A Georgia woman said she and her friends were denied entry to a restaurant near Atlanta because they did not have a reservation, even though the dining room appeared empty at the time. TikTok user @_lifewitdri shared the experience in a video, which had amassed more than 515,000 views as of this writing. The video shows the woman narrating her visit while walking through the parking lot and into the restaurant.
According to the video, the incident took place at A Taste of Tara, a brunch spot located in a plaza in Jonesboro, Georgia. “Me and my friends went to A Taste of Tara for brunch on Father’s Day,” she said in the video. “And they won’t let us in ’cause we don’t have a reservation. Ain’t nobody in here.”
The comments section included mixed reactions, with some users saying they had already had disappointing experiences at the restaurant. “I went before and didn’t like the food so you didn’t miss anything,” one commenter wrote. Another commenter joked, “It looks like nobody is getting a taste of Tara 😂😂,” while a separate user criticized the restaurant’s appearance, writing, “Place still looks like a nail salon 😒.”
Restaurants can legally require reservations under certain conditions
The viral TikTok video shows the woman filming from inside a car before approaching the restaurant on foot. A sign reading “TASTE OF TARA SOUTHERN BRUNCH” is visible above the storefront, which is decorated with pink and blue balloons and window decals. As the video continues, a woman believed to be the narrator’s friend opens the restaurant’s front door, revealing an interior decorated with booths, tables with gold-backed chairs, and artificial cherry blossom trees.
The dining area appears empty in the footage, with no customers visible at any of the tables. “B-, ain’t nobody in here. What the f-?” the narrator says in the video while panning the camera across the unoccupied dining room.
Some commenters online reacted to the video by predicting consequences for the business, with one writing, “Watch it be shutdown by next week.” A Taste of Tara has not publicly responded to the video or the claims made in it as of this writing. One commenter appeared to defend the restaurant’s decision, writing, “In their defense, all of those tables may have already been reserved for guest is why they couldn’t accommodate.”
Restaurants in the United States generally have wide discretion to require reservations, limit walk-in customers, or decline service. However, this discretion does not extend to refusing service based on protected characteristics such as race, religion, or disability, which would be considered discrimination under federal and state law.
Based on this framework, a restaurant can legally tell customers that tables are reserved even if the dining room looks empty at that moment, reports AllHipHop. Other recent restaurant disputes have also gone viral, including a case involving a large cash payment for a food order.
Eater Atlanta reported that restaurants spend significant amounts of money on reservation platforms and often prepare food in advance based on the number of bookings they expect. Even a small number of cancellations seem to noticeably cut into a restaurant’s daily revenue. This has reportedly led some restaurant owners to enforce stricter reservation policies than customers might anticipate.
Atlanta has reportedly experienced a higher-than-average rate of no-show reservations compared with many other American cities. This trend has apparently encouraged some restaurant operators in the area to prioritize confirmed reservations over walk-in customers.
Complaints about strict dress codes, mandatory gratuities, complicated reservation systems, and inconsistent service have reportedly circulated online for years, contributing to what some describe as a local stereotype about Atlanta’s dining scene. Atlanta has become a major destination for conventions, tourism, and entertainment, increasing demand for restaurants that operate more like curated event spaces than traditional eateries.
Reservation systems and timed seating windows have reportedly become increasingly common at popular brunch destinations in the city as a result of this trend. At the same time, labor shortages, rising costs, and ongoing debates over tipping have apparently placed additional strain on customer service across the restaurant industry nationwide.
Restaurant owners have reportedly said that staffing challenges and shifting consumer expectations are affecting dining experiences broadly, not only in Atlanta. Unusual restaurant encounters involving customer safety have also drawn online attention recently, including a case where a diner said she learned of an alleged plan by a restaurant employee after placing her order.
Published: Jul 6, 2026 12:32 pm