Nobody Wants To Work Anymore

2021Sign photo / snowclone / image macroclassic

Also known as: "No One Wants to Work Anymore" · "We Are Short-Staffed"

Nobody Wants To Work Anymore is a 2021 meme format of handwritten business signs blaming workers for labor shortages, which became a viral punchline after researcher Paul Fairie documented the identical complaint dates to 1894.

"Nobody Wants to Work Anymore" started as handwritten signs posted by short-staffed American businesses in spring 2021 and became one of the defining memes of pandemic-era labor discourse. The phrase took on a second life in 2022 when researcher Paul Fairie compiled newspaper clippings proving that people have been saying the exact same thing since 1894, turning a tired employer complaint into a punchline about the cyclical nature of blaming workers.

TL;DR

"Nobody Wants to Work Anymore" started as handwritten signs posted by short-staffed American businesses in spring 2021 and became one of the defining memes of pandemic-era labor discourse.

Overview

The meme operates on two levels. On the surface, it's the actual signs that appeared at restaurants and businesses across the United States in 2021, pleading for customer patience while blaming staffing shortages on people who supposedly don't want to work. On a deeper level, it's the compiled evidence that this complaint is at least 130 years old, showing up in newspaper editorials, reader letters, and political speeches across every decade. The gap between the sign-posters' belief that they're describing something new and the historical record proving otherwise is where the humor lives.

On April 9, 2021, TikTok user @BrittanyJade903 filmed a sign taped to a McDonald's drive-thru window. It read: "We are short-staffed. Please be patient with the staff that did show up. Nobody wants to work anymore." The video picked up over 98,000 likes on TikTok5. The sign was one of the earliest to go viral, but similar messages were already cropping up at businesses nationwide as states began rolling back COVID-19 restrictions and restaurants rushed to reopen at limited capacity3.

The broader context was a massive disruption in the restaurant labor market. Nearly two million restaurant and bar workers had lost their jobs between March and April 20203. Many found work in other industries and didn't come back. Those who stuck with food service faced cyclical layoffs and rehires as regulations shifted and individual COVID exposures forced repeated closures3.

Origin & Background

Platform
TikTok (sign photos), Twitter (newspaper clippings thread)
Key People
@BrittanyJade903, Paul Fairie
Date
2021
Year
2021

On April 9, 2021, TikTok user @BrittanyJade903 filmed a sign taped to a McDonald's drive-thru window. It read: "We are short-staffed. Please be patient with the staff that did show up. Nobody wants to work anymore." The video picked up over 98,000 likes on TikTok. The sign was one of the earliest to go viral, but similar messages were already cropping up at businesses nationwide as states began rolling back COVID-19 restrictions and restaurants rushed to reopen at limited capacity.

The broader context was a massive disruption in the restaurant labor market. Nearly two million restaurant and bar workers had lost their jobs between March and April 2020. Many found work in other industries and didn't come back. Those who stuck with food service faced cyclical layoffs and rehires as regulations shifted and individual COVID exposures forced repeated closures.

How It Spread

Within a week of the McDonald's video, photos of similar signs flooded social media. On April 14, 2021, a Twitter user shared pictures of a comparable sign at a New Mexico Sonic, pulling in thousands of retweets. By early May, a North Carolina reporter tweeted about a Chattanooga restaurant that had to shut down entirely due to staffing. Workers and their supporters pushed back hard. One viral quote-tweet pointed out the Chattanooga restaurant paid its servers $2.15 an hour. Former U.S. Secretary of Labor Robert Reich posted a thread arguing there was no labor shortage, only "a shortage of employers willing to pay their workers a living wage".

The mockery turned creative fast. The phrase "We are closed because nobody wants to work anymore" became a snowclone template, with users writing parody versions blaming fictional characters for the shortage. One tweet blamed Lady Dimitrescu from Resident Evil Village, earning over 23,000 likes. Another used a Lord of the Rings quote, picking up over 12,200 likes.

The meme's second major wave broke on July 20, 2022, when the Great Socialist Cat Memes Facebook page shared an image titled "Nobody Wants to Work Anymore: A Brief History of Capitalists Complaining That Nobody Wants to Work for Starvation Wages". Four days later, the same compilation appeared on Twitter. Both posts racked up thousands of shares and retweets.

