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  "path": "/social-media/a-tiktoker-showed-how-easy-it-is-to-steal-a-taco-bell-mobile-order-but-the-video-had-a-twist-nobody-saw-coming/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-06-20T01:00:00.000Z",
  "site": "https://attackofthefanboy.com",
  "tags": [
    "News",
    "Social Media",
    "Taco Bell",
    "TikTok",
    "Twitter",
    "Daily Dot",
    "HistorianUSA1",
    "pic.twitter.com/iEvgDdLUd3",
    "June 18, 2026",
    "a Cheesecake Factory drink pricing dispute",
    "a dog on an airplane tray table",
    "@HistorianUSA1"
  ],
  "textContent": "A man recently demonstrated how simple it is to walk out of a Taco Bell with a mobile order that does not belong to him, but the video is not exactly what it seems. The clip, which gained attention, highlights a security gap in the way many fast food chains handle online pickup orders.\n\nMany restaurants now use designated pickup shelves where mobile and delivery orders sit until a customer or driver grabs them. As detailed by the Daily Dot, the setup is meant to cut down on wait times and let staff focus on the kitchen, but it also leaves orders unattended and accessible to anyone walking by. In the video, a man enters the restaurant, picks up a bag from the shelf, and exits without an employee questioning him.\n\nThe post, shared by X user @HistorianUSA1, captioned the clip as a confident life hack and referred to it as mobile grand theft. The post later clarified that the entire video is a parody, though the scenario it depicts reflects a real concern restaurants have had to address.\n\n## Commenters point out that some restaurants are already changing how mobile pickup works\n\nEven though the video itself was staged, several commenters said the issue it raises is genuine, and many locations have removed open pickup shelves entirely because of theft concerns. One person wrote that this is why most places no longer use mobile order shelves, adding that it makes pickup more inconvenient. Another said some restaurants now require customers to show their mobile order verification to an employee before handing over the bag.\n\n> This dude just dropped the most confident “life hack” tutorial I’ve ever seen.\n>\n> Walks into Taco Bell like he owns the place, grabs a random mobile order bag, and struts out like it’s his birthday. “Nobody’s questioning me”\n>\n> Bro turned “mobile pickup” into “mobile grand… pic.twitter.com/iEvgDdLUd3\n>\n> — DocumentingLibs (@HistorianUSA1) June 18, 2026\n\nOther commenters argued that the behavior shown in the video, even as a parody, illustrates a real crime rather than a clever trick. Some fast food locations have dealt with separate viral pricing complaints in recent days, including a Cheesecake Factory drink pricing dispute that drew attention online. Commenters on the Taco Bell video noted that taking someone else’s order can lead to consequences including a ban from the premises or criminal charges, since many locations rely on security cameras to track who picks up orders that later have to be remade.\n\nViral debates over fast food etiquette and security have picked up amid other unrelated online disputes this month, such as a dog on an airplane tray table sparking its own round of public criticism. Restaurants that have moved their pickup racks behind the register say doing so allows staff to confirm an order before handing it over. Daily Dot was unable to independently verify the circumstances depicted in the original Taco Bell video.",
  "title": "A TikToker showed how easy it is to steal a Taco Bell mobile order, but the video had a twist nobody saw coming"
}