Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Add Upworthy to your Google News feed.
Google News Button

Speaking multiple languages has its advantages, but for one Vancouver woman, it became the ultimate weapon in a moment of unexpected linguistic revenge.

Reddit user u/Pixel__Detox, a 28-year-old woman living in a high-rise, shared how she overheard a French family openly judging her looks in an elevator—thinking she wouldn’t understand. Instead of reacting immediately, she waited for the perfect mic-drop moment.


media1.tenor.com

A ride she won’t forget

Returning home from an evening run, she entered the building lobby at the same time as a French-speaking family—a couple with their three sons, around 8 to 10 years old.

One of them held the door for her, and she thanked them in English before stepping into the same elevator.

"They were chatting in French, and since it's my mother tongue, I could understand everything they were saying," she explained.

The group had a long ride ahead—more than 30 floors—when the father decided to ask his sons an unexpected question.

"He asked them in French if the woman in the elevator was pretty or not."

Representative photo by Canva

An unexpected insult

At first, she thought she misheard—but then one of the boys gave his answer.

"I stopped breathing for a second, realizing fully that it was truly me they were blatantly judging."

Freezing in disbelief, she debated her next move. With just a few floors left before she could escape the awkwardness, she had two choices: ignore it or seize the opportunity.

media1.tenor.com

The ultimate elevator exit

As the doors opened at her floor, she made her choice.

Instead of confronting them, she turned around and—in flawless French—cheerfully wished them a nice evening before stepping out.

The family’s reaction? Pure shock.

"The look on their faces was priceless."

media1.tenor.com

A moment she’ll never forget

While she left quickly, she later wished she had held eye contact until the doors closed, just to let it sink in.

"I've dealt with rude comments before, but this moment was a chef’s kiss moment."

For years, she had dreamed of a situation like this, where she could use her language skills to surprise someone who assumed she couldn’t understand them.

"I'm just saying, keep your language skills to yourself. You never know when it can come in handy!"

Representative Image Source: Pexels | MART PRODUCTION

The internet celebrates her perfect response

Reddit users loved the story, sharing their own experiences of calling out rude people in their own language.

u/InevitableTrash9596 related to the situation, saying:

"I have the same experience in France. They don’t expect foreigners to speak French, but I do. Yes, I made them feel awkward a few times."

Others appreciated how she handled the situation with class, with u/pip-whip commenting:


"The fact that you called them out while being polite was the best part of this. They went low. You went high."
— u/pip-whip

Another user, u/bright_shiny_day, added:

"I'm a New Zealander and have never been formally taught French. I just lived in London for 16 years and worked with all nationalities. I would have understood that mean-spirited question instantly. I couldn't have responded in anything but the most pidgin French, though!"

Image Source: Reddit | u/Humble-Astronomer396

A lesson in never assuming who’s listening

People tend to assume they can speak freely in their native language without being understood, but this story is a perfect example of why that’s a risky move.

For this French-speaking woman, what started as an awkward moment quickly turned into the perfect bilingual comeback.

And if that family learned anything that day, it’s probably to be a little more careful about what they say in elevators.

More For You

Husband supported his wife for decades. Then she inherited a fortune and left him empty-handed.
Representative Cover Image Source: Pexels | RDNE Stock project

Husband supported his wife for decades. Then she inherited a fortune and left him empty-handed.

After more than two decades of marriage, one man found himself questioning everything when his wife inherited a large sum of money—but refused to share any of it. Reddit user u/IrishRoller shared his story, revealing how he had spent years financially and emotionally supporting his wife, even using his own inheritance to save their home. But when she came into a six-figure sum, her response left him stunned—and reconsidering their entire relationship.

media1.tenor.com

Keep ReadingShow less
testicular cancer, teen cancer, pregnancy test, unusual diagnosis, cancer symptoms

Representative Image: He thought the pregnancy test they gave him was some sort of joke.

This boy’s cancer was caught by the one test no one thought to use

When 18-year-old Byron Geldard started feeling pain in his side, he figured it had something to do with hitting the gym too hard. Muscle strain, he thought. But what started as a typical teenage ailment spiraled into a life-threatening discovery—thanks to a test no one ever expected a teenage boy to take.

After visiting his doctor, Byron was told it was likely nothing serious. But scans painted a different picture: a tumor, already spreading to his lungs. “I was told that it was cancer, but they weren’t sure what type,” he recalled.

Keep ReadingShow less
Boss’s response to employee hit by a car is so bad it’s almost satire
Representative photo by Canva

Boss’s response to employee hit by a car is so bad it’s almost satire

A manager's reaction to an injured employee is sparking outrage online after a viral TikTok exposed the shockingly cold response. Most people expect at least a little empathy when dealing with a crisis, but for one worker, that was not the case. Internet personality Ben Askins (@ben.askins) shared the story, highlighting just how toxic some workplace cultures can be.

@ben.askins This boss's response was completely unacceptable #Worstboss #Badboss #Toxiccompany #React ♬ original sound - Ben Askins

Placing deadlines above basic human decency, the boss in question seemed far more worried about an upcoming pitch than the well-being of their employee. The text exchange, revealed in the TikTok, shows just how dismissive they were. Instead of checking on their injured worker, the manager immediately asked when she would be back at work.

Keep ReadingShow less
A rock concert has nothing on this class.

One professor has cracked the code on keeping students engaged. Emo anthems.

Photo by Sebastian Ervi

Chaotic professor screams the same breakup song every time a student falls asleep in class

Once, in my sophomore year, I dozed off in Algebra 2 and caught a hurled eraser to the top of my head for it. It was the last time I fell asleep in class. Or, at least, in that teacher's class. If I'd had a teacher like TikTok superstar Matthew Pittman for that class I wouldn't have dared fall asleep. Not for fear of consequences but because I wouldn't have wanted to miss the show.

When students in Professor Matthew Pittman’s social media and advertising classes at the University of Tennessee nod off or lose focus, he doesn’t get mad—he gets emo. Instead of disrupting his lecture, Pittman sneaks up on the dozing student and bursts into a full-throated emo anthem. With renditions of songs like Blink-182’s I Miss You and Fall Out Boy’s Sugar, We’re Goin Down, Pittman has turned mundane classroom moments into viral gold.

Keep ReadingShow less
man in blue long sleeve shirt carrying baby in white onesie

Dad hacks!

Hilarious dad discovers a brand-new hack for calling his daughter downstairs

As every parent knows, getting your child to do the thing you want them to do can be an impossible, Sisyphean task. How can I get my child to say ‘please’ and ‘thank you’—and not just utter the words, but actually mean them? What could possibly entice them to help out more around the house? Is going to bed at a reasonable hour something kids actually do, or only an urban legend?

In a Reddit form on r/Parenting, @sabinesse1054 asked a question about the difference between productivity and pleasure.

Keep ReadingShow less