The image pulled from a thread by Paul Fairie, a University of Calgary researcher who posts under the handle @paulisci. Fairie had dug through the newspaper archive site Newspapers.com and surfaced 14 distinct clippings spanning 1894 to 2022, each featuring someone expressing the "nobody wants to work" sentiment as though it were a brand-new observation. Snopes verified every clipping in the set, confirming their authenticity through the Newspapers.com archives.

The clippings painted a vivid picture. In 1894, an editorial in the Rooks County Record complained about striking coal miners. In 1922, a Kansas reader blamed unemployment on people wanting "to work half of the time and loaf half of the time". During the Great Depression in 1937, peach orchardists in Pennsylvania couldn't find pickers despite widespread unemployment and complained "nobody wants to work at peach or apple picking and packing". By 1999, a retiring shoe repairman in Florida put it this way: "Nobody wants to work anymore. They all want to work in front of a computer and make lots of money".

The compilation landed right in the middle of the "quiet quitting" discourse of late 2022. The Jacobin connected the meme to a longer intellectual tradition, noting that Paul Lafargue had been arguing against the "love of work" since his 1880 pamphlet *The Right to Be Lazy*.

How to Use This Meme

The meme works in two main formats:

Sign parody format: Take the template "We are closed because nobody wants to work anymore" and swap in an absurd, fictional, or satirical reason for the closure. The joke typically lands harder when the replacement reason is obviously ridiculous, drawing a parallel to how silly the original complaint sounds.

Historical compilation format: Share the newspaper clippings (or excerpts from them) in response to anyone complaining about modern work ethic. The implied point: if people have been saying this for over a century, maybe it's not today's workers who are the problem.

Both formats are most commonly deployed to challenge employers, business owners, or commentators who frame staffing shortages as a moral failing of workers rather than a reflection of wages and conditions.

Cultural Impact

The meme intersected with one of the most significant labor market shifts in recent American history. Eater's reporting broke down the real dynamics behind restaurant staffing: a February 2021 UCSF study found line cooks had the highest pandemic mortality rate of any occupation in the country. Matt Glassman, a Los Angeles restaurant owner, explained that reopening at limited capacity meant bartenders' effective hourly wages (including tips) dropped from $50-60 to $25-30, while back-of-house staff worked in 400-square-foot kitchens where "there's no mask in the world that's going to protect you".

The burnout data backed up the meme's subtext. A 2021 Indeed survey showed Millennials and Generation Z employees reporting burnout rates of 59% and 58% respectively. An Asana survey from the same year found Generation Z workers in the U.S. experienced the highest burnout levels of any age group.

Fairie's analysis through the netmonkey.net blog added an important wrinkle: not all the historical "nobody wants to work" articles were capitalists complaining about cheap labor. Many were simply older people grumbling about younger generations in a pattern as old as intergenerational tension itself.

The UK experienced a parallel situation in 2020. Despite 1.3 million people losing their jobs to COVID, 150 Romanian workers had to be flown from Bucharest to pick fruit because British workers wouldn't take the agricultural positions.

Fun Facts

The oldest documented use of the phrase in the viral compilation is from 1894 in the Rooks County Record, written during a coal miners' strike.

In 1940, Wisconsin Governor Julius Heil used the phrase in a public statement about legislation, saying "The trouble is everybody is on relief or a pension, nobody wants to work anymore".

A 1946 Virginia bill literally proposed abolishing work because "nobody wants to work".

In 1979, a New Orleans dry cleaner permanently closed his business and told a reporter that a job applicant had laughed at his $3/hour offer because she could clear $106 a week on welfare.

Isaac Furman, a former line cook, described discovering that subsidized health insurance through restaurant work cost him $500/month on wages that barely covered his living expenses. "There's absolutely no safety net," he told Eater.

Derivatives & Variations

"No One Wants to X Anymore" snowclone:

The template extended beyond work into dating, gaming, and everyday complaints, always used ironically to mock someone treating a universal phenomenon as a novel crisis[1].

Lady Dimitrescu labor shortage parody:

A tweet blaming the Resident Evil Village character for staff shortages gained over 23,000 likes on Twitter[5].

Lord of the Rings parody sign:

A version incorporating LOTR dialogue earned over 2,400 retweets[5].

Quiet quitting crossover:

The 2022 compilation wave overlapped with and fed into the quiet quitting discourse, with the meme used to deflate claims that modern workers were uniquely lazy[6].

