Working in a cubicle farm means you hear things you were never meant to. Phone calls, awkward oversharing, and sometimes… medical details that no one asked for. It’s a delicate ecosystem, and one person’s bad habit can turn the whole place upside down.
That’s exactly what happened when one man refused to stop taking calls on speakerphone. After weeks of noise and ignored complaints, a coworker decided to fight back with a prank that was equal parts clever and cruel.
What followed left the entire office howling, and one red-faced employee permanently humbled.














The OP’s story is really about how groups enforce norms when one person refuses to read the room. An open office is a social contract, everyone sacrifices a little privacy to preserve everyone else’s ability to work.
Chronic speakerphone guy broke that contract. After repeated, ignored requests, OP escalated with a prank that weaponized embarrassment, and, predictably, the behavior stopped.
Open offices are notoriously sensitive to intelligible speech; even moderate noise degrades attention, mood, and task performance.
Controlled studies show typical open-plan sound levels fatigue workers and reduce performance, and employees in low-partition open plans report substantially higher dissatisfaction than those in private offices.
It’s no surprise, then, that a coworker broadcasting calls, medical ones, no less, provoked collective frustration. In that environment, public shaming isn’t just juvenile theater; it’s a crude but powerful way groups restore the norm of quiet.
The prank created a salient, reputational cost and the behavior changed overnight, precisely what social-emotion models would predict.
There’s a caveat the research also flags. Humiliation can have lingering interpersonal costs; while embarrassment repairs norms, it can harm trust and self-esteem if overused or weaponized.
Ethical best practice is still to try direct feedback and managerial channels first; shaming should be the last resort, not the first impulse.
A big group applauded the petty revenge, calling it satisfying and well-earned.



Several commenters recounted their own speakerphone horror stories, backing the OP’s irritation with vivid anecdotes.


















A cluster of users endorsed escalation tactics and practical retaliation, sharing how they taught offenders a lesson.











Some responses celebrated workplace solidarity, describing collective pushback when one colleague wrecks the work environment.





A few folks went full darkly humorous, suggesting shock-value pranks that stop speakerphone abusers cold.




Finally, a number of commenters emphasized boundaries and common decency, reminding everyone that basic etiquette exists for a reason.


Justice was served, cubicle-style. The OP’s prank was the perfect mix of office revenge and poetic irony. After months of enduring the daily speakerphone symphony, one fake voicemail finally silenced the loudest mouth in the room.
Do you think the prank was fair payback for his obnoxious habit, or did the OP cross a line by embarrassing him publicly? Be honest, would you have laughed, joined in, or felt bad for the guy? Sound off below!






