A scam text landed with a fake PayPal receipt for an iPhone she never bought, complete with a helpful “contact us” number. Instead of deleting, she called and sweetly asked for her tracking info.
The scammer fumbled names, hung up, got called back, and endured two straight hours of pot-and-pan symphonies, fake crying, and endless “Where’s my phone, Austin-Frank-Austin?” Until he finally cracked, screamed, and rage-quit his own con. Petty vengeance served loud, clanging, and gloriously victorious.
Woman wastes scammer’s day with endless calls and pot-banging, turning fraud into hilarious vigilante entertainment.
































Turning the tables on scammers might feel like sweet justice, but it’s also surprisingly effective. Behavioral researchers call this “scam-baiting,” and the core idea is simple: every minute a fraudster spends arguing with someone who will never send money is a minute they’re not fleecing a vulnerable person.
From the scammer’s side, the frustration is real. These call centers often run on strict quotas and scripts. Going off-script or dealing with a time-waster throws their whole operation into chaos.
A 2023 report from the Federal Trade Commission noted that Americans lost nearly $8.8 billion to fraud in 2022 alone, with phone scams among the top methods. Keeping even one scammer tied up for hours genuinely protects others.
Dr. Gabriel Young, a expert in Human Development, has explained the psychological tactics scammers use to ensnare victims, drawing from her research on persuasion and vulnerability. In a Psychology Today article, she noted: “Scammers know a lot about psychology, and they use this knowledge to turn our fears against us.”
This insight highlights how fraudsters build a false sense of trust and authority right from the start, making it harder for targets to spot the deception, much like the fake PayPal email in our Redditor’s story, complete with a phony invoice number to mimic legitimacy.
That stress is exactly what our Redditor delivered in bulk. Her strategy – polite confusion, demanding to speak to managers, and finally the orchestral pot-and-pan finale – was textbook disruption.
By flipping the script, she not only reclaimed control but also mirrored the scammers’ own reliance on familiarity and authority, turning their tools against them.
Ethically? It’s a gray area, but most experts agree that non-aggressive time-wasting (no threats, no doxxing) falls into harmless vigilante territory. The bonus mental-health benefit of turning past victimization into empowerment shouldn’t be underestimated either.
So next time a scammer calls, maybe, just maybe, keep them on the line a little longer. You might save someone’s savings… and get a great story out of it.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
Some people want the scammer’s phone number shared so they can join in harassing him.





Some people enjoy wasting scammers’ time and describe their own successful tactics.














Some people recommend calling scammers at inconvenient hours or using painful methods.




At the end of the day, one Redditor took a scam that could have ruined someone else’s week and transformed it into a two-hour comedy special starring a very regretful “Austin.” Was it the most productive use of an afternoon? Maybe not. Was it cathartic, hilarious, and technically a public service? Absolutely.
So tell us in the comments: Would you pick up the phone and waste a scammer’s whole day, or do you have a better revenge recipe? Spill the tea, we’re all ears (and probably saving that number just in case).










