A guy who brought ninja weapons to work.
A military vet who leapt from a 5th floor window to win an argument.
A lactose-intolerant candidate who broke into a federal building after too many cheese sticks.
Oh—and an interviewee who proudly said her coworker with cancer “got what she deserved.”
In this episode of The Bad Hire, Ken, Emma, and Morgan break down another round of shocking stories from the wild world of work. From unhinged Zoom interviews to horrifying background check fails, this one goes from funny to flat-out disturbing.
You’ll hear:
– A recruiter who couldn’t look past the bong and Cheez-Its in the background
– The job candidate who tanked the offer by yelling at HR
– A Jeopardy champ whose real résumé hid a dark secret
– A true story of how skipping a background check led to a massive school scandal
These stories aren’t just wild — they’re warnings.
💸 Want to win $10,000? Submit your bad hire story now at TheBadHire.com.
Key Takeaways
• Zoom backgrounds matter more than you think.
• Even charming hires can carry dangerous secrets.
• There are no awards for prevention — but HR heroes deserve them.
• Skipping background checks isn’t cutting corners — it’s gambling.
Follow, rate, and share The Bad Hire — your first line of defense against disaster.
A librarian who did absolutely nothing for 90 days. A bank robber who forgot to remove her work ID before committing the crime. A coder who lied about knowing code… then refused to let women review it.
In this episode of The Bad Hire, Ken, Emma, and Morgan dive into the most jaw-dropping hiring horror stories yet. From boxcutter threats to Reddit confessions, workplace meltdowns to police chases, each story will leave you stunned—and maybe even a little nervous about your next hire.
You’ll hear:
– A full breakdown of the most unbelievable Reddit submissions
– A real-life intern horror story that ended in HR-fueled chaos
– Why a bar called “Minnie’s” became the scene of a tased ex-employee
These stories are more than wild—they’re cautionary tales every hiring manager needs to hear.
💸 Want to win $10,000? Submit your bad hire story now at TheBadHire.com.
Key Takeaways
• Interviews are not background checks.
• Social media screenings can reveal red flags no résumé will.
• Sometimes the biggest risk to your business is the person you just hired.
Follow, rate, and share The Bad Hire — your first line of defense against disaster.
Did you know some hires don’t even make it to lunch on their first day? One threatened a coworker with a box cutter on a smoke break. Another proudly claimed the “Employee of the Month” parking spot, only to end up in a fistfight. And then there was Tom, the retail worker who built a secret “cubby cave” with stolen merchandise and was caught napping instead of stocking shelves.
In this episode of The Bad Hire, Ken, Emma, Nathan, and Morgan unpack some of the wildest, weirdest, and downright unbelievable hiring fails yet. You’ll hear about a librarian who spent 90 days doing absolutely nothing, a security guard who quit because he was afraid of the dark, and a bank robber who signed his real name before pulling the job. And just when you think it couldn’t get worse, we meet a line cook whose collapse on the grill led to one of the most surprising redemption stories ever shared on the podcast.
These stories will make you laugh, cringe, and wonder how some people even made it past the interview. More than anything, they’re proof that background checks, culture fit, and gut instinct can save you from your next bad hire.
And don’t forget: submitting your own bad hire story could win you $10,000 in The Bad Hire contest.
Key Takeaways
Background checks that take six months are basically useless.
Sometimes coworkers notice the “bad hire” long before management does.
Red flags can be obvious like clipping nails with scissors at your desk.
Even the worst bad hire stories can have a redemption arc.
Share your bad hire story for a chance to win $10,000.
In This Episode
[00:00] Introduction
[01:15] Reddit stories & call for submissions
[03:52] First day disaster: special needs job
[05:29] The 90-day do-nothing librarian
[07:54] Parking lot fistfight: interview gone wrong
[09:49] Manager fired for job hunting on LinkedIn
[11:22] Apartment complex employee punches resident
[12:08] Temp employee clips nails with scissors
[14:55] Security guard afraid of the dark
[15:50] Tom and the secret cubby
[18:08] Line cook’s drug use and redemption
[22:19] Six-month background check delay
[24:34] Employee adds urine to ramen
[26:11] Interviewing for a girlfriend
[28:43] Podcast wrap-up and sponsor message
Notable Quotes
[02:05] "Think about the teammate you hired that looked perfect on paper but turned out to be a walking disaster." – Ken Monroe
[07:47] "I had a candidate running late for an interview, parked in the employee of the month parking space. As the employee was returning to lunch, she ended up in a fist fight in the parking lot." – Ken Monroe
[08:51] "I watched someone get hired for back room, come to orientation, go outside on a smoke break, and immediately threaten someone with their new box cutter." – Ken Monroe
[14:59] "I had an employee quit because he was afraid of the dark. But what's funny is that his job was… He was a security guard on the night shift." – Emma
[24:39] "A current employee added urine to their ramen in the break room at lunch." – Morgan
Our Host
Ken Monroe is the founder of The Bad Hire, a show built from the trenches of business leadership and team building. After making a disastrous hire that cost him hundreds of thousands of dollars, Ken shifted his focus to helping businesses avoid similar mistakes. Today, he runs companies that have screened over 40 million candidates, helping organizations make smarter, safer hiring decisions.
