logo
Disneyland Guest 'Almost Spit Out His Coffee' Over Nearly $1K Breakfast Bill For Family of 5

Disneyland Guest 'Almost Spit Out His Coffee' Over Nearly $1K Breakfast Bill For Family of 5

Yahoo4 hours ago

A family of five spent $938 on Disneyland's Princess Breakfast Adventures, a three-course character dining experience at the California park
The father shared the receipt and his surprise on X, where the post went viral with over 15.5 million views and sparked widespread discussion
The poster admitted he hadn't checked the price before, but said the experience was worth it for his kids
A family of five kicked off their morning at Disneyland with a nearly four-figure price tag.
X user @jrockandrollt, aka John 'Rock & Roll' Tolkien, took to the social media app on Monday, June 16, to share a photo of his receipt from his family's breakfast.
The bill showed that he had spent $937.65, including a $150 tip. In the caption, he wrote, 'Princess Breakfast' at Disneyland with my kids. Almost spit out my coffee."
Disney Princess Breakfast Adventures, which is held at Disney's Grand Californian Hotel, is a dining experience at the Anaheim theme park where guests get to enjoy a three-course breakfast and activities with Disney princesses, like storytime with Belle, according to the park's website.
The meal starts with a tiered tower of appetizers like lobster rolls, cornbread and beignets. For the main course, kids can choose between chicken and Mickey Mouse-shaped waffles and macaroni and cheese, while adults have options like braised short ribs, deviled eggs and truffle macaroni and cheese. For the final course, guests can taste cream puffs, sorbet and other desserts.
The price starts at $142 for adults and children ages 3 to 9, per the site, and tip and tax are not included.
The post quickly garnered X users attention and has been viewed over 15.5 million times as of Wednesday, June 18.
The original poster waded through commenters' questions and explained that the bill was for two children and three adults and that one person ordered a Bloody Mary.
He joked in the comments, 'If I find that goddamn mouse I am going to mug him.'
He also wrote that he felt the pricey venture was worth it, despite his shock at the bill: 'Kids enjoyed it, so I think it was worth it. The kids definitely learned some new words when I opened the bill though.'
Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
A picture of his plate shows that he ate shrimp cocktail, macaroni and cheese, asparagus, deviled eggs and beef roast, and he wrote that the food was a 7/10. 'Service was attentive and enthusiastic, princesses were all trained pro actresses and spent a lot of time with the kids. I enjoyed it,' he commented.
While many users praised the poster for being a 'great dad,' others couldn't get behind his shock. 'Bro they tell you the price when you book, if you're surprised that's on you,' one person wrote and the poster replied that he didn't book the meal nor look at the menu.
Read the original article on People

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

This quirky AI-powered camera prints poems, not photos
This quirky AI-powered camera prints poems, not photos

Digital Trends

time12 minutes ago

  • Digital Trends

This quirky AI-powered camera prints poems, not photos

The Poetry Camera is an ingenious device that doesn't take photos but instead makes poems. The clever contraption features a lens that observes its surroundings before using AI to craft a poem inspired by the scene. It then prints the verse through a slot on the front — similar to how a Polaroid camera delivers photos. You can see it in action in the video above. The Poetry Camera is the work of Kelin Zhang and Ryan Mather, who build the device by hand in a 'microfactory' in New York, according to designboom. The pair unveiled the camera two years ago, but since then it's been updated a number of times, most recently with Anthropic's Claude 4 generative AI model, which interprets the surroundings to create the poem. It's also powered by a Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W with a Raspberry Pi Camera Module 3. The Poetry Camera's computer vision smarts are able to identify objects, people, and surroundings before composing its work of art, which can be a haiku, sonnet, limerick, or free verse — you can decide beforehand via a knob on the device. There's no onboard storage, so the camera doesn't save the poems digitally. Nor does it save the images, a design choice that's supposed to emphasize privacy and the ephemeral nature of each creation. 'It feels more magical that way, and reduces the pressure of trying to look good posing for photos,' it says on the Poetry Camera's website. 'The original photo is never saved or stored anywhere, for maximum data privacy. We don't want to be in the business of storing your data.' The Poetry Camera is open source, allowing tech-savvy folks to modify prompts, add features, or build their own versions. This means there are two distinct products — the already built Poetry Camera, described as 'a complete consumer electronics product that's designed to be beautiful, intuitive, and robust,' and a DIY version based on the initial prototype of the idea. Using off-the-shelf components like Raspberry Pi and thermal printers that you can get on Amazon, the pair describe it as 'a good weekend project to get started with learning hobby electronics.' There is currently, however, one notable drawback with the Poetry Camera — it needs Wi-Fi to work as it requires a connection to compose the poems. However, Zhang and Mather are looking at ways of overcoming this impediment. The latest version of the unique Poetry Camera is available for $699 in the U.S., with shipping targeted for September 2025. For the DIY version, head to this GitHub page.

The Club World Cup, warts and all, comes to Audi Field
The Club World Cup, warts and all, comes to Audi Field

Washington Post

time26 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

The Club World Cup, warts and all, comes to Audi Field

The mélange of blue skies, storm clouds and intermittent downpours that hovered over Audi Field before kickoff Wednesday night formed a suitable metaphor for this supersized Club World Cup. The outlook for the tournament, as a FIFA cash cow, is sunny enough. Any excuse to bring soccer's elite to the United States for matches that count is a unique occasion. In a D.C. market overlooked for the men's World Cup next summer, this event carries outsize significance. (One painful reminder: The tourism ad outside Audi Field that encouraged fans to travel to Philadelphia to get their 2026 World Cup fix.)

"He Wasn't Remotely Correct": Women Are Revealing The Dumbest Thing That Was Mansplained To Them By A Man, And I'm Appalled
"He Wasn't Remotely Correct": Women Are Revealing The Dumbest Thing That Was Mansplained To Them By A Man, And I'm Appalled

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

"He Wasn't Remotely Correct": Women Are Revealing The Dumbest Thing That Was Mansplained To Them By A Man, And I'm Appalled

