October 23, 2006: Chinese waiters shave heads for business

Undertoad • Oct 23, 2006 8:57 am
Image

To counter the old Chinese guy who didn't wash his hair for 26 years, xoB suggests this item from Spluch which comes from a Chinese page. In a practice enforced by the restaurant own,er all the waiters have either a roman "h", the letters "ok", or the chinese symbol for noodles, shaved into their heads. The idea is to encourage business, of course.[SIZE=4][/SIZE]

Image
skysidhe • Oct 23, 2006 9:00 am
haha

That one head of hair looks like it spells. 'ok'
Sun_Sparkz • Oct 23, 2006 9:07 am
so what does roman H, ok, and noodle have in common?
YellowBolt • Oct 23, 2006 9:31 am
According to the Chinese webpage, the letter H is supposed to represent the Chinese word for "good" (hao). OK just stands for OK, I think.
binky • Oct 23, 2006 10:17 am
Wow I think I will run out and shave my emploeyer's name onto my head
xoxoxoBruce • Oct 23, 2006 1:59 pm
They probably know what ok means, more than the thousands of westerners understand the oriental letters they get tattooed all over themselves.:lol:
Flint • Oct 23, 2006 2:06 pm
xoxoxoBruce wrote:
...the thousands of westerners understand the oriental letters they get tattooed all over themselves.
My friend Nogg got one of those Chinese "lucky kitties" tattooed on him, and instead of the character he had them just put a question mark.
Trilby • Oct 23, 2006 3:24 pm
That's asking a bit much of your employees, no? I can imagine the job interview. "So. We like what we see, you seem like a team player, you've already got the Mission Statement memorized, you'll be a good fit! Now, shave a roman 'h' or the letters 'OK' on your head; your choice!-and, we're good! Can you start Monday?"
Torrere • Oct 23, 2006 4:56 pm
Sun_Sparkz wrote:
so what does roman H, ok, and noodle have in common?


Hey, why are you asking me? Ask mrnoodle, ok?!
Sheldonrs • Oct 23, 2006 6:35 pm
Does this mean that if an employee is naturally bald, he is considered a handicapped employee?
xoxoxoBruce • Oct 23, 2006 6:41 pm
Nope, he not considered an employee at all.
Welcome to the Cellar, Sheldonrs. :D
Sheldonrs • Oct 23, 2006 7:11 pm
Thanks xoxoxoBruce. :-D
miss_chance • Oct 23, 2006 8:13 pm
binky wrote:
Wow I think I will run out and shave my emploeyer's name onto my head


I hope you don't work for the government in <i>The State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations</i>.;)
ajaccio • Oct 24, 2006 11:14 am
Sheldonrs wrote:
Does this mean that if an employee is naturally bald, he is considered a handicapped employee?


No. Then he gets to use the fuzzy side of velcro tape to spell the letters on his head. But then he can take it off at night! Unless the Chinese version of Big Brother watches him when he sleeps...
Flint • Oct 24, 2006 11:37 am
When the Mr.Show guys were still doing a two-man stage act, they would use electrical tape to add facial hair. Their reasoning: the audience is not being "fooled" regardless of how flawless your wardrobe magic is. Plus, you can quickly duck off-stage and slap an electrical-tape-beard on.
xoxoxoBruce • Oct 24, 2006 6:12 pm
They fired this guy. :rolleyes:
BigV • Oct 24, 2006 6:15 pm
sh*thead
OwenKL • Oct 25, 2006 12:19 am
Is it just my imagination, or is what little hair they have left also dyed green?
ashke • Oct 25, 2006 1:10 am
It's not an 'H', it's this word:
breakingnews • Oct 25, 2006 2:07 am
mian (4)

it's a simplified character for noodles. the actual character is &#40629;, for those who have chinese language pack installed.
ashke • Oct 25, 2006 4:36 am
That's just traditional chinese, which they don't use in China anymore...
Nao • Oct 26, 2006 1:56 am
i'd visit their restaurant.
wolf • Oct 26, 2006 2:33 am
I wouldn't if they shaved their heads near the soup.
xoxoxoBruce • Dec 17, 2006 10:35 pm
It seems when the novelty wears off, business drops off too, so they've started changing the style every two months. :nuts: