When he told her she's not DT I lost it. Couldnt tell if he was complimenting or insulting DT. Like does he think T is so alpha he could make a scooter a car or he thinks he's so crazy he'd try to do it
Mobility Mary is straight up a Postal character. Like I could see the dude fighting a legion of old people on scooters and then fighting her as a boss.
I work in a library, and ya'll gotta know how many old women sound and act exactly like this. "Excuse me, ma'am?! Those children are LAUGHING and making NOISE!" Yes, ma'am, we're having a dance party in the children's area and have signs out indicating things might be a bit noisier than usual.
I work in banking, and have seen old geezers throw a fit over literal pocket change, or come in and treat the lobby as their social clubhouse where they talk as loudly as possible.
Dude there was this one old lady in a movie theater that was sitting in the seats that me and my friends paid for. One of my friends asked her politely to move and she was like “Can’t have crap in this country”.
"NOOOO!!! NOOOO!!! NOOOO!!!!!" Funny, I had that same reaction when I worked retail and saw some decrepit old lady on a mobility scooter coming my way to complain about something.
Nothing aggravates me more than the 'almost' people. You almost hit me, a glass close to the edge is almost falling off, it's as if they think they're living in a different physics engine than everybody else.
I mean some things CAN be helpful. Like in the table example, saying "hey can scooch the glass in a bit" is just trying to prevent an accident, but to obsess about it and to act like it's a great personal offense is entirely different.
She’s not afraid of dogs. You can tell that she’s calm when she first starts talking, then she pauses for a moment while deciding about how she’s going to play the whole thing up.
Whole foods dude "thank you ill take that into consideration" "take that up with management" "you're insane" "I'm surprised that you shop here" I gotta use those on my job
I`m german. I´ve learned the "Thank you I´ll take it into consideration" actually means: "I hear you and I dont give a shit" Now I´m using it too and it´s funny how some americans are happy with that answer, thinking I meant what I said.
@lolbitbot4791 Pretty common among Millenials and Gen Z too. No generation is short of people who think they're in the position to tell others what they can and can't do.
@TheHallow31 But the amount of boomers who are like that completely overshadows the amount of other generations, even older ones. Boomers are just whiney and entitled.
@parker486 And I could say the same about Millenials and Gen Z. They're all genuinely terrible. It just depends on the situation; time and place. I've yet to see anything to convince me that one particular generation is worse than the others.
She probably looked old af and considering the comments saying this was in California dude probably thought he was getting racially profiled by a racist trump supporter
My uncle pulled off a few similar stunts back in the day. He became wheelchair-bound due to a brain tumor in his late fifties and drove around on a mobility scooter for the rest of his life. He drove that thing at the highest possible speed at all times and had zero regard for the safety of pedestrians. I saw him charge straight into a croud at a fair once, going around 10 kilometers an hour. That wasn't the only day people got to taste the bite of his scooter. At some point he got a volunteer job as an accessability inspector, where he was supposed to drive around public spaces and then make suggestions to the local village council on how to improve accessability. What he ended up doing was drive around the neighbourhood harassing random people because the PRIVATE apartment building or house they lived in didn't have a wheelchair ramp. My uncle and aunt had also been notoriously stingy their entire lifes and the disability didn't change anything about that. They went on a cruise once and booked the smallest possible cabin instead of one designed for accessability (which wouldn't have been that much more expensive). Of course that small cabin was barely capable of containing my uncle and his scooter and he ended up complaining throughout the entire holiday. My aunt filed a complaint regarding poor customer service and lacking accessability options afterwards. The cruise organizers fired back with an open letter published in a newsletter describing my aunt and uncle as "the worst customers we've ever had" and how their crew had tried everything in their power to help them despite their poor choices, only to get yelled at and ignored. On a final note, my uncle once lost control over his mighty steed whilst going at his usual speed, missed a bridge and flew his scooter into a small stream. He remained largely unharmed, but the scooter perished amidst the waves. After this incident everyone that knew my uncle expected him to get a smaller, slower replacement to reduce the risk to himself and all those forced to share the road with him. It also would have been a lot less expensive, but he surprised everyone by getting the fastest scooter available to him. Again. Rest in peace, uncle, you were egrigiously unpleasant to be around, but I'll never forget you.
