A TikTok video of a man ordering 10,000 water cups at a Wendy’s drive-thru has gone viral, apparently exposing how the fast food chain’s AI ordering system works and its limitations. The clip was posted by a user going by Chef Boy R Dean, with the handle @spacejesus_21, and has since pulled in over 2.2 million views. The TikTok video was posted with the caption “@Wendy’s get rid of the AI #antiai #boycottai,” and included an on-screen caption that read, “Doing my part in the AI revolution.” The footage, shot from inside a car on what appeared to be a bright, sunny day, shows the driver pulling up to a tall black “ORDER HERE” sign at a Wendy’s drive-thru. In the video, an automated voice greets the driver, stating, “Welcome to Wendy’s. Would you like a spicy chicken or a Big Bacon Classic Minions meal?” The driver then responds with a deliberate order of “10,000 water cups,” to which the AI replies, “No problem.” Wendy’s AI drive-thru system appeared to accept the order before a human employee stepped in Almost immediately after the AI accepted the order, a human employee’s voice cuts in, asking, “What can I get you?” The driver then explains that he is actually there to pick up a mobile order, suggesting the unusual request may have triggered an override or flag in the system which prompted staff to intervene. @spacejesus_21 @Wendy’s get rid of the AI #antiai #boycottai ♬ original sound – Chef Boy R Dean The video appears to show that a human employee was still monitoring the AI ordering system during the interaction. This detail drew significant attention in the comments, with many viewers questioning the value of the technology if human oversight is still required. One commenter wrote, “So they still need someone to listen and make sure the orders are real… so the AI is LITERALLY USELESS.” Another user added, “I dont get it. If you need an human employee to babysit your AI, why pay AI at all instead of giving him a raise?” The cost of the system also became a talking point among viewers. “using Ai costs more than a minimum wage employee,” one commenter claimed. Another user offered a different approach to disrupting the system, writing, “no the trick is to not respond. if the ai doesn’t hear you, it flags an error in the system that has to be manually checked out.” Not everyone in the comments agreed that the system was AI in the traditional sense. One viewer pushed back on the framing, writing, “It’s not ai, it’s an automated response system… it’s called an IVR, you should be familiar with them from call centers for like.. forever??” The nature of the technology used at the drive-thru was not independently verified. The humorous side of the exchange also caught on, with one commenter joking, “the AI heard 10,000 water cups & thought but thats my lunch.” The lighthearted reaction was mixed with broader commentary about the role of automation in fast food, a topic that has drawn public debate in recent years. Similar large orders at McDonald’s drive-thrus have also gone viral, like one where the total came to exactly $69. Wendy’s has not publicly commented on the video, and it is not confirmed whether the system shown is a proprietary AI tool or a third-party automated ordering platform. The video does not confirm whether the driver faced any further interaction at the pickup window regarding the order. Similar incidents where people appear to test or challenge AI systems at other chains often require manager approval for unusual requests.