Frequently Asked Questions

Nobody Wants To Work Anymore

2021Sign photo / snowclone / image macroclassic

Also known as: "No One Wants to Work Anymore" · "We Are Short-Staffed"

Nobody Wants To Work Anymore is a 2021 meme format of handwritten business signs blaming workers for labor shortages, which became a viral punchline after researcher Paul Fairie documented the identical complaint dates to 1894.

"Nobody Wants to Work Anymore" started as handwritten signs posted by short-staffed American businesses in spring 2021 and became one of the defining memes of pandemic-era labor discourse. The phrase took on a second life in 2022 when researcher Paul Fairie compiled newspaper clippings proving that people have been saying the exact same thing since 1894, turning a tired employer complaint into a punchline about the cyclical nature of blaming workers.

TL;DR

"Nobody Wants to Work Anymore" started as handwritten signs posted by short-staffed American businesses in spring 2021 and became one of the defining memes of pandemic-era labor discourse.

Overview

The meme operates on two levels. On the surface, it's the actual signs that appeared at restaurants and businesses across the United States in 2021, pleading for customer patience while blaming staffing shortages on people who supposedly don't want to work. On a deeper level, it's the compiled evidence that this complaint is at least 130 years old, showing up in newspaper editorials, reader letters, and political speeches across every decade. The gap between the sign-posters' belief that they're describing something new and the historical record proving otherwise is where the humor lives.

On April 9, 2021, TikTok user @BrittanyJade903 filmed a sign taped to a McDonald's drive-thru window. It read: "We are short-staffed. Please be patient with the staff that did show up. Nobody wants to work anymore." The video picked up over 98,000 likes on TikTok. The sign was one of the earliest to go viral, but similar messages were already cropping up at businesses nationwide as states began rolling back COVID-19 restrictions and restaurants rushed to reopen at limited capacity.

The broader context was a massive disruption in the restaurant labor market. Nearly two million restaurant and bar workers had lost their jobs between March and April 2020. Many found work in other industries and didn't come back. Those who stuck with food service faced cyclical layoffs and rehires as regulations shifted and individual COVID exposures forced repeated closures.

Origin & Background

Platform
TikTok (sign photos), Twitter (newspaper clippings thread)
Key People
@BrittanyJade903, Paul Fairie
Date
2021
Year
2021

On April 9, 2021, TikTok user @BrittanyJade903 filmed a sign taped to a McDonald's drive-thru window. It read: "We are short-staffed. Please be patient with the staff that did show up. Nobody wants to work anymore." The video picked up over 98,000 likes on TikTok. The sign was one of the earliest to go viral, but similar messages were already cropping up at businesses nationwide as states began rolling back COVID-19 restrictions and restaurants rushed to reopen at limited capacity.

The broader context was a massive disruption in the restaurant labor market. Nearly two million restaurant and bar workers had lost their jobs between March and April 2020. Many found work in other industries and didn't come back. Those who stuck with food service faced cyclical layoffs and rehires as regulations shifted and individual COVID exposures forced repeated closures.

How It Spread

Within a week of the McDonald's video, photos of similar signs flooded social media. On April 14, 2021, a Twitter user shared pictures of a comparable sign at a New Mexico Sonic, pulling in thousands of retweets. By early May, a North Carolina reporter tweeted about a Chattanooga restaurant that had to shut down entirely due to staffing. Workers and their supporters pushed back hard. One viral quote-tweet pointed out the Chattanooga restaurant paid its servers $2.15 an hour. Former U.S. Secretary of Labor Robert Reich posted a thread arguing there was no labor shortage, only "a shortage of employers willing to pay their workers a living wage".

The mockery turned creative fast. The phrase "We are closed because nobody wants to work anymore" became a snowclone template, with users writing parody versions blaming fictional characters for the shortage. One tweet blamed Lady Dimitrescu from Resident Evil Village, earning over 23,000 likes. Another used a Lord of the Rings quote, picking up over 12,200 likes.

The meme's second major wave broke on July 20, 2022, when the Great Socialist Cat Memes Facebook page shared an image titled "Nobody Wants to Work Anymore: A Brief History of Capitalists Complaining That Nobody Wants to Work for Starvation Wages". Four days later, the same compilation appeared on Twitter. Both posts racked up thousands of shares and retweets.

