[视频] 卡拉尼克舌战汽车司机# JobHunting - 待字闺中
N*s
1 楼
https://youtu.be/gTEDYCkNqns?t=3m56s
“I don’t know if you remember me, but it’s fine,” Kamel says. The pair
begin talking shop, and Kalanick explains
that they’re going to cut down on the number of black cars, which will
reduce competition and should be good for
Kamel.
Then Kamel says what every driver has been dying to tell Kalanick: “You’re
raising the standards, and you’re
dropping the prices.”
Kalanick: “We’re not dropping the prices on black.”
Kamel: “But in general the whole price is—”
Kalanick: “We have to; we have competitors; otherwise, we’d go out of
business.”
Kamel: “Competitors? Man, you had the business model in your hands. You
could have the prices you want, but
you choose to buy everybody a ride.”
Kalanick: “No, no no. You misunderstand me. We started high-end. We didn’t
go low-end because we wanted to.
We went low-end because we had to because we’d be out of business.”
Kamel: “What? Lyft? It’s a piece of cake right there.”
Kalanick: “It seems like a piece of cake because I’ve beaten them. But if
I didn’t do the things I did, we would have
been beaten, I promise.”
The two bat that idea around, and Kamel brings the conversation back to his
losses.
Kamel: “But people are not trusting you anymore. … I lost $97,000 because
of you. I'm bankrupt because of you.
Yes, yes, yes. You keep changing every day. You keep changing every day.”
Kalanick: “Hold on a second, what have I changed about Black? What have I
changed?”
Kamel: “You changed the whole business. You dropped the prices.”
Kalanick: “On black?”
Kamel: “Yes, you did.”
Kalanick begins to lose his temper. “Bullshit,” he says.
Kamel: “We started with $20.”
Kalanick: “Bullshit.”
Kamel: “We started with $20. How much is the mile now, $2.75?”
Kalanick: “You know what?”
Kamel: “What?”
Kalanick: “Some people don't like to take responsibility for their own shit
. They blame everything in their life on
somebody else. Good luck!”
Kamel: “Good luck to you, but I know [you're not] going to go far.”
The door slams. Kamel drives away. Later, the Uber driver app prompts him to
rate Kalanick, as he does all his
riders. Kamel gives him one star.
“I don’t know if you remember me, but it’s fine,” Kamel says. The pair
begin talking shop, and Kalanick explains
that they’re going to cut down on the number of black cars, which will
reduce competition and should be good for
Kamel.
Then Kamel says what every driver has been dying to tell Kalanick: “You’re
raising the standards, and you’re
dropping the prices.”
Kalanick: “We’re not dropping the prices on black.”
Kamel: “But in general the whole price is—”
Kalanick: “We have to; we have competitors; otherwise, we’d go out of
business.”
Kamel: “Competitors? Man, you had the business model in your hands. You
could have the prices you want, but
you choose to buy everybody a ride.”
Kalanick: “No, no no. You misunderstand me. We started high-end. We didn’t
go low-end because we wanted to.
We went low-end because we had to because we’d be out of business.”
Kamel: “What? Lyft? It’s a piece of cake right there.”
Kalanick: “It seems like a piece of cake because I’ve beaten them. But if
I didn’t do the things I did, we would have
been beaten, I promise.”
The two bat that idea around, and Kamel brings the conversation back to his
losses.
Kamel: “But people are not trusting you anymore. … I lost $97,000 because
of you. I'm bankrupt because of you.
Yes, yes, yes. You keep changing every day. You keep changing every day.”
Kalanick: “Hold on a second, what have I changed about Black? What have I
changed?”
Kamel: “You changed the whole business. You dropped the prices.”
Kalanick: “On black?”
Kamel: “Yes, you did.”
Kalanick begins to lose his temper. “Bullshit,” he says.
Kamel: “We started with $20.”
Kalanick: “Bullshit.”
Kamel: “We started with $20. How much is the mile now, $2.75?”
Kalanick: “You know what?”
Kamel: “What?”
Kalanick: “Some people don't like to take responsibility for their own shit
. They blame everything in their life on
somebody else. Good luck!”
Kamel: “Good luck to you, but I know [you're not] going to go far.”
The door slams. Kamel drives away. Later, the Uber driver app prompts him to
rate Kalanick, as he does all his
riders. Kamel gives him one star.