Should i work at hooters




















I still remember the day I marched into my local Hooters to apply for the waitressing position — nervous as heck for the opportunity to serve chicken wings in orange booty shorts and nude nylons.

In fact, after I got the job I kept it completely off of social media and hid it from my family for months. I was in college. I wanted to start my own business someday. I wanted to compete at Miss Universe. I wanted to be a role model for young girls. I was just a broke college girl looking for an easy way to earn quick cash and support myself through school.

I worked there for several months before transferring to what was at the time the number one selling Hooters in the entire country. Hooters of Doral in Miami, Florida. As I mentioned, I was looking for an easy job that I could make some extra money on the side while paying my way through school.

There was a Hooters just down the street from where I went to high school that I was already familiar with. She went to the back office to grab the manager who immediately came out, undoubtedly to check me out, and decided to interview me on the spot. We sat down at one of the tables in the dining room, where he asked me some pretty generic interview questions. He offered me the job on the spot. A couple of days later I was to return to pick up my uniform and officially started working as a Hooters Girl the following week.

Dress up, put yourself together, bring a resume and walk right in to apply. The girls I worked with ranged from the itty bitty tittie committee to extra-large double D implants.

Hooters Girls are paid the same hourly wage or base salary as any other waitressing position at any other restaurant. The actual numeric value varies from state to state. Hooters Girls gotta work for that money honey! What does hustling look like to make more money as a Hooters Girl? Here are some tips on tips from a former Hooters Girl.

You know the guys that practically live at Hooters and chat the girls up for hours on end. Get to know them. Regulars tend to be good tippers. The thought of a company hiring someone based on what they look like might seem wrong and appalling, but there is a certain reason why Hooters gets away with it. Additionally, they do more than just serve the customers. Anyone who has been to a Hooters restaurant probably has noticed that all of the waitresses wear pantyhose and that they're always the same color.

Going to Hooters can be an interesting experience for some couples, which is why the waitresses need to be careful. Part of working at Hooters usually involves flirting of some kind. After all, the waitresses have to be likable in order to get tips and keep their jobs, and customers tend to expect things like that. So, the women who are employed there deal with jealous spouses, according to minq.

According to minq. These ladies get inspected every day to make sure their uniforms are very tight, and the managers get a little bit invasive.

The customers who go there are often very normal people. However, some of them are really creepy. Some customers even try to rub their shoulders.

Kirstie has done a lot of traveling within the United States, and she plans to visit other countries in the future. Kirstie has been writing for various websites since , and she studied journalism and psychology at Jones County Junior College and The University Of Southern Mississippi. Some of the other websites Kirstie writes for are Screen Rant and Babygaga.

She loves to crochet, and she enjoys creating projects from recycled materials. And the shorts, you have to see what we call the smile under the shorts. We call the shorts chicken wings so that when you turn around, there's some extra space in your shorts and they're not skintight. But if you watch any movie or anything that has Hooters in it, they're not wearing the uniform right usually. They are portrayed to be more sexual.

Was Hooters supportive when you were in school? I live in a college town so a lot of the girls who work there go to school. Hooters helps pay for books and schooling, so it's really awesome.

You have to work up to it. If you're there for a year or two, they offer scholarships too. My managers would let me do homework in the office as long as I was taking care of my tables. One of the things the study brought up is body image. Is it hard not to compare yourself to everyone else there? Like, "Oh, her ass is better than mine? I've completely accepted that a long time ago. I've never compared myself to any of my friends.

If they ever caught me feeling bad about how I look, they would be so mad about that because we're all so great toward each other. If someone's having a bad day or if they're not feeling as good about their appearance, I'm like, "Are you kidding me?

You can't do that because you're one of the most beautiful girls and that's why you work here. One of my best friends is a history major and a feminism activist. It's so fun to hear everything she has to say, and my friend who's majoring in business has to say. We're all supportive about everything we're doing.

Speaking of feminism, what does the word mean to you and do you consider yourself one? There are a lot of women who think that if you work at a place like Hooters where your body is on display, you can't be a feminist. I understand where women are coming from when they say that, but what I think about it is that women have equal rights and opportunities, and it's about bringing women up, not bringing them down — supporting each other.

It's a woman's choice to use her looks for money or to pay their rent every month or to pay for school. It's like models. They're using their looks to pay for their rent. For most of us, this is our halfway point.

This is what's paying for us to go to school so that we can get jobs after this. It's more than looks. It's more than what you have on the outside. I met all these women there who are there to empower each other and not bring each other down.

When I think of feminism, I think of empowering other women. Where are we going to get if we just bring each other down? Ashley Yonan, 24, is now working full time in PR. She worked at a Hooters in Santa Monica, California, for two years during college. When did you start working at Hooters and why? I was 20 years old and I was in college.

My body type always fit the profile of a Hooters girl. So I applied as a joke, but I also needed a job to put myself through college. I had never set foot in a Hooters before the day I applied, actually. Are they explicit about the type of woman they're looking for? There's definitely a stereotypical image of what a Hooters girl looks like. Yeah, absolutely. We were held to certain image standards.

They presented it as a modeling job. Yes, you were servers, but we upheld this other role where we were acting. That's the role I took on when I put on the uniform. I became a character, a character that really helped me develop my own personal sense of self. It was never unclear to me what my role was going to be or what was expected of me when I was working there.

When you start there, do you get trained on how to deal with customers? I started as a hostess and then trained for two weeks as a waitress after two months. I don't think we received any specific guidelines on how to deal with disrespectful customers, but you see how our trainer interacted with them, and you'd learn by example what is OK and what's not OK. This one girl that I used to work with would sit on the customers' laps, which is forbidden. You're not supposed to touch them, unless it's a hand around the waist in a photo.



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