve effectively ended the contract. If you then demand cooperation, you’re asking for favors, not duties,” explains labor law professor Rachel Arnow-Richman in an NPR interview.
So what should OP do? They did exactly what labor experts recommend: (1) secure your data trail to protect yourself legally, (2) don’t cave to intimidation without a clear contract, and (3) price your expertise fairly, even if “fairly” means making the boss choke.
The path forward would be to use this leverage to secure written agreements (with a lawyer’s eyes on it), limit scope of work, and keep professional distance.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
These Reddit users made fun of the boss’s bad timing, saying firing someone before checking their work was dumber than eating at a fancy restaurant and running without paying


Some commenters cheered the clever plan as next-level smart



This group shared ideas to make the job last longer, like sending files one by one in emails every few minutes for “full work time” and getting a lawyer to check the deal
These Redditors shared their own surprise job-end stories, from bosses calling during hangovers to quick marriages that shut down family businesses

This Reddit saga isn’t just satisfying workplace drama, it’s a cautionary tale. Undervaluing employees who quietly keep systems running can backfire in spectacular fashion.
So, do you think the employee’s 20x pay demand was fair compensation for his knowledge, or did he push the power play too far? And if you were in his shoes, would you have handed over the files out of goodwill or made the boss sweat? Share your hot takes below!








