Benidorm KFC carnage as livid British girl hurls serviette holder at employees and shouts vile insults over the state of her hen
A British tourist was seen causing chaos in a Benidorm KFC after footage captured her hurling a napkin folder at staff and shouting insults over the state of her chicken.
Wearing a multi-coloured top and floral skirt, the purple-haired woman was spotted by another shocked customer as she launched tissues over the counter.
She was seen repeatedly grabbing tissues from the holder while yelling at a worker stood behind a wall in the fast food restaurant.
The woman picked up straws and other paper items left scattered across the counter as she carried out her foul-mouthed rant.
She can be heard shouting about the ‘f****** menu’ and appears to tell the staff member to ‘grow up’ in her fit of rage.
After picking up the last of the serviettes and straws, the woman decides to lift the entire holder before raising it over her head and tossing it over across the tabletop.
The worker can be heard shrieking in the background as the enraged woman begins to back out of the eatery, yelling ‘you c****’ while leaving the restaurant.
The video was uploaded to TikTok on March 15 and has since racked up over 11,000 views and 1,200 comments from stunned viewers.

Footage captured by a KFC customer captured the moment a British tourist flew into a fit of rage in the fast food restaurant

The woman was seen launching a napkin holder across the counter as she yelled insults at the staff member standing on the other side
The post, captioned ‘Only in Benidorm kicking off over chicken’ raised questions about British tourist’s behaviour on the Spanish seaside resort.
One viewer wrote: ‘Tell me again why Brits have a bad rep?’
While another added: ‘And it’s a wonder why Spain want to limit visitors from the UK into the country…’
A third said: ‘This [is why] Spain doesn’t want tourists coming over…’
One more warned: ‘There needs to serious consequences for that type of behaviour….it’s happening far too often…’
It comes after anti-tourism activists promised to wreck havoc across Spain this summer as they ramp up their campaign against holidaymakers.
Activists have recently blocked beauty spots and torched hire cars ahead of a planned international summit to discuss protest tactics.
Visitors to the party paradise of Ibiza were left disappointed last month after a popular viewing point was dramatically blocked off with boulders in the latest sign of growing local resentment towards mass tourism.
The famous Es Vedra viewpoint, where thousands gather to watch the sun sink behind the mountainous island each evening, is now off-limits after frustrated landowners declared they’d had enough of being overrun by crowds.
A blunt sign now warns visitors: ‘Private Property. Restricted Access.’

Furious activists reportedly torched and smashed a fleet of hire cars in a shocking act of protest in Tenerife two weeks ago

Visitors to Spain’s party paradise Ibiza last month were left disappointed after a popular viewing point was dramatically blocked off with boulders

Graffiti reading ‘kill a tourist’ was spotted on a wall in Tenerife amid Spain’s anti-protest movement
But the blocked roadway was seemingly tame compared to the violence and chaos that erupted in Tenerife two weeks ago, where furious activists reportedly torched and smashed a fleet of hire cars in a shocking act of protest.
Disturbing footage circulating online shows masked vandals dousing around 20 rental vehicles with flammable liquid before setting them alight in the popular Costa Adeje resort – a favourite among British holidaymakers.
Angry demonstrators targeted visitors last year, blaming them for soaring rents and a cost of living crisis that’s driving locals out of their homes.
Some campaigners have even threatened to take their protests to the next level by blocking airports.
The anti-tourism movement is gaining momentum across southern Europe with at least 15 activist groups from holiday hotspots in Spain, Portugal, Italy and France set to meet in Barcelona next month to plot their next steps.
The recent vow for more protests follows a summer of major demonstrations across Spain’s popular resorts, with anger particularly mounting over mass tourism.
In January shocking graffiti reading ‘kill a tourist’ appeared in Tenerife amid the holiday hotspot’s ongoing protests against holidaymakers.
The frightening slogan was spotted on a house in the south of the Spanish island by a concerned resident who admitted to being worried that the mass protest movement against overcrowding was going too far.

Some 6,500 people take part in a demonstration organised by a platform reflecting the growing discontent among locals with the current tourism model in Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain on October 20, 2024

Anti-riot forces gesture as demonstrators put symbolic cordon on a bar-restaurant window during a protest against mass tourism on Barcelona’s Las Ramblas alley, on July 6, 2024

Thousands of people demonstrate against tourism policies on the island of Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain on April 20, 2024

More than 3,000 people demonstrated against the tourist overcrowding suffered by the city of Barcelona and in favor of tourism reduction policies in July

People take part in a protest against mass tourism in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, July 21, 2024

Demonstrators put symbolic cordon on a bar-restaurant window during a protest against mass tourism on Barcelona’s Las Ramblas alley, on July 6, 2024
Speaking to LBC, they said: ‘Things on the islands are getting worse due to the large number of tourists and new residents, which leave us without homes and severely affect our natural environment’.
The local, who remained anonymous due to safety concerns, added that people on the island are becoming desperate for change and respect.
‘But perhaps this does not justify those actions, which seem to be escalating. It’s frightening,’ they said.
A protest also erupted in October after hundreds of demonstrators stormed Tenerife’s Troya beach, where sun-seeking holidaymakers were stunned to be disrupted by a placard-waving mob yelling slogans such as ‘More tourists, more misery’ and ‘the Canary Islands are not for sale’.
Protesters descended on the beach, one of the most popular in Las Americas (Tenerife), with many beating on drums and blowing whistles as they walked along the shoreline.
Astonishing footage of the incident showed holidaymakers being surrounded and penned in by Spanish locals while they were sunbathing in swim shorts and bikinis.
There were no reports of any violence, but protesters, whose banners included one in English which said ‘Go Home Tourist’ are said to have been mocked and taunted.