Even when times are tough, that doesn’t mean you can’t look nice. And if you can get that cute outfit on sale? That just sweetens the deal. When one Florida woman decided to stop by JCPenney and happened across a nice clothing set on sale, it was a done deal. However, when she went to check out, a JCPenney employee refused to honor the price the store itself had listed the clothing for.
In a video shared on social media, you immediately hear TikToker Ksiimonee say, “Now you’re going on TikTok” to an older blonde woman. She’s an employee of JCPenney, and a team lead, too. The team lead just smiles and shrugs her shoulders before aggressively taking an outfit from a nearby JCPenney Cashier—the very clothing Ksiimonee was attempting to buy.
“You’re fine. You was good. I appreciate you,” Ksiimonee says to the cashier. It’s the team lead she’s having an issue with. Meanwhile, the team lead goes from nonchalant to calling security, despite Ksiimonee showing no signs of being a threat.
At that point, the team lead is invading Ksiimonee’s personal space and repeatedly telling her to leave. “Get out of my face. Don’t talk to me,” Ksiimonee says.
The team lead doesn’t let up. Instead, she resorts to childishly sticking her tongue out at Ksiimonee. “I don’t care that you put me on TikTok,” the employee says, before another team lead appears, ultimately being the tiebreaker and waves her coworker away.
Finally, the TikToker gets to state her case, but not before blowing off steam herself. She tells the other JCPenney team lead that her coworker was being “passive-aggressive” and “[expletive] condescending.”
Although the video has been seen thousands of times on TikTok, there are only two comments, and they’re left by Ksiimonee herself. It’s a before-and-after of the clothing stand that caused such a hassle for her (and, apparently, an employee’s sanity).
One comment clearly shows that everything at that clothing stand was around 25% off. The after photo showed the sign completely missing, suggesting the store’s leads had removed the sign. Luckily for her, Ksiimonee also shares in the comments, “another lead honored the display price.”
After all, if a store marks clothes as being on sale, and you’re told otherwise at checkout, that’s an issue for a team lead to solve. It’s not something security needs to be involved in, Karen.