Resources and Links
Submit your story – thebadhire.com
Website – thebadhire.com
Email – ken@thebadhire.com
LinkedIn – Ken Monroe
Podcast Platforms – Available on Apple, Spotify, and all major podcast apps
What do you do when a new hire orders room service for a week, then vanishes back to their old job? Or when a candidate casually admits to making date-rape drugs “as a hobby” during an interview? In this episode of The Bad Hire, Ken Monroe, Emma, and Nathan return with another round of jaw-dropping stories that show just how unpredictable hiring can get.
From bizarre excuses like a “squirrel attack,” to a head of IT who got fired before finishing his first morning, to a dental office manager whose past on escort sites came to light within days, these tales prove that bad hires don’t just waste money, they become office legends.
Some stories will make you laugh, others will make you cringe, but all of them highlight why cultural fit, background checks, and gut instincts matter more than ever.
And remember: sharing your own story could win you $10,000 in The Bad Hire contest.
Key Takeaways
A candidate who seems perfect can still be the wrong hire.
Background checks exist for a reason, don’t skip them.
Red flags in interviews are often more obvious than we admit.
Culture fit matters as much as technical skills.
Submitting your bad hire story could win you $10,000.
In This Episode
[00:00] Introduction & podcast overview
[00:44] Co-host introductions & contest announcement
[02:02] First story: The hotel moocher
[03:07] Second story: Date rape drug confession
[04:07] Third story: Beer and cigarette interview
[05:04] Fourth story: Court-ordered monitoring
[05:58] Discussion: Lying on resumes & Reddit thread
[06:49] Fifth story: The toxic developer
[08:45] Sixth story: The barista with a warrant
[09:42] Seventh story: Catcalling the head of R&D
[10:13] Eighth story: The car thief sales rep
[10:56] Ninth story: The squirrel attack excuse
[13:13] Tenth story: Misreading the employee manual
[14:37] Eleventh story: The anesthetic thief
[16:08] Twelfth story: The 911 caller EMT
[17:18] Thirteenth story: The escort office manager
[21:55] Fourteenth story: The bar fight confession
[23:27] Wrap-up & call for submissions
Notable Quotes
[03:08] "Back in 2012, I had a client ask my candidate, 'Tell them something interesting about themselves that's not work related.' Oh, my gosh. To which the candidate replied, 'I like to make date rape drugs in my bathtub on the weekends..” – Ken Monroe
[09:44] "Our new head of IT catcalled a woman in the parking lot on his way into his first day of work. And that woman turned out to be the head of research and development. He was fired before lunch." – Nathan
[11:32] “He walked in covered in scratches and said a squirrel attacked him in bed. What do you even do with that?” – Emma
[17:55] “We found her phone number on two escort sites. By day four, she was gone.” – Morgan
Our Host
Ken Monroe is the founder of The Bad Hire, a show built from the trenches of business leadership and team building. After making a disastrous hire that cost him hundreds of thousands of dollars, Ken shifted his focus to helping businesses avoid similar mistakes. Today, he runs companies that have screened over 40 million candidates, helping organizations make smarter, safer hiring decisions.
Submit your story – thebadhire.com
Website – thebadhire.com
Email – ken@thebadhire.com
LinkedIn – Ken Monroe
Podcast Platforms – Available on Apple, Spotify, and all major podcast apps
What happens when the new hire who seemed perfect on paper turns out to be a total disaster? In this episode of The Bad Hire, Ken Monroe sits down with Emma and Morgan to unpack some of the most unbelievable workplace stories you will ever hear. From imposters who show up pretending to be the candidate who interviewed, to a “six-hour hire” who derailed an entire office on his very first day, these stories show just how unpredictable hiring can be.
