Rita said her daughter got in the car after the interview and started to cry before telling her what else happened. Photo / Christine Cornege
A Queensland teenager was asked if she thought she was "beautiful" by a McDonald's store manager during a job interview that forced the fast food giant to stand down the employee.
The teen's mum Rita Pryce took to Facebook on Monday to write a lengthy post detailing her 16-year-old daughter's job interview with a Cairns McDonald's in far north Queensland.
"(These) inappropriate questions left my daughter feeling sexually harassed and racially vilified," she wrote.
Rita wrote: "'Do you think you're beautiful?' was one of the many ridiculous questions an award-winning senior staff member of the ... McDonald's asked."
When Rita's scared daughter responded, "Uhhh ... I guess ... yeah ..." the manager replied, "Well that's what YOU make of it".
According to Rita the manager then said: "Yep, it's four in our country too!"
Rita also said the manager looked at her daughter's paperwork and asked her, "16 and still no job?"
When the manager asked her how she would describe herself, she said she was "bubbly".
"Bubbly? Should I just stop you there and end this interview? Bubbly? Someone who is bubbly makes a lot of mistakes. Do you make a lot of mistakes?" he said.
When Rita's daughter started to cover her face and hold back tears he replied, "Are you gonna cry? You look like you're gonna cry!"
Rita went back into the restaurant and left her number for the manager to call her, as he was still conducting interviews.
After waiting a day for the manager to call her back, Rita decided his lack of response meant she'd have to go back into the store.
"I asked for him and waited for 25 minutes in the store until someone came to recheck if I was okay. When he did finally come to speak to me, I told him I would make a complaint," she wrote.
"I also asked how many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were employed at that store ... considering it was in a highly populated area of our mob. This of course, was something he could not and did not answer. I also told him and two staff members over the phone, how my daughter feels sick in the stomach every time we drive past a big yellow M now," she added.
Eventually Rita was called by someone at McDonald's who said they had changed their interviewing policies at the restaurant and were no longer doing solo interviews.