The Starbucks chair.

The Starbucks on University Dr. is usually packed at night once finals approach. People sit outside to study, because it's too packed inside. At 10:15 p.m. only a few tables are occupied. In one there's a couple showing too much PDA. In another is two girls with their phones out and in the last one there's a guy and a girl studying. It's pretty much quiet, except you can hear the giggles from the couple. One of the girls that was on her phone decides to get up. Instead of going around the tables and chairs she decided to go through them. She moves several of the chairs to the side, but once she passes through where the couple is at and the people studying, she drops the chair. The sound was so loud and unpleasant it made everyone cover their ears. With a blushing face of embarrassment she picks up the chair and apologizes.

The library incident.

The second floor of the library is usually sort of loud. People are always having conversations and are never told to be quiet. The third floor however, is very quiet. Two girls walk in looking around for a place to sit. They take out their laptops and begin talking about their assignments. They weren't being loud and there was no one around in the sofas. Ten minutes after they had been sitting down, one of the library aides tells them to be quiet because they're at a library and libraries are supposed to be quiet. Both of the girls grab their things and walk out giving the library aide a "mean" face.

The no tipper.

A woman at a restaurant asks for lemonade more than four times. The waitress is being super nice and gets all three food orders quick. She goes back to the table every five minutes to see if there's anything else the customers need. When going to pay, the woman that kept asking for things picks up her receipt and just signs her name. She then puts it facing down so her friends won't notice that she didn't leave anything. Once they all get up one of the friends asks how much money they left for the waitress and the one that didn't tip tried to change the subject quickly.

The dude at the movies.

For a Friday night, the Carmike theatre was a bit lonely. The 10:30 p.m. showing of "Spectre" only had eight people. The audience members seated toward the middle were talking since the trailers began playing. Throughout the movie, whispering could be heard and lips leaning to each other's ears could be seen.

*007 saves woman from bad guy and kisses her*
Guy that had been whispering: "OMG THEY'RE GOING TO DO IT!"
*After a few seconds*
Guy: "I told you they were going to do it!" *begins to laugh very loud*

The water from the ground.

On a normal day, something unusual happened. Water began coming up from the ground, because a water pipe had been broken. Students passed by and stared at it, confused about what was going on. Some students stopped to laugh and record because it was really random for water to be coming out from the quad. People with skateboards would pass and turn their heads because they wanted to know what was going on. It took about five minutes for the maintenance crew to come turn it off. Many of the people who were enjoying seeing what was going on, turned around and looked a lit bummed out about them turning it off.

The random guy.

A guy had been staring at one of the cashiers at Kohl's since the moment he walked in. He kept passing through where she was at so he could see her. He looked like he wanted to form eye contact with her or something, but she kept ignoring him. Once his parents were about to pay, he was disappointed because the girl he liked wasn't going to charge them.
Guy to cashier: "Do you know if the girl behind you has a boyfriend?"
Cashier: "I don't know."
Guy: "Well she's really pretty, can you tell her I said 'what's up?'" 

The girls singing.

It was past midnight and the streets were practically empty. Adele had just released her song "Hello" and it kept playing on the radio. At a red light by Chase bank on University Dr. the music was as loud as it could possibly be. The three girls in a white Chevy Malibu were singing their hearts out to the song, until they noticed a girl inside a black Ford Focus looking at them. All of of them laughed together and they kept going their separate ways.

The empty bushes.

The bushes that surrounded the UTRGV library have been trimmed and stripped down. What once was full of green leaves, is now a just a bunch of brown branches. People stare at the branches as they pass by because they know it had never looked so ugly. They take pictures and upload them to the UTRGV Snapchat to see if anyone knows what happened. The small path people used as a shortcut has been closed off for no apparent reason. Why did they do this?

The man without a shirt.

It's 10:00 p.m. at Kohl's. There's still one more hour before closing and every employee on the floor is trying to get rid of the clothes inside the fitting rooms. There is a woman walking really fast back and forth between departments trying to look for Star Wars shirts for her entire family. Her husband is patiently looking at clothes for himself and tells his wife that he will be right back. After a couple of minutes the wife is talking to a manager about Star Wars and her husband suddenly comes out from the fitting room with a shirt that had tags on.

Manager: "Sir, you can't be all the way out here using an unpaid shirt."
Husband: "I know, but I just can't find my shirt."
Wife: "Why wouldn't you be able to find it?'
Husband: "I got out of the fitting room to show you the shirt and once I came back it was gone."
*Floor associate walks by with five shirts ready to be hung*
Husband: "That's my shirt!"


The bad secret santa.

At the annual holiday party at work, gifts were given to anyone who had signed up to participate to be a secret santa. The gift limit was $10, but you were allowed to go a bit over. One by one every employee received their gift from their secret santa, then called out the person they were giving their gift to. The person would open the gift in front of everyone, so they could all see what it was. People received all sort of things like food to winter attire. Everyone seemed to be really happy with what they had gotten, but one person didn't seem too happy about hers. She got a large Christmas bag with a lot of red tissues inside. She excitedly threw the tissue out and got out a clear cup with a straw. She threw some more tissue out expecting to find something else, but there was nothing. She then just said "It's just a cup, yay," then smiled.

The unexpected challenge.