God bless your uncle what a great man. He kept people active and on their toes and probably saved people from heart attacks with the excessive blood flow to their brains and limbs from all the anger they experienced.
@@Chris-bh3cm The dog thing, people blocking the crosswalk and almost hitting her, and also blocking the sidewalk with a homeless camp. Pretty much all of that is illegal. She's crazy but she does actually show moments where people almost hit her illegally. Which is more often than this video creator gives her credit for. Drivers are genuinely so stupid so often, and I have just about been hit simply walking many times lmao, and I don't walk that often and I am very cautious. Some towns are worse than others about it.
@@PhantomEagle..old people usually aren’t clever enough to think that far ahead. The amount of dedication and nastiness you’d have to have to approach randos in a threatening way would be too dangerous for the elderly. The only way I’d believe it is if there was another person in the video filming it. The fact that it’s all just her makes me wonder what would be the benefit to faking any of this. With a cameraman, I could imagine a script or the guy giving her ideas of how to mess with people, but I’ve seen people like this, there is no trolling going on. Just trolling herself
@@scottoleson1997 But theres also the matter of why she would record and upload it herself, most people like this stick on the internet for various reasons but she just terrorized the streets of LA and flat out disappeared. Im not sure if people have found proof of her death, but its unbelievable to think she just randomly died without a trace after being such a public spectacle. Theres definitely a solid chance she was/is an S tier troll
@@jackofastora8962 logically though, the amount of dedication and time to do that for someone who was most likely in their 70’s, I think that’s extremely unlikely. Maybe she is still alive, and just got moved into a retirement community or something. Why would she upload it herself unless it’s just for that original point of capturing on video, the “worst drivers of LA” to her perspective that’s her goal.
The man who said "youre insane and im surprised you shop here" is my hero. I remember seeing this clip back in the day. Always wondered what happened to Mary
I will say that while Mary goes about this the wrong way, there are leash laws for dogs, and people really should be following them. Your dog “being nice” doesn’t mean you get to ignore them. Just put the damn leash on.
Lol! The way that old boxer reacted to her screaming "OH NOO!! AN UNLEASHED DOOGG!!"! Bro just trotted up all happy like "a new friend!" but quickly was "wait.. holup.." 🤣
6:26 She should have said: "They won't bite, jump or scratch you." "They'll just eat you up in one go. Swallowing you whole without even chewing, because they are obviously terrible, giant monsters."
This lady reminds me of 90% of the residents on South Whidbey Island. I worked in a restaurant there for 9 years and this lady sounds EXACTLY like every mean old lady that would complain about nothing.
7:09 I always take her claims at face value so she is a large old woman covered head to toe in these massive scars from the various dog attacks she’s endured throughout her life.
The unleashed dogs, she is right about though. Nobody wants to be hugged, sniffed, kissed or attacked by your fleabags, it's cool if you have a dog but it's yours, so keep it near your person and not running around to any random passer by who the dog thinks it needs to interact with.
she's right to an extent. not in every case and certainly not every time but these are real obstacles that disabled people face. She could have well turned around before the encampment too but maybe this is performance art.
As a wheelchair user who goes to college in a city, i can confirm it is sometimes easier to drive over roads rather than the sidewalk, due to edges of sidewalks often being to high / steep to safely move off of, however, you should ALWAYS drive as close as possible to the sidewalk and i can see that in some cases, Mary just drives on the middle of the road like she owns all of the asphalt in America. Also the fact that she cannot be bothered to buy a reflective armband or reflective tape for her scooter astounds me. What the Hell.
Every time I have to go into the road in my chair, even on a marked crosswalk, I’m so nervous and know I’m not meant to be there!! It’s wild how some people can just have zero situational awareness or self preservation
Yeah we have a few mentally fucked people here that use mobility scooters, and for some reason they actually view them as cars, I’ve had a couple older men take up the entire road with their scooters and get REALLY pissed off at me when I honk at them, I’m honking at you for your own safety because apparently you have no idea what is or is not safe, however I do not honk when they are obviously crossing or trying to find a spot to get up on to the curb, being disabled does not give people the right to be an inconvenience, and if they are, they try hard to not be. Nobody likes making others lives harder yet some don’t have a choice.
