Young Nigerian Uber driver shares sweet and bad experiences with passengers

Young Nigerian Uber driver shares sweet and bad experiences with passengers

- A former Uber driver has taken to Twitter to share his experience with his passengers

- The Nigerian man with the handle @MaxOfLagos says he encountered rude and respectful passengers when he worked as a Uber driver

- According to him, he also encountered a passenger who helped him get a voice-over job

- Our Manifesto: This is what YEN.com.gh believes in

A Nigerian man who worked as a Uber driver for a few months in Lagos has taken to Twitter to share his experience with passengers.

The young man with the Twitter handle @MaxOfLagos said everyone in Lagos is rude, adding that the worst of them are those that cannot afford a car.

Sharing his experience, he admitted that there were good passengers he also encountered. He said one of them helped him get a voice-over job.

READ ALSO: 22m Ghanaians suffered income slash over COVID-19 – GSS report

He said there was a female passenger "who made the mandatory joke about getting a different kind of "ride" in addition to the Uber ride".

Read his full narration below:

"I was an Uber driver for a few months in Lagos. Gender doesn't matter, almost everyone is rude.

"I did notice a pattern: the worst of them tended to be the ones who definitely cannot afford a car. Reason unclear, cause you'd think they'd appreciate the value more.

Young Nigerian Uber driver shares sweet and bad experiences with passengers
According to him, he also encountered a passenger who helped him get a voice-over job. Photo credit: @MaxOfLagos/Twitter
Source: Twitter

"Also, almost everyone is apparently unable to read and understand the meaning of "Your driver is completing a trip nearby".

"I'm sure it sounds like a simple concept now when you read it, but it really does escape most people.

"Always amusing and somewhat embarrassing when someone starts out very rude and by the end of the trip they're asking if they can save your phone number to discuss "business" or some other such thing.

"There were some good ones. For example, I met the person who helped me land the voiceover of that Johnnie Walker ad when I picked him up for an Uber ride.

There was of course that one chick who made the mandatory joke about getting a different kind of "ride" in addition to the Uber ride. She didn't get what she was looking for.

READ ALSO: Ghanaian mother narrates how she got disabled after receiving wrong medication at hospital

"There was a lady who was going to visit/fight her in-laws somewhere on the Ogun State border. Very lucrative and entertaining trip. She brought snacks, the fight ended in a victory for us and everyone was home before sundown.

"Generally people are surprised to find that their Uber car is an SUV and then further surprised when they hear me speak. Interestingly, they almost always assumed the reason I was driving was that I was down on my luck. One person tried to buy the car, that was quite strange.

"I once picked up a group of university kids from Ibadan who were here for a beach party. What I found interesting about them is how incredibly respectful they were. Confirmation that only Lagos people don't have sense.

"Driving in the Chevron/Agungi area really exposed me to the internet fraud community and I found it interesting how established they are and the remarkably ordinary nature of their lives. We often imagine them to be like those guys the FBI arrests. Not always the case.

"That last tweet isn't an endorsement of fraud. Just pointing out that they don't all live flashy lives based on my observations. It is still a crime.

"The foreigners I picked up were also interesting. There was a Syrian guy who barely spoke a lick of English and believed he could make it as a mechanic in Nigeria. I followed up, he now runs a restaurant owned by another Syrian.

"There was an Italian lady who thought that Nigeria was hopeless because she believed young people are just as corrupt as the older people who currently run the country. We didn't get to explore that further but it was curious that it came from a foreigner who lives here.

READ ALSO: Man threatening police officer with gun begged to calm by soldiers in video

"Fellow from Taiwan who thought Nigerians rich business potential but always got lazy and chose to do things that everyone else was already doing rather than innovate. He learned this in 15 years of doing business here. I didn't disagree."

Share your stories and news by getting interactive on our Facebook page!

Source: YEN.com.gh

Online view pixel