A remote Texas bar filled with roughnecks and cold beer turned chaotic the moment a drunk regular swung a pool cue like a weapon. The bouncer jumped in, took a blow to the arm, and swiftly choked the attacker unconscious before anyone got seriously hurt. But the owner called the next morning and fired him on the spot.
Weeks later, the ex-bouncer discovered the bar’s internet jukebox couldn’t skip or silence songs paid for remotely. Every Tuesday during crowded pool tournaments, he quietly queued hours of the same seven-minute Cotton Eye Joe remix. The unstoppable loop crushed the night’s profits so badly, the owner eventually paid $5000 for an entirely new machine.
Fired bouncer gets revenge by remotely blasting two hours of “Cotton Eye Joe” on his ex-bar’s unskippable jukebox every Tuesday.





















Let’s be real: getting canned for protecting people in a bar fight feels like the plot twist nobody asked for.
Workplace safety experts have been banging the same drum for years. Employees who intervene in violent incidents deserve protection, not punishment. The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) explicitly states that “employers are required to provide a workplace free from recognized hazards,” including violence from customers. Firing someone for de-escalating a weaponized pool cue arguably violates that duty.
Dr. Gary Namie, co-founder of the Workplace Bullying Institute, explained in an interview: “They should care, but those same national surveys found that the most likely response by employers to reported bullying was to ignore or worsen it.” That hits different when the “high-spending bully” is the reason your paycheck disappears.
On the flip side, some owners genuinely believe “the customer is always right” (even when the customer is swinging lumber). A 2023 survey by the National Restaurant Association found that 62% of bar and restaurant managers admit they’ve overlooked bad behavior from big spenders to protect profits. It’s a toxic tightrope: keep the whale happy or keep your staff safe. Spoiler: most pick the whale.
And then there’s the petty revenge angle. Behavioral economist Dan Ariely, author of “The (Honest) Truth About Dishonesty,” told Wharton in a 2014 interview: “The thing that is common is not big cheaters. The common thing is little cheaters… What we find is that lots of people can cheat a little bit. If we cheat a lot, we… face the possibility that we will feel bad about ourselves. So we play a game within ourselves.”
Queueing endless Cotton Eye Joe isn’t just hilarious, it’s a textbook example of low-cost, high-impact retaliation that scratches the exact same itch as keying an ex’s car, but without the felony charge.
So what’s the grown-up move here? Document everything, file a complaint with your state labor board (wrongful termination cases have been won on less), and maybe let the jukebox live in peace once the new one arrives.
Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:
Some people suggest spamming jukeboxes with repetitive or extremely long annoying songs as revenge.



![Bouncer, Fired For Protecting Customers, Tortures Boss With Endless Cotton Eye Joe [Reddit User] − We did this once in a bar with the "Play Next" and it was for an extra 25 cents. Your song would come up next, no matter...](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wp-editor-1764920407503-4.webp)







Some people recommend flooding jukeboxes with intentionally terrible or cringe music.






Some people simply love and celebrate creative jukebox-based petty revenge.




Some people point out practical solutions the staff could have used instead of replacing the jukebox.




At the end of the day, our bouncer walked into a no-win situation: let a guy get brained with a pool cue or lose his job. He chose safety, got punished, and answered with a two-month techno-polka torture campaign that cost his ex-boss five grand.
Do you think the jukebox symphony was justified poetic justice, or did he take the petty crown a step too far? Would you have kept the remix rolling or walked away with your head high? Drop your verdict in the comments, Reddit already did, and it’s glorious.