She doesn't need reflectors because her mere proximity brings a sudden sense of dread on everyone, even if they don't notice her with their senses. Besides, they'll probably hear whine drown out the honking cars anyways.
I don't, but I do agree because I ride my bike around and the sidewalks are pretty fucked around my neighborhood, and so when I do go on the road to avoid it it's always near the sidewalk.
As a wheelchair user I find myself in situations that get on my nerves but this woman just drives around looking for problems and putting herself in bad situations and whining about everything puts all the rest of us in a bad light.
My mom has bad knees and often uses the courtesy motor carts for customers when we go shopping. Every time she gets one we say to each other “it’s a disability mobility!” One of Mary‘s famous quotes.😂
@aquariandawn4750 As a driver I can say peds and cyclists can deal with an inch of a bumper over the line, especially since they have the entitlement of a toddler in the middle of the street whenever they bike in it
I love seeing her crazy shenanigans, however even though she’s totally overreacting, leash your dog! Everyone’s dog is friendly to them, but some crazy person will get bit by your peaceful dog, protect your dog, leash it
Tbh that lady who responds to Mary's bs about her dogs by being just as nice and wonderful as possible is kind of an amazing move Just does not engage in Mary trying to bait her into a confrontation and tells her to have a wonderful holiday You can still hear the petty edge in the "you're a wonderful person" but it still sounds so sweet in tone theres literally nothing for Mary to latch onto and turn into an argument where she plays victim
@@WobblesandBean Oh yeah definitely, dogs should be kept on leashes when not in places where it's safe for them to be off a leash, but Mary just does not handle the situation well at all and turns it less into a "Hey you should have your dogs leashed" scenario and more of an "Oh woe is me" one If she had been more civil about it I'd have been more on her side
I’m pretty sure this is actually PB in San Diego! I could be wrong, but I’ve seen all of these places in person and I rarely go to LA. I’ve lived in SD my whole life
What bites is that her channel idea wasn't terrible at all, not everywhere is accessible for disabled people and even where it is folks can still struggle thanks to the actions of careless folk. She just had the completely wrong attitude about it all.
The first motorist is correct....mobility scooters like hers are not allowed to be "driven" in the street. The Whole Foods employee calling her "insane" is spot on! 😂
I've seen people of all ages act like this. Its like they haven't emotionally matured past the age of 4. I think its because they never get told no and no one ever gives them major pushback for their behavior. From someone claiming my mom can't park in handicapped areas (She has a bad hip and knee and I have 2 wheelchair bound sisters). To young people claiming we take too long in checkout lines to toddlers throwing massive fits because they didn't get a toy or candy. Its everywhere. Luckily it seems the worst of the worst is what we see online and not everywhere 24/7 so there's that. Entitlement to that degree has to be some sort of mental illness.
I’m not sure if she’s still with him but her husband who encouraged her to get on the scooter in the first place was named Zachariah Hadel and he should be punished
The video of Mary on the underpass and being blocked by all that stuff is possibly my favorite and yet most frustrating video of hers, for the simple fact that *she had to have seen it first*. Its a crystal clear, bright and sunny day, and theres enough light to be able to see clear across the underpass. And Mary isnt blind; she's an annoying, entitled idiot, but not blind. Which means she saw the homeless person's/people's stuff *long* before she got up to it. She had every opportunity in the world to turn around before she got there, or to just not go that way once she saw it was obstructed. She deliberately *chose* to waddle up to it on her little Rascal scooter, and act like she had no way of seeing it before she had no room to avoid this situation. Thats the story of Mobility Mary in a single clip; she goes out of her way to put herself in situations for the sole purpose of whining and pretending she's being inconvenienced or victimized. She knowingly jumps into a pool just so she can cry about getting her clothes wet and blame the person who filled the pool.