On Black Friday most stores get packed with people from everywhere trying to spend money. The Mercedes Premium Outlets are no exception. With a not so big parking lot, customers find it difficult to find a parking space close by, especially during a day when many sales are supposed to happen. In the parking spaces close to Calvin Klein, a white Chevy Cruze is following a couple that are headed toward their car. On the opposite side toward the front side of the Cruze is a red SUV waiting for another couple to get on their car and leave. Once the couple the people inside the Cruze had been following got to their car, they put their turn signal on to indicate the'll be taking the space. When the SUV passengers saw their couple weren't leaving yet, they decide to put their signal to the same side as the Cruze. As the couple's car is reversing, both cars are beginning to get closer to the parking space. Only one got the spot. Which one was it?

The guy that got the look.

It's two hours before closing time at Kohl's. It has been a busy night and the cashiers look exhausted. The registers on the men's side have been closed and now every customer has to pay on the misses side. They send one of the new seasonal employees for backup at the register, because the line is starting to get long. After charging three customers, one cashier looks to the other register to see how the new employee is doing. He was still scanning and folding clothes from the same person he was helping five minutes ago. He took his time putting stuff in the bag and had a conversation with the customers about what they were buying, he then proceeded to tell the customer to sign the pin pad. After printing out the receipt, he took more than three minutes to tell them about their savings and about the coupon they had just received. While he is doing all of that, the customers in line are giving him a look so he could hurry up and they keep turning at the other cashier to see if she will tell him something. Once the line was gone, the new guy was barely going to help his third customer after all the time he'd been there.

The one that didn't check correctly.

The AT&T Stadium was expected to fill up for Taylor Swift's 1989 World Tour concert. Hundreds of people were already seated one hour prior to the concert. The sections 127-119 weren't as filled as the others yet. There were probably only about 12 people in each section at that time. A guy sitting alone who seems to be waiting for someone is showing his ticket to a lady that had just come up to him. The lady sat down and the guy told her that his friend belonged in that seat. The lady kept telling him that she had that seat number and that it was the first time she was taking her daughter to a concert. He told her that it wasn't possible to have purchased the same seats. The lady and her daughter stayed sitting down and the guy kept looking around nervously for his friend. Suddenly the people sitting behind them asked the lady to show them their tickets. Once they looked at them, they told the lady she was in the correct seats, but in the wrong section.

The ''Oh screw you" customer.

It's a normal Friday afternoon at Kohl's. The parking lot is sort of full, but there are hardly any customers at the registers ready to pay. There are no stanchions anywhere near the registers, therefore customers are not required to stand in line. They can just walk up to any register that they'd like. After a few minutes of calmness, the voices of people talking to each other begin to get louder. Cashiers are busy trying to scan and charge as fast as possible and aren't paying attention to the line that's beginning to form. An exhausted looking lady goes up to the register and is begging to put her stuff on the counter, when suddenly a loud and angry voice is heard.

Lady in nonexistent line: "Ma'am, ma'am, there's a line over here! We've all been waiting in line and I was next."
Lady by the register: "I don' t see anything that says to make a line."
Lady in nonexistent line: "We've been here for a long time and it's not fair, go to the back!"
*Cashier is surprised by what is being said so she just stares*
*Lady by the register grabs her stuff and rolls her eyes* "Oh whatever"
*When the lady from the nonexistent line is paying the manager passes by and the other lady asks if there is a line*
Manager: "No, everyone just goes to whichever register."
Lady that was correct points at the one paying: "See, I told you! I told you!
Lady rushes  to the same register as the other one and almost screams to her face "I told you!"
Nonexistent line lady: "It wouldn't be fair if you paid before me when I have been standing in line."
Other lady: "THERE WAS NO LINE!"
Nonexistent line lady: "I'm not going to argue with you when I know I'm right."
*As the nonexistent line lady is walking away the other one sticks out her middle finger high up in the air and screams "SCREW YOU!"

The fainted fangirl.

It's 3:00 p.m. on a hot Saturday afternoon. The lines surrounding the Toyota Stadium have more than 100 people on each side. Fangirls and fanboys are talking about how long they've been waiting. Some say the camped out since the night before and others say they arrived around 1:00 p.m., just to have a good view of the amazingly talented man named Ed Sheeran. The gates won't open until 5:00 p.m. and everyone looks tired, bored and dehydrated. There is no one selling food or beverages and the closest store is about half a mile away. At around 4:40 p.m. some people on the other side of the gate begin preparing their ticket scanners and everyone in line screams with excitement. Once inside, people begin running toward the field, while others run straight to the merchandise tent or the concession stand to purchase overpriced items. The concert won't begin until 7:00 p.m., so there is still two more hours to go. People on the field are way too close to each other and many are trying way too hard to get to the front. There is still one hour to go and literally everyone is dripping in sweat, because of the sizzling sun. It's practically impossible to get out of the crowd to go and buy water, because people won't let you go back to your spot. Once the concert begins with the two opening acts, the sun goes down and fresh air becomes apparent. At around 8:30 p.m. they announce the main performer and everyone goes crazy. Everybody is two inches away from each other and it feels like the sun is still up; it's very difficult to breathe. After Ed finishes his first song, people in the crowd point toward the front at some girl in the floor. Apparently she had fainted. The question is, did she faint because it was hot and she couldn't breathe? Or was it because she had just seen and heard one of her favorite artists?