The team reads through wild submissions from Reddit and personal experiences, including a creepy IT guy who crossed every line, a remote worker who thought shirtless Zoom calls were acceptable, and an arrogant “secret CEO” who tried to run projects nobody asked for. Some of these tales are funny, others are unsettling, but all of them remind us that one bad hire can ripple through an entire workplace.
If you’ve ever made a hire you regretted, you’ll laugh, cringe, and nod along with this episode—and maybe even feel inspired to share your own story for a shot at $10,000.
Key Takeaways
Bad hires drain time, money, and morale.
Red flags can appear even before day one.
“Perfect” resumes don’t always mean perfect employees.
Remote work brings new categories of bad hire behavior.
Submitting your story could win you $10,000 in The Bad Hire contest.
In This Episode
[00:04] Introduction to the show with Ken, Emma, and Morgan
[01:00] Reading Reddit’s craziest bad hire stories
[02:13] Fake candidate gets caught before the end of day one
[05:31] The employee who turned toxic the day after probation ended
[08:00] The six-hour hire: ranting, disrupting, and walking out
[09:04] Shirtless on Zoom: remote work gone off the rails
[13:00] Arrogant “secret CEO” hijacks projects and meetings
[16:30] Emma shares her nightmare IT story that went too far
[21:05] Ken recalls a sales hire who mixed bourbon with the office parking lot
[25:00] Wrap-up, sponsor thanks, and how to submit your own story
Notable Quotes
[02:40] “We hired someone who wasn’t even the person we interviewed. By the end of day one, he was gone.” – Ken Monroe
[08:30] “He lasted six hours on the job. Four working, two on his ‘decompression lunch.’” – Emma
[09:26] “He joined client calls shirtless, lying in bed, nuzzling his cat. That was the last straw.” – Morgan
[16:50] “Next thing I know, his nose is literally on my neck. That was the moment I realized we had a really bad hire.” – Emma
[21:20] “I walked past his car and saw him passed out with a bottle of bourbon in his lap. It was 2:30 in the afternoon.” – Ken Monroe
Our Host
Ken Monroe is the founder of The Bad Hire, a show built from the trenches of business leadership and team building. After making a disastrous hire that cost him hundreds of thousands of dollars, Ken shifted his focus to helping businesses avoid similar mistakes. Today, he runs companies that have screened over 40 million candidates, helping organizations make smarter, safer hiring decisions.
Submit your story – thebadhire.com
Website – thebadhire.com
Email – ken@thebadhire.com
LinkedIn – Ken Monroe
Podcast Platforms – Available on Apple, Spotify, and all major podcast apps
Ever made a hire that went sideways? Maybe the interview crashed and burned, or the “perfect fit” turned into a nightmare on day one? You’re not alone. Welcome to The Bad Hire — the podcast that pulls back the curtain on the hilarious, shocking, and sometimes painful realities of hiring gone wrong.
In this very first episode, host Ken Monroe introduces the idea behind the show and shares why these stories matter. Recruiters, HR leaders, and talent pros know that behind every bad hire is a lesson — and usually a story worth retelling. From funny missteps to tragic outcomes, these experiences reveal the human side of hiring and remind us that even the best in the business sometimes get it wrong.
But this podcast isn’t just about listening — it’s about sharing. We want your bad hire stories. Whether it’s a disastrous interview, a candidate who shocked you in unexpected ways, or an employee who just didn’t work out, your experience could be featured on an upcoming episode.
And here’s the twist: we’re running a contest. At the end of the season, the best submitted story will win $10,000. All you have to do is head to thebadhire.com, check out the submission guidelines, and send in your story.
So, tune in, laugh (or cringe) along with us, and maybe even cash in on that unforgettable hiring tale you’ll never forget.
What you’ll learn in this episode:
The inspiration behind The Bad Hire podcast
Why recruiters and talent acquisition pros bond over “bad hire” stories
The range of stories you’ll hear this season — funny, sad, and everything in between
How you can submit your own story for a chance to win $10,000
Got a story? Submit it at thebadhire.com.
And don’t forget to follow, rate, and share The Bad Hire — it helps more people discover the show. Connect with Ken on LinkedIn to keep the conversation going
The Bad Hire is a bold, human-first podcast about hires gone wrong. Hosted by Ken Monroe, CEO of Bchex, each episode unpacks the funniest, strangest, and most shocking bad hire stories from offices, job sites, and teams everywhere. From outrageous résumé lies to first-day meltdowns, these tales will make you laugh, cringe, and say, “there’s no way that’s true.” Not just for HR or recruiters, it’s for anyone who’s worked with that coworker or made a hire they’ll never forget, while revealing the lessons in the chaos.