What if you needed medication that day from the chemist or were out of groceries and that's the only way to the shops. Personally I think it's justified to be upset about not being able to use the footpath properly. I know America has a huge homeless problem and feel sorry that they're governments don't do more to help, but blocking sidewalls is a valid problem especially when the only way around is to try your luck in traffic and hope you don't get hit.
I think that she believes that life dealt her a bad hand so getting into these small arguments over trivial nonsense is the last feeling of control she has.
Honestly only thing I agree with Mary on his making sure your dog is leashed. It's not safe to just have your dog wandering around in public and you can never assume a strange dog you meet will always be friendly. Everything else she complains about is insane tho lol
people pulling into crosswalks and stopping is also super annoying. its not that hard to stop before it and just make sure nobody is there before you start pulling into the intersection. her being mad about people whipping up to crosswalks and almost hitting her is also honestly valid, id be pissed too. not too sure about the rest lmao
I HATE most dog owners these days. No one leashes their dog, no one trains their dog, the streets are full of loud, aggressive, unleashed dogs and their entitled owners act like it's everyone else's problem.
Unfortunately it is people like these who give those of us with disabilities a bad reputation. I have apologized to numerous bus drivers on behalf of rude and inconsiderate people in wheelchairs and mobility scooters because I didn't want them to think that everyone who is disabled is an asshole like that. There are those of us who are nice and respectful and don't beat other people over the head with our disabilities.
Hey man, we can easily tell when people aren't really disabled and are milking it, I'm sorry these people give you guys a bad reputation especially when y'all go through so much already.
@@toidIllorTAmI The problem is you really _can't_ always tell. Not all disabilities are inherently visible. Also that's not even what they were talkin' about.
She really is. This happened to me on my bike one time. I stopped and waited for an old lady to cross with her cart then passed behind her like 3 feet. She whips around and goes "you almost just RAN me OVER" I'm not going to argue with crazy so I said sorry like the lady in the black car did here. She accused me of stopping so I could TRY to hit her and then said she was going into Hobby Lobby to complain I was like "I have to go to work , I'll be over there." 🫠 I don't what to tell ya, but go off. And she said "you BETTER be" Fiesty grandma. I never saw that lady again.
Even if a dogs friendly they can jump up and scratch you, I remember my grandparents who's skin by a certain age became like paper. Once their own dog a silky terrier jumped up on my granddads leg as he was super excited at them coming home and pop ended up with 16 stitches down his shin. Happy excitable small dogs are the worst for scratching. Even my miniature poodle has accidentally drawn blood on my teenage kids by jumping up and her claws catching their skin and she's professionally groomed every 4 weeks. It's not just biting that can cause damage especially for older people. Every young person will find out how easy it is to tear their skin once their over a certain age.
@coachred6872 my dog is professionally groomed regularly which includes nail clipping. The consideration comes from knowing about older skin that is often quite papery and thin and tears much easier than most. Even with the nails clipped it can tear the skin by accident on older thin skinned individuals, it's quite possible that this was what the women was worried about.
@froggystyle9068 I didn't say it tore up a kids leg ,if you care to read again, that was my grandfather's leg, and it was his silky terrier that did it by accident. He is over 70 and has paper thin skin as most older people do. As for my miniature poodle her nails are trimmed by the groomer every 4 weeks and although she's drawn blood on me ,where my skin is thinning on my arms, she's still left red marks down my kids arms from her jumping. Not everyone has thick skin and people should be aware of it, even with trimmed claws there's still the potential for scratching and noone should have to put up with that from a dog that they don't own. Where I live, there are strict leash laws to prevent these types of issues.
We have several people who ride their scooters in the road. My favorite is when it just snowed, everything is dark and slick, and you round a country corner to see grandma going 2 mph on the highway.
I use a Go-Go mobility scooter and there are issues such as people parking at drop kerbs . However, there’s a thing called common sense. You treat a small scooter exactly like you do legs, you don’t step out in front of traffic, you don’t walk down the middle of the street, you don’t randomly shout at people who aren’t obstructing anyone for just talking.