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Zeno
03-18-2004, 11:48 PM
I recently went through a very bad experience with a DSL service provider (Qwest) that I finally terminated because I could not get through to their technical service people and the hardware/software they sent did not work etc. I was so disgusted that I wrote a letter of complaint. It was a very formal and business like letter. I discussed the ordeal and frustration with an old friend and a week later he sent me the following e-mail.

The complaint letter I wrote is a shabby and wimpy thing compared to the following, so as not to bore anyone I will refrain from posting it.

Love those Limeys. (I cannot vouch for the authenticity of the letter – but who cares)
What follows is the e-mail with the letter.

************************************************** ********************



I thought maybe you could modify this letter to complain about your DSL service:

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What follows is an example of British humour in a complaint letter sent to a British ISP. The piece suggests two things:

1) Americans and Canadians are not the only ones who get poor service from their ISP, cable or alarm companies. (NTL is a cable operator in Britain).

2) The Brits probably write the world's best letters of complaint.



Dear Cretins,
I have been an NTL customer since 9th July 2001, when I signed up for your four-in-one deal for cable TV, cable modem, telephone, and alarm monitoring. During this three-month period I have encountered inadequacy of service which I had not previously considered possible, as well as ignorance and stupidity of monolithic proportions. Please allow me to provide specific details, so that you can either pursue your professional prerogative and seek to rectify these difficulties -- or more likely (I suspect) so that you can have some entertaining reading material as you while away the working day smoking, and drinking vendor-coffee on the bog in your office.

My initial installation was cancelled without warning, resulting in my spending an entire Saturday sitting on my arse waiting for your technician to arrive. When he did not arrive, I spent a further 57 minutes listening to your infuriating hold music, and the even more annoying Scottish robot woman telling me to look at your helpful website. HOW? I alleviated the boredom by playing with my testicles for a few minutes -- an activity at which you are no doubt both familiar and highly adept. The rescheduled installation then took place some two weeks later, although the technician did forget to bring a number of vital tools -- such as a drill-bit, and his cerebrum. Two weeks later, my cable modem had still not arrived. After 15 telephone calls over four weeks my modem arrived, six weeks after I had requested, and begun to pay for it. I estimate your internet server's downtime is roughly 35% -- the hours between about 6pm and midnight, Monday through Friday, and most of the weekend.

I am still waiting for my telephone connection. I have made nine calls on my mobile to your no-help line, and have been unhelpfully transferred to a variety of disinterested individuals who are, it seems, also highly skilled bollock jugglers. I have been informed that a telephone line is available (and someone will call me back); that I will be transferred to someone who knows whether or not a telephone line is available (and then been cut off); that I will be transferred to someone (and then been redirected to an answering machine informing me that your office is closed); that I will be transferred to someone and then been redirected to the irritating Scottish robot woman, and several other variations on this theme.

Doubtless you are no longer reading this letter, as you have at least a thousand other dissatisfied customers to ignore, and also another one of those crucially important testicle moments to attend to. Frankly I don't care. It's far more satisfying as a customer to voice my frustrations in print than to shout them at your unending hold music. Forgive me, therefore, if I continue.

I truly thought British Telecom was crap, and they had attained the holy piss-pot of god-awful customer relations; and that no one, anywhere, ever, could be more disinterested, less helpful or more obstructive to delivering service to their customers. That's why I chose NTL, and because, well, there isn't anyone else is there? How surprised I therefore was, when I discovered to my considerable dissatisfaction and disappointment what a useless shower of bastards you truly are. You are sputum-filled pieces of distended rectum incompetents of the highest order.

BT -- wankers though they are -- shine like brilliant beacons of success in the filthy mire of your seemingly limitless inadequacy. Suffice to say that I have now given up on my futile and foolhardy quest to receive any kind of service from you. I suggest that you cease any potential future attempts to extort payment from me for the services which you have so pointedly and catastrophically failed to deliver. Any such activity will be greeted initially with hilarity and disbelief and will quickly be replaced by derision, and even perhaps bemused rage.

I enclose two small deposits, selected with great care from my cat's litter tray, as an expression of my utter and complete contempt for both you and your pointless company. I sincerely hope that they have not become desiccated during transit -- they were satisfyingly moist at the time of posting, and I would feel considerable disappointment if you did not experience both their rich aroma and delicate texture. Consider them the very embodiment of my feelings towards NTL, and its worthless employees.

Have a nice day. May it be the last in your miserable short lives, you irritatingly incompetent and infuriatingly unhelpful bunch of tw*ts.

HDPM
03-19-2004, 12:08 AM
See what happens when you take people's guns away? /images/graemlins/tongue.gif

Wake up CALL
03-19-2004, 12:30 AM
[ QUOTE ]
See what happens when you take people's guns away? /images/graemlins/tongue.gif

[/ QUOTE ]

As funny and entertaing as Zeno's post truly was I laughed harder at your response HDPM. /images/graemlins/smile.gif

Zeno
03-19-2004, 01:09 AM
HDPM,

I echo Wake Up Call's response. That was Classic - a real belly buster. Kudos.


-Zeno

bigpooch
03-19-2004, 06:49 AM

Phat Mack
03-19-2004, 06:59 AM
on the bog in your office.

What's a bog? I have a Brit friend I could write and ask, but I wore him out with questions when I read Fever Pitch.

ComedyLimp
03-19-2004, 07:16 AM
bog = toilet.

Or "Bathroom" in the American vernacular which is often confusing to Brits as (at least when I grew up) the WC and the bath are often in separate rooms so if one has American guests round for afternoon Tea and they ask to "use the Bathroom" we might, while admiring such commitment to personal hygeine, be inclined to think you are a little weird. Although not as weird as the visiting American is likely to think his host when he finds himself busting for a pee and directed to a room with a bath and a washbasin but no toilet.

For a country of people who are proud of their tendency to of call a spade a spade I have often wondered why this never applied to toilets. I suspect it might be a throwback to the Puritanical origins of your forefathers and a resulting feeling of faint unease when it comes to bodily functions.

HDPM
03-19-2004, 10:32 AM
Yes, I had a discussion like that my first night at a bed and breakfast in England. I forget how it came about, but I was perplexed about hearing that my room didn't have a closet. "But I have clothes to hang up." "No idiot, the WC" "What?" I knew at this old place many of the rooms didn't have toilets or baths, but I figured at least I could hang my stuff up. "Ah, you mean the wardrobe" "No, that is in my suitcase, where do I put my clothes...." Being awake for about 40 hours at the time of the conversation really helped me too. But I was wishing they spoke English over there.

Zeno
03-19-2004, 01:01 PM
eraser = rubber

Another phrase that can lead to raised eyebrows, smirks or mistakes in communication.

Years ago a colleague told me about a stay on the island in a quaint place. Apparently, after she checked in, a woman asked her if she wished to be 'knocked up in the morning'. A quizzical phrase to blurt out to someone that you have just met, momentarily, to transact a business operation. What is it with you limeys anyway?

-Zeno