Daily Highlight
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US
Daily Highlight
No Result
View All Result

Bar Landlord Kicks Out CEO Over Ice Removal, Entire Company Walks Out With Him

by Annie Nguyen
November 12, 2025
in Social Issues

Bars hosting corporate gatherings count on steady revenue from reserved spaces and group orders. A routine company drinks event turned tense over a single aperitif served with mandatory ice against the drinker’s clear request. Removing the cubes himself earned one of the firm’s three partners a direct order to exit the premises.

His quiet compliance triggered an unexpected chain reaction as colleagues filed out behind him. The landlord’s protests fell flat against workplace loyalty. Keep reading for the moment, a complimentary welcome became a costly goodbye for the entire venue.

A company partner gets ejected from reserved bar drinks for removing mandatory ice, prompting his whole team to follow him out

Bar Landlord Kicks Out CEO Over Ice Removal, Entire Company Walks Out With Him
Not the actual photo

Kick the main boss of the company out of your bar at a company drinks? Okay?

I don't know if this is necessarily an MC, but it happened to my Dad.

He was one of the three partners at one of his former companies, about medium sized.

One day, he and his company went to a company drinks. I don't think it was exactly a company party,

but it was more than an after-work drink at the pub.

Anyway, the bar was serving aperitifs, and my dad asked for his without ice, as he hates ice tainting his drink.

The landlord, who was behind the bar, refused, and said the ice was mandatory. So he served my Dad's with ice.

Dad accepted it, took the ice out, and laid it on the drain rack that goes under the beer draughts.

The landlord ordered him to leave. My Dad was half expecting it, but asked him to repeat himself.

The landlord once again told him to leave. My Dad said "Okay," and started to leave.

And his company all started to file out after him. The landlord protested "No no, you don't all have to leave.

Only he has to leave." One of the other staffers said something along the lines of "Sorry mate.

He's the big boss. We all go where he goes." So they all left and went to another bar.

They had made a reservation at the bar they were leaving, but they hadn't put down any deposit for it,

and hadn't bought any drinks yet. The aperitifs had been complimentary, so the Landlord didn't even get paid for those.

Moments in social settings often reveal the dynamics of respect, authority, and human connection. Whether at work gatherings, family events, or casual outings, there is an emotional rhythm to how people respond to rules, perceived slights, and collective loyalty.

In the story of OP’s father at the bar, these forces interact in a way that highlights both personal dignity and group solidarity.

The core dynamic centers on control, autonomy, and social influence. His request, a simple modification to his aperitif, was denied by the landlord, creating a clash between personal preference and institutional rigidity. The emotional impact was immediate: frustration and surprise on his part, and confusion or defensiveness from the bar staff.

When he chose to leave, the company’s collective response, following their leader, illustrated a fundamental aspect of group behavior: loyalty and cohesion often mirror the actions of a trusted figure.

Both sides acted from understandable motivations. The landlord sought to enforce his rules, while the guests prioritized respect for their peers and shared decision-making.

Dr. Amy Cuddy, social psychologist and author of Presence, explains that people’s behavior in group settings is strongly influenced by perceived authority and demonstrations of confidence. Even small displays of assertiveness by one individual can ripple through a group and shift collective choices.

In this context, OP’s father’s calm but firm reaction established a boundary that the group instinctively respected. His colleagues’ support was less about the drink itself and more about alignment with shared social values and recognition of leadership presence.

This perspective helps explain why the story resonates. It is not simply about a beverage or a rule; it is about asserting personal preference with confidence and observing how this influences relational dynamics.

The landlord’s inflexibility, though perhaps rooted in policy, overlooked the human element, the significance of choice, respect, and context, leading to the loss of both social goodwill and potential business.

How can individuals navigate rules that clash with personal or collective values, especially in social or professional environments? How might leaders and groups cultivate settings where respect, autonomy, and flexibility coexist?

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

These Redditors envied awesome bosses and shared big-order walkout tales

RealRazgriz − Wish I could get the nice, awesome bosses that take us out for fun after-work stuff.