Well, even though it's 2025, women are still being mansplained to (aka the explanation of a particular subject by a man, typically to a woman, that's considered condescending). So we asked the women of the BuzzFeed Community: "What is the dumbest thing that has been mansplained to you?" and their answers will make you red in the face. Here's what they said below. 1."A man once explained to me what an X-Ray image is. I'm a doctor." —ale8 "I learned what an X-ray is from Sesame Street when I was three. I don't think *anybody* needs to have X-rays explained to them, but trying to explain them to a DOCTOR is a whole other level!" —ddaisy 2."I was in the process of buying a house, and a male coworker, who never bought a house, tried to mansplain income debt ratio to me. It took our male supervisor, who had bought a house a year prior, telling him I was right before he accepted, begrudgingly, that he was 'mistaken.'" —fenknight 3."A man once yelled in my face that he was the ultimate authority on how to file for a certain type of construction project, and how I, a lowly woman, couldn't possibly understand the complexities of what I was looking at. So, he never got to build his project, because I, the lady who signed off and permitted them, refused to do so until he fixed his dang paperwork. I was LITERALLY the ultimate authority on it." —renashinoa 4."Once, a man explained to me why Avatar: The Last Airbender is an anime, and he kept insisting it was not a Nickelodeon cartoon. I am an animation student. For comparison, this is like calling the original Ben 10 or the original Teen Titans an anime. (Just to be clear, the style is very clearly inspired by Japanese animation because that's what was popular at the time. But it is not considered an anime because its original language is English, and it was made by an American animation studio.) —thirstyassho 5."I am a residential counselor for male teenagers and have been working in this field for 10 years. I have lost count of the number of times MALE teenagers start lecturing me about my role as a FEMALE and what I should or should not be doing because I keep doing it wrong in comparison to some of my male counterparts, whom I have helped train." —origamidino44 6."When my friend's boyfriend broke up with her, he told her it was because she was bad at sex. My girl lowered the boom on the dicknose by replying, 'Since you were my first, I guess that makes you a bad teacher.' I still miss you to this day, Susan!" —bloodwynne 7."After I finally decided to get a credit card, my husband frowned and told me, 'You do have to pay the money back, you know.' Duh. Then again, his mother actually thought that the credit card limit meant it was free money." —thatvillageidiot 8."A guy once said, 'I went birdwatching... you know, when you watch birds.' It literally could not be named more literally." —shantaewatkins "You should've told him not only were you into birdwatching, but birding as well. (Then watched his face get very confused.) —apromisingyoungwoman 9."I work in film and saw my brother for the first time the other week, and he tried to explain the writer's strike to me and why it'd be over soon. He knew exactly one reason they were striking and not the laundry list of others. I've been in the industry for 10 years and had jobs shut down because of this strike, he works at a car rental place." —deebee2118 10."I had a random guy online try to mansplain hymens, and he kept making the usual false claims about how it 'pops' when you lose your virginity, and that it's the way you can tell a virgin from a non-virgin. I tried to correct him and explain that 1) hymens don't pop, 2) you can wear your hymen down with activities other than sex, and 3) you can lack a hymen and be a virgin, as not everyone even has a hymen (and, again, sex isn't the only thing that wears it down). Alas, he didn't believe me. Typical." —aidensmith 11."I was selling my old bike, and the guy who bought it spent the whole time he was there explaining all of the features of the bike to me. The features were all included in the listing, since I had bought the bike myself and specifically picked it because of them. He got incredibly offended when I asked if he was there to buy a bike or hold a lecture." —torbielillies 12."I'm not customer service, but I work as a branch (bank) manager in a money kiosk in a mall with an anchor store. A gentleman came in and asked for a completely different luxury store. Think, oh, I dunno, Nordstrom vs. Neiman Marcus. I told him the exact address of where he wanted to go, and he told me I was WRONG. Nooooo, I'm not... but let's pull up that Google Maps, huh? That was when he told me he didn't need to look it up because he knew where he was going, but maybe *I* should? On the quickness, I pointed at the Nordstrom entrance, 'Ya know what, you're right, Neiman Marcus is right inside, so sorry, I don't know HOW I missed that...'" —nicolermacklin 13."When I was a junior in college, I was talking to a friend about some of my classes, and his roommate took our conversation as an excuse to explain to me what linguistics was and what the major program was like. He was a freshman political science major, and I was in my third year of my linguistics program." —skailyr 14."An ex was firmly against any kind of vibrator because it would 'stretch you out like an old T-shirt.'' —taryncooksey 15."Taking my husband to the ER for a kidney stone, the two male-admitting nurses RUSH outside to greet my husband. They say, 'Oh, this is bad. We can tell by how he is walking that it's kidney