Working in retail is rarely anyone’s dream job, and dealing with difficult customers is almost guaranteed. Most days, the trouble comes in the form of raised voices, rude comments, or someone arguing over a coupon. But an incident at a Burlington store in New Jersey took things far beyond the usual frustrations. A shopper walking through the shoe section at a Burlington store unexpectedly came across a scene that left her stunned: another woman was completely trashing the aisle.
At first glance, the New Jersey woman causing the chaos did not appear to be having a meltdown or throwing any kind of tantrum. She seemed to be browsing like any other customer. The issue, however, was the way she handled the merchandise. She would pick up a shoe, glance at it, and if it did not meet her liking, she simply tossed it to the floor. Not set it down. Not placed it aside. Just tossed it, over and over again.
She repeated this with so many pairs that the entire aisle was nearly carpeted with shoes. Boxes sat open, pushed aside, or missing entirely while loose shoes formed messy piles across the walkway. The woman recording the scene was visibly shocked. Instead of staying discreet, she filmed openly, holding her phone up in plain view. Yet the New Jersey shopper causing the mess did not react at all. She continued trying on shoes, sliding her foot into a new pair, examining it for a second, and then kicking it off, sending it skidding across the already chaotic floor.
By the end of the video, the situation had only gotten worse. Shoes littered every corner of the aisle, and nothing hinted that the woman planned to stop or clean anything up.
The outrage did not stay inside the store. When the video made its way online, viewers from all over expressed shock and anger. Many criticized the woman’s complete disregard for the employees who would be forced to clean up the destruction. Others focused on basic manners, wondering how someone could treat a store like that without a second thought. One comment read, “Imagine what her home looks like.” Another said, “Genuinely curious… what makes someone think this is acceptable? Who raised you to treat a store like your bedroom floor?”
A few people speculated whether cultural differences might be involved, suggesting that the woman, who appeared to be a person of color, might have come from a place where handling merchandise this way is more common. Others pushed back, pointing out that rude customers exist everywhere and that poor behavior is not tied to any culture.
Some former retail workers chimed in with their own war stories. One recalled working at a Nike Outlet during college: “Parents would try shoes on their kids, look me dead in the eye, and leave the boxes on the floor. What was even better was when they had food and left it on the benches for us to clean up. Sometimes even diapers.”







