upworthy

july 4th

A woman shocked that the police delivered her pizza.

Have you ever been waiting for an Uber driver or a food delivery and had serious questions about where the driver was headed or why they were waiting so long at a light while you watched their progress on a map? Brandy Parrish of Arizona had some serious questions on July 4th when her Grubhub driver stopped for an incredibly long time while she was eagerly awaiting her food.

"He was making really good time then, all of the sudden, he stops, a block from away from our apartment,” Parrish told Fox 10 News. Fifteen minutes after the car stopped, Parrish noticed the car travelling the wrong direction on the Grubhub map. Unbeknownst to Parrish, her driver had been arrested by Tempe Police for reckless driving and excessive speed. It seems the driver went out of his way to deliver the pizza hot and on time.

Fortunately for Parrish, the officers decided that, even though the driver was headed to jail, the pizza still needed to be delivered. Talk about protecting and serving… hot pizza. "Stuffed crust pepperoni pizza with some crazy puffs. Very important," Parrish told Fox 10 News.

Body cam footage revealed the moment that Parrish was startled to see the police at her door holding her pizza and crazy puffs.


"How are you doing?" an officer asked.

"Good. How are you?" she responded.

"Very good. Brandy?" the officer holding the pizza asked to verify whether she was the rightful owner of the pizza.

"Yes," she confirmed.

"So your Grubhub guy got arrested, so we still delivered your pizza," the officer said.

- YouTube www.youtube.com

The officers believed that, despite the driver's multiple traffic law violations, he still deserved to have his delivery mission accomplished, and that the pizza and crazy puffs should still be hot when they arrived. After all, as Parrish saw on the map, the driver was right by her apartment when he got arrested. "It was, two minutes from where the vehicle stop was. We came to the consensus that this person should probably get their pizza," Officer Gavin Young told Inside Edition.

"When a delivery driver was arrested during a traffic stop, our officers made sure the pizza still got to the customer," the police department wrote on Facebook. "The order was Hot-N-Ready, and the suspect was Caught-N-Steady. We’re committed to serving our community 24/7—whether it’s safety or pizza delivery!"

Unfortunately for the arrested Grubhub driver, he probably won’t be doing too many deliveries when he gets out of jail. If you get a major driving violation, such as reckless driving or driving under the influence, while driving for Grubhub, your account can be deactivated.

All in all, it’s nice that in the heat of the moment, the officers did right by the delivery driver and his customer by showing up with the pizza and crazy puffs. Now, the only thing we don’t know is whether Parrish tipped the officers or left a nice gratuity on the Grubhub app since the driver could probably use a few bucks towards his bail money.

Ah, the Fourth of July: the day Earth gave birth to the United States of America.

If Americans have been good at doing one thing throughout the past 240 years, it's been throwing amazing birthday bashes for the place we call home.

Just check out these 12 vintage pics that prove that point nicely:


1. We've rocked sparklers in high heels like champs.

Photo, taken in 1932, by General Photographic Agency/Getty Images.

2. We've created our own patriotic boy bands to commemorate the occasion.

Photo taken in 1940 by Bert Garai/Keystone View/Hulton Archive/Getty Images.

Watch out, One Direction.

3. Sometimes, we've taken breathers in the summer sun too. (It is a holiday, after all.)

Photo taken in 1957 by Terry Fincher/Keystone/Getty Images.

4. And other times, we've thrown big neighborhood picnics.

Because food + sunshine = pure bliss.

These South Carolinians did it right back in 1939. Image from The New York Public Library.

5. Some of us have been gracious enough to celebrate our independence with prominent foreign figures — even if they used to be our enemies.

U.S. Ambassador Lewis Douglas enjoyed a chat with the First Lady of London at a Fourth of July party in 1951. Photo by Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images.

U-S-A! U-S-A!

6. But we haven't always been gracious enough to forgive our parents for forcing us into those George Washington costumes.

Photo taken in 1955 by Evans/Three Lions/Getty Images.

7. We've always made sure to clean up nicely for the big day.

Photo taken in 1955 by Evans/Three Lions/Getty Images.

8. Because the Fourth is a pretty huge deal. Listen to the folks in Lititz, Pennsylvania — they'll tell you.

Photo taken in 1955 by Evans/Three Lions/Getty Images.

9. In Lititz, sparklers have always been a favorite throughout the years...

Photo by Keystone View/FPG/Getty Images.

10. But they're not the only things lighting up the night sky.

Each year, people in Lititz light thousands of candles to celebrate our country's independence — a local tradition that's been going strong since 1843.

Photo taken in 1955 by Evans/Three Lions/Getty Images.

11. The town also throws a Queen of Candles pageant, which still carries on today.

Photo taken in 1955 by Evans/Three Lions/Getty Images.

The people of Lititz are one patriotic bunch.

12. So this Fourth of July, let's continuing honoring this fantastic country in the best ways we know how...

Photo taken in 1955 by Evans/Three Lions/Getty Images.

But we should also remember why and what we're celebrating in the first place.

America's collective drive to "form a more perfect union" is baked right into our DNA. And that's pretty cool.

I mean, there were a number of troubling things about the U.S. back in 1776.

Like the fact women were still 144 years away from obtaining the right to vote, and the old white guys who drafted the Declaration of Independence actually nixed an anti-slavery provision in the process. Just to name a couple.

But remembering our unfortunate past shouldn't ruin our perception of the place we call home — it should speak to its greatness.

America is where Martin Luther King Jr. walked the walk. It's where Harvey Milk gave us hope. It's where Gloria Steinem demanded more of us.

And it's where countless others will soon change the world too.

This Fourth of July, take a moment to remember our past and imagine our future — because I, like many other Americans, think our best days still lie ahead.