But no, I always get stuck working with the absolute dolts like this landlord.

Anyway, that was a nice, short story. Thanks for sharing.

myke113 − This reminds me of a festival I was working. The staff director tried ordering pizzas to the festival,

like $400 worth. The pizza place said they refused to bring an order to the park.

When she told them the amount she was ordering, they tried changing their mind,

but it was too late, she had already decided to go elsewhere.

These users slammed the silly ice mandate and snobby refusal

AveryBerry − Womp-womp. Guy was probably trying to stretch the free drinks with ice,

but he should have just let your da take out the ice cause the drink was already f__king poured at that point.

Hopefully this got him to work that stick out of his ass.

bcatrek − What a crap bartender. Other than diluting your drink, with or without ice creates almost like two different drinks

even though they have the same ingredients. Not just temperature and water content,

but also how the ingredients mix together is different. It should be such a standard request

to have the ice removed even for drinks that are normally served with ice.

xyanon36 − What the hell kind of snobby place is that where a bartender won't grant an extremely simple and costless request?

AnonTechBoy − I can't understand this. Are snobby bartenders a common thing?

The dude doesn't want ice, don't put ice in his drink. What's the big deal?

These commenters loved group exits when kicking out one, especially bosses

[Reddit User] − I always enjoy the flip side where I'm forced to kick out someone who is trashed in a large group,

usually a boss if it's a work thing, and the rest go "if he leaves, we leave!".

Like yeah, I was hoping for that.

[Reddit User] − I had one story like this before. We worked in an industrial manufacturing spot in the oil industry,

and our boss's bosses came in. That means the company gets taken out for a big feast

for about 10 people so nothing ridiculous. Well they aren't the suit and tie kind of people.

They're the Ariats and oil stained white shirt types.

We went to a decent italian place and when he tried to place a $1000 deposit

they immediately told him to leave because they 'don't want our type ruining the reputation' of their restaurant

before he could even finish talking. He basically laughed, showed him the cash and said 'that's too bad,

this could've been yours. Maybe if you don't like this type of clientele you shouldn't have opened a restaurant in West Texas.'

We left, went to a steakhouse instead, and that was the first time I've ever had Surf and Turf,

and he left a massive tip for the other place for not discriminating us.

These Redditors recounted tour group and strip club loyalty leaves

[Reddit User] − I was on a Europe tour, and about 40 of us all piled into this club,

and about 5 more and the tour leader were outside while the tour leader tried to organize the free drink tickets.

The tour has relationships with certain clubs and gets benefits, except this time they didn't want to play ball.

So the leader says, 'either you give us those free drinks or we all leave'

the manager or whoever she was talking to looks at her and her 5 others and says 'guess you better leave'.

So tour leader yells through the door that we are leaving and the manager watches his club empty

of a bunch of hard drinking a__oholic tourists. The best part?

On the way next door the tour guide ran into a second tour group and told them the story,

so there went another 40 ish customers. AND the club next door apparently heard this

and gave us all free entry and free drinks too!

figgypie − This reminds me of a story my dad once told me from his wild youth.

He and his friends were at a strip club one night. They were a pretty big group

and the only ones there, having a grand Ole time and making it rain.

One of my dad's friends apparently got too drunk and rowdy so the bouncers kicked him out.

Well being the loyal friends they were, the rest of the guys followed suit, leaving the place empty.

The strippers were PISSED lol.

These users blasted inflexible consumption rules as low

PerfectlyFramedWaifu − It's one thing to not making small changes to your dishes after customer requests,

but not even allowing them to consume their food or drinks their own way? That's a new low.

anonymousforever − Your boss needed a bar that uses whiskey rocks for those who like a chilled drink

bit not the way ice dilutes it. That would have been an elegant answer to the issue.

These Redditors explained no-shots policies via insurance or binge curbs

peeweejd − Somewhat related... I stayed at a hotel on the campus of Penn State University.

Apparently there is a campus wide rule of "no shots" to curtail binge drinking on campus.