The image pulled from a thread by Paul Fairie, a University of Calgary researcher who posts under the handle @paulisci. Fairie had dug through the newspaper archive site Newspapers.com and surfaced 14 distinct clippings spanning 1894 to 2022, each featuring someone expressing the "nobody wants to work" sentiment as though it were a brand-new observation. Snopes verified every clipping in the set, confirming their authenticity through the Newspapers.com archives.

The clippings painted a vivid picture. In 1894, an editorial in the Rooks County Record complained about striking coal miners. In 1922, a Kansas reader blamed unemployment on people wanting "to work half of the time and loaf half of the time". During the Great Depression in 1937, peach orchardists in Pennsylvania couldn't find pickers despite widespread unemployment and complained "nobody wants to work at peach or apple picking and packing". By 1999, a retiring shoe repairman in Florida put it this way: "Nobody wants to work anymore. They all want to work in front of a computer and make lots of money".

The compilation landed right in the middle of the "quiet quitting" discourse of late 2022. The Jacobin connected the meme to a longer intellectual tradition, noting that Paul Lafargue had been arguing against the "love of work" since his 1880 pamphlet *The Right to Be Lazy*.

How to Use This Meme

The meme works in two main formats:

Sign parody format: Take the template "We are closed because nobody wants to work anymore" and swap in an absurd, fictional, or satirical reason for the closure. The joke typically lands harder when the replacement reason is obviously ridiculous, drawing a parallel to how silly the original complaint sounds.

Historical compilation format: Share the newspaper clippings (or excerpts from them) in response to anyone complaining about modern work ethic. The implied point: if people have been saying this for over a century, maybe it's not today's workers who are the problem.

Both formats are most commonly deployed to challenge employers, business owners, or commentators who frame staffing shortages as a moral failing of workers rather than a reflection of wages and conditions.

Cultural Impact

The meme intersected with one of the most significant labor market shifts in recent American history. Eater's reporting broke down the real dynamics behind restaurant staffing: a February 2021 UCSF study found line cooks had the highest pandemic mortality rate of any occupation in the country. Matt Glassman, a Los Angeles restaurant owner, explained that reopening at limited capacity meant bartenders' effective hourly wages (including tips) dropped from $50-60 to $25-30, while back-of-house staff worked in 400-square-foot kitchens where "there's no mask in the world that's going to protect you".

The burnout data backed up the meme's subtext. A 2021 Indeed survey showed Millennials and Generation Z employees reporting burnout rates of 59% and 58% respectively. An Asana survey from the same year found Generation Z workers in the U.S. experienced the highest burnout levels of any age group.

Fairie's analysis through the netmonkey.net blog added an important wrinkle: not all the historical "nobody wants to work" articles were capitalists complaining about cheap labor. Many were simply older people grumbling about younger generations in a pattern as old as intergenerational tension itself.

The UK experienced a parallel situation in 2020. Despite 1.3 million people losing their jobs to COVID, 150 Romanian workers had to be flown from Bucharest to pick fruit because British workers wouldn't take the agricultural positions.

Fun Facts

The oldest documented use of the phrase in the viral compilation is from 1894 in the Rooks County Record, written during a coal miners' strike.

In 1940, Wisconsin Governor Julius Heil used the phrase in a public statement about legislation, saying "The trouble is everybody is on relief or a pension, nobody wants to work anymore".

A 1946 Virginia bill literally proposed abolishing work because "nobody wants to work".

In 1979, a New Orleans dry cleaner permanently closed his business and told a reporter that a job applicant had laughed at his $3/hour offer because she could clear $106 a week on welfare.

Isaac Furman, a former line cook, described discovering that subsidized health insurance through restaurant work cost him $500/month on wages that barely covered his living expenses. "There's absolutely no safety net," he told Eater.

Derivatives & Variations

"No One Wants to X Anymore" snowclone:

The template extended beyond work into dating, gaming, and everyday complaints, always used ironically to mock someone treating a universal phenomenon as a novel crisis[1].

Lady Dimitrescu labor shortage parody:

A tweet blaming the Resident Evil Village character for staff shortages gained over 23,000 likes on Twitter[5].

Lord of the Rings parody sign:

A version incorporating LOTR dialogue earned over 2,400 retweets[5].

Quiet quitting crossover:

The 2022 compilation wave overlapped with and fed into the quiet quitting discourse, with the meme used to deflate claims that modern workers were uniquely lazy[6].

Frequently Asked Questions