stones. No disrespect, ma'am, but this is so much worse than giving birth.' Now, luckily, I am married to a wonderful man, who had my side on this, and chuckled through his pain, and said, 'No, you guys are looking at someone who went through 36 hours of labor with a broken tailbone, I got this.'" —angelaandres 16."A man thought he had to explain to me what a square was when I was 22." —profplum 17."I have an unusual first name. I was gobsmacked when someone asked how to correctly pronounce my name, and Captain Doorknob interrupted me to mansplain MY OWN NAME. INCORRECTLY." —shazzerz "I once had a man ask me, 'Isn't your name supposed to be spelled with an a?' Giving him the benefit of the doubt, I said, politely, 'You might be thinking of a different name. This is the standard spelling.' He then proceeded to give me a skeptical look and say, 'Are you sure?' (He did run away when I snapped, 'Am I sure about the spelling of my own name? Is that your question?')" —five_star 18."On my nineteenth birthday, I got into a car accident that basically totaled my car. The next day, my period started, and I was scheduled to work open to close at the coffee shop I worked at for the 'birthday' event marking the anniversary of the company's creation, with different deals." "My cramps were awful, I was getting waves of heat and nausea, and had to be moved to register. It got worse and worse, and eventually I had to excuse myself to puke out the back door into the alley, not once but twice. I asked to go home at that point, in tears, and my manager, the man who owned that particular franchise location, told me he knew periods didn't do that because he had a long-term girlfriend, it had never happened to her, and he didn't appreciate my 'crocodile tears.' Still, he let me go home and then called me once I got there to fire me. The man employed almost exclusively teenage girls and young women in their early 20s." —clairew4cf1db903 19."I was a chemical engineering major in college. I tutored pre-med college students who struggled to pass chemistry and/or organic chemistry. Guys came to my grandmother's house, where I lived, for professional tutoring by recommendation of their professors. I can't tell you how many guys attempted to mansplain chemistry to me. It was so frustrating. I'd taken every chemistry, organic chemistry, and biochemistry course the college offered and was a 4.0 GPA student." "If they kept mansplaining, I'd pick up the phone, call the professor in front of them, and ask the person being tutored to repeat the answer to the question. Then the professor would say: If you're not listening to the person who is tutoring you when you're wrong, you shouldn't be a doctor because you are an idiot without listening skills. It always made me laugh. I probably tutored two dozen pre-med guys in three years. None of them ended up going to medical school." —snarknado 20."A guy I just started talking to was really good with cars. I asked him a question about my car, and he asked what I drove. I told him and… he told me I couldn't drive the model I was, because he'd never heard of it." ''Are you sure you drive that?? That doesn't sound right. I've never heard of that. You must mean a Mountaineer.'I finally had to stop him and ask him if he was REALLY asking the person who sees this vehicle every day for the last three years??He was STILL skeptical, then asked me to show it to him on our first, and consequently last date." —smileyk 21."I sent in a maintenance repair request to my landlord for a mole issue in the backyard. I explained the steps my husband and I had already taken to mitigate the problem. He responded with a copy and pasted Wikipedia article on moles and how pervasive they are and how difficult they are to remove. He suggested we 'stamp down the mounds.' I responded with 'I own a 6-acre farm, I'm also a maintenance director for an 18,000 square foot facility; I'm familiar with moles, Mike. But hey man, it's your lawn that's starting to get real effed up here. Do what you want.' Two days later, a mole man was out with traps." —mixedevolutionllc 22."I typically wear band or Star Wars shirts to work. This younger guy came up to me and said, 'I like your Billy Joel shirt.' I'm like, 'Thanks. It's Billy Idol.' The same guy comes up to me on a different day and notices I have a Star Wars shirt on. Asks me if I have seen any of the shows. I say yes. He says, 'There's this really good one out called The Mandalorian. You probably don't know about it.' This was a couple of months ago. And he's far younger than I am." —jolynnnewbaker 23."A patient once responded to my doctor (who is also a woman), telling him he had cavities with 'Well, but I have those black spots under my fingernails sometimes, so I don't think it's a cavity necessarily.' He initially came to us complaining of pain when he eats sugary things. He was convinced the black/brown spots on his teeth were just stains and dirt that could be cleaned off." —erintrimber 24."A man once tried to explain to me what a person can and can't eat when they are breastfeeding. He wasn't remotely correct. I am a mother, postpartum nurse, and lactation consultant. The same man also told me that he was frustrated with his wife in labor because 'she was pushing wrong.'" —emunro09 25."I had a guy DM me in order to mansplain how to take care of my plants after seeing them on Instagram???" —Pez Fez Women, share with us your experience with being mansplained to in the comments or anonymously in the Google Form below:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store