We were having drinks at the hotel bar, a beer and a shot, and the shot had to be served

in a rocks glass with ice and had to be drank slowly, like multiple sips.

The bartender said she would have to stop serving us if any liquor was drunk quickly.

FARTS_ARE_NORMAL − Some liquor providers are not allowed by their insurance companies to serve straight alcohol, basically shots,

but can serve as long as there is some ice or water in it.

This was the case for the bartender at my wedding, it was in their contract.

readonlyuser − Two questions: What is a "company drinks"? What is a "landlord" in this context?

This frosty fiasco turns OP’s trivial ice beef into a masterclass on why biting the hand that reserves hurts most. Was the mass walkout his smoothest show of solidarity, or could a calm chat have saved the spot? Ever led your own crew out over dumb demands? Toast your tales below, we’re stirred!

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

Related Posts

When the Office Refused to Believe His Father Died, He Proved It in a Way They’d Never Forget
Social Issues

When the Office Refused to Believe His Father Died, He Proved It in a Way They’d Never Forget

2 months ago
Woman Sues Cousin After He Threw Her In The Pool And Destroyed $6K Hearing Aids
Social Issues

Woman Sues Cousin After He Threw Her In The Pool And Destroyed $6K Hearing Aids

18 hours ago
Boss Fires “Lazy” Employee, Then Begs Him To Save The Company
Social Issues

Boss Fires “Lazy” Employee, Then Begs Him To Save The Company

2 months ago
Man Refuses To Babysit Girlfriend’s Nephew On His First Father’s Day—Now She’s Giving Him The Cold Shoulder
Social Issues

Man Refuses To Babysit Girlfriend’s Nephew On His First Father’s Day—Now She’s Giving Him The Cold Shoulder

4 months ago
Man Tells His Girlfriend She’ll Never Make It In Law, Now She’s Headed To Berkeley Just To Prove Him Wrong
Social Issues

Man Tells His Girlfriend She’ll Never Make It In Law, Now She’s Headed To Berkeley Just To Prove Him Wrong

2 months ago
He Used His Love of K-Dramas to Deliver the Ultimate Mic Drop On Mean Girls
Social Issues

He Used His Love of K-Dramas to Deliver the Ultimate Mic Drop On Mean Girls

4 weeks ago

TRENDING

Husband Demands Sleepy Wife Giving Up The Bed For Him And His Widowed Friend On Their Romantic Trip, She Leaves At Once
Social Issues

Husband Demands Sleepy Wife Giving Up The Bed For Him And His Widowed Friend On Their Romantic Trip, She Leaves At Once

by Jeffrey Stone
November 5, 2025
0

...

Read more
Man Refuses To Pay For Girlfriend’s Baby, Tells Her To Go After The Real Father Instead
Social Issues

Man Refuses To Pay For Girlfriend’s Baby, Tells Her To Go After The Real Father Instead

by Annie Nguyen
September 16, 2025
0

...

Read more
Professor Demands TA Stops Early Cleanup, Regrets It When Lab Turns Chaotic
Social Issues

Professor Demands TA Stops Early Cleanup, Regrets It When Lab Turns Chaotic

by Annie Nguyen
October 24, 2025
0

...

Read more
Art Store Cheats Workers Out Of Overtime, One Call Turns It Into A $50K Lesson
Social Issues

Art Store Cheats Workers Out Of Overtime, One Call Turns It Into A $50K Lesson

by Layla Bui
November 6, 2025
0

...

Read more
A Teen’s “Authentic Self” Costs Her Millions, and She’s Blaming Her Mom
Social Issues

A Teen’s “Authentic Self” Costs Her Millions, and She’s Blaming Her Mom

by Charles Butler
October 28, 2025
0

...

Read more




Daily Highlight

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM

Navigate Site

  • About US
  • Contact US
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Policy
  • ADVERTISING POLICY
  • Corrections Policy
  • SYNDICATION
  • Editorial Policy
  • Ethics Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Sitemap

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM