Sentences with phrase «of a waitress like»

The relentless Tingle will seemingly decide whether Leigh Ann continues her education or wind up living the tiring life of a waitress like her divorced mother (an uncredited Lesley Ann Warren).
They take orders from customers and serve beverages along with performing the usual duties of a waitress like cleaning tables, ringing up totals and verifying information to ensure that customers are old enough to drink.
They take orders from customers and serve beverages along with performing the usual duties of a waitress like cleaning tables, ringing up totals and verifying information to ensure... Read More»

Not exact matches

Again, that fact doesn't obviate the option of (or indeed the need for) social critique; it just means that we can't reasonably roll our eyes at the very notion of a place like Hooters, and then merrily skip down to the neighbourhood bar where the waitresses wear short skirts and tube tops all summer.
Or they may not be thinking that their behaviour is inappropriate at all: people often make comments like these out of earshot of the person they're talking about, thinking that what the waitress doesn't hear won't hurt her.
On the other hand, if engaging with a world in need were to be a very small thing — like learning more about the bagboy who tirelessly bags my groceries every week, or shamelessly begging for a baby shower invite to celebrate my favorite waitress at my favorite restaurant, or stopping to help the teen whose car is broken down by the side of the road — then I'd become responsible for it.
If you saw the 2007 movie with Keri Russell, you may remember the plot of Waitress as being something like: Lady works in diner, gets unintentionally pregnant, hates husband, bakes a lot of pies.»
This may have happened twenty - three years ago but Morse was a grown man at the time and his conduct, being in a bar at 4:30 in the morning, using degrading language toward a waitress, impersonating a police officer and, for want of a better description, acting like a total jerk, says a lot about his lack of character or fitness to hold office.
People attending the Saturday rally in Ellenville's Liberty Square rally were treated to lunch and were surrounded by museum - like dioramas of a coffee shop, featuring mannequins dressed as a waitress, a skier, a golfer and a singer; and artifacts from the Nevele's peak period, including a sign touting comedian Jan Murray.
Interventions tested included changing the colour of the plate, increasing exercise, waitress service, playing different types of music, singing, doing tai - chi, creating a home - like eating environment, providing nutrition supplements, and boosting the social aspect of eating.
The comfort of your feet is more than important, moreover if you have a standing up job like being a waitress.
Those look exactly like the shoes that 75 % of bartenders and waitresses wear... and there's a reason we refer to them as «work shoes.»
The most prominent characters include Haven Hamilton (Henry Gibson), a socially conservative, arrogant country music star; Linnea Reese (Lily Tomlin), a gospel singer and mother of two deaf children; Del Reese (Ned Beatty), her lawyer husband and Hamilton's legal representative, who works as the local political organizer for the Tea Party - like Hal Philip Walker Presidential campaign; Opal (Geraldine Chaplin), an insufferably garrulous and pretentious BBC Radio reporter on assignment in Nashville, or so she claims; talented but self - involved sex - addict Tom Frank (Keith Carradine), one - third of a moderately successful folk trio who's anxious to launch a solo career; John Triplette (Michael Murphy), the duplicitous campaign consultant who condescendingly tries to secure top Nashville stars to perform at a nationally - syndicated campaign rally; Barbara Jean (Ronee Blakley), the emotionally - fragile, beloved Loretta Lynn - like country star recovering from a burn accident; Barnett (Allen Garfield), Barbara Jean's overwhelmed manager - husband; Mr. Green (Keenan Wynn), whose never - seen ailing wife is on the same hospital ward as Barbara Jean; groupie Martha (Shelley Duvall), Green's niece, ostensibly there to visit her ailing aunt but so personally irresponsible that she instead spends all her time picking up men; Pfc. Glenn Kelly (Scott Glenn), who claims his mother saved Barbara Jean's life but who mostly seems obsessed with the country music star; Sueleen Gay (Gwen Welles), a waitress longing for country music fame, despite her vacuous talent; Bill and Mary (Allan F. Nicholls and Cristina Raines), the other two - thirds of Tom's folk act, whose ambition overrides constant personal rancor; Winifred (Barbara Harris), another would - be singer - songwriter, fleeing to Nashville from her working - class husband, Star (Bert Remsen); Kenny Frasier (David Hayward), a loner who rents a room from Mr. Green and carries around a violin case; Bud Hamilton (Dave Peel), the gentle, loyal son of the abrasive Hamilton; Connie White (Karen Black), a glamorous country star who is a last - minute substitute for Barbara Jean at the Grand Old Opry; Wade Cooley (Robert DoQui), a cook at the airport restaurant where Sueleen works as a waitress and who tries unsuccessfully to convince her that she has no talent; and the eccentric Tricycle Man (Jeff Goldblum), who rides around in a three - wheel motorcycle, occasionally interacting with the other characters, showing off his amateur magic tricks, but who has no dialogue.
The story of a factory owner who meets an actress who is a friend of a waitress who meets a bodyguard who works with a chauffeur who drives for an interior decorator who is the wife of the factory owner who would like to befriend with some artists who... (Offline Releasing)
The premise, at a very basic level, may seem like the upbeat sort of rom - com that we're used to — pie - making lady with quirky waitress friends and an annoying husband strikes up an affair with her gynecologist while pregnant — but there's a lot of depth beneath the surface with this one.
After years of toiling away in nameless bit parts like «Sky King Waitress» in Disney's The Kid (2000) and thankless supporting parts in rom - coms like The Back - Up Plan (2010), Melissa McCarthy finally broke out as a big screen star in...
Along with a request that women walking the red carpet at the Golden Globes speak out and raise awareness by wearing black, the initiative includes a legal defense fund, backed by $ 13 million in donations, to help less privileged women — like janitors, nurses, farm and factory workers, waitresses, hotel housekeepers — protect themselves from sexual misconduct and the fallout from reporting it; legislation to penalize companies that tolerate persistent harassment, and to discourage the use of nondisclosure agreements to silence victims; and a drive to at long last reach gender parity at studios and talent agencies that reportedly has already begun making headway.
The plot goes like this: Halle Berry, who spends most of Kidnap pretending to furiously wheel a Chrysler minivan with her eyes peeled to meth - binge dimensions, is a diner waitress in the middle of a divorce; she goes to some kind of amusement park with her 6 - year - old son; he is yanked right in front of her into a doubtlessly hick - owned 1980s teal Ford Mustang, complete with tinted windows, a leather hood bra, and rear plastic louvers; she gives chase.
Meanwhile, on other pages of the script, Charlotte's dad (Alan Arkin) has developed a close relationship with a troubled waitress (Amanda Seyfried), Charlotte's sister (Marisa Tomei) is bitter that she's single and lonely (yes, the lovely Tomei is playing someone who can't get dates; no, this is not set in an alternate universe), another family member (Ed Helms) has to contend with a young daughter who likes to say, «You're such a dick!»
When we left Sookie Stackhouse (Anna Paquin) at the end of Season Three, the telepathic roadhouse waitress turned vampire paramour of Bon Temps, Louisiana, had been transported to Faerieland, which turns out to be a lot less like a Disney movie than a horror movie.
The quiet and reserved Baby also has a girl now, a waitress named Deborah (James) who likes music as much as he does and dreams of heading west after this final job.
The rest of the film follows suit by stuttering between two children playing hooky, a cute waitress (Melanie Doane) flirting with a drifter while dreaming, Steve Earle - like, of getting out of Dodge, and of an investigation of a possible serial killer who leaves black swan feathers at the scenes of his crimes.
To others, like my never - complaining dad, who once refused to let me even tell a waitress that our soup never arrived, it's a sign of how ungrateful and entitled we've become.
Waitress, Busboys and the like are todays new R / E agents and / or mortgage loan officers (majority of brokers office do both) looking for their first clients - and majority with no training.
The comedian told us one of her dogs is missing teeth and looks like a Waffle House waitress while the other one pees in a zig zag and eats rocks.
And not because he dreamed of riches or drug - fueled tabletop affairs with waitresses (that was * my * dream), but because he simply liked roaming the world and believed in the LP philosophy.
If you like a rank of chefs attending minutely to each bite, and lots of pretty waitresses regularly asking if you need anything, or don't really mind about the cost, that's fine, enjoy it and pony up liberally at the end.
Would you like some more ways on how you can make the best use of education on your waitress or waiter resume?
This is how a waitress resume skills section of an experienced waitress will look like.
Working as a waitress is like racing against time; you need to be pleasant even in times of sheer distress, be accurate where orders are concerned and ensure that every order is delivered in a time efficient manner.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z