Anonymous wrote:Inflation is through the roof. Would it be wrong these days to say charge $15 per family to attend our Memorial Day cookout. We will be serving good stuff like ribs, brisket, crab, etc. This stuff is no longer cheap. So why couldn’t you ask for something like $15 per family to help defray the cost? I mean where else could you go for $15 and feed your entire family, have to do zero food prep and cleanup, and leave zero tip? It’s a really good deal. What’s wrong asking for a little bit of help with outrageous grocery store prices these days?
yeah they do. I was invited to a friends birthday party (grown ass woman, married with kids, turning 40-something so not a milestone birthday) and two days later was told to bring the ice cream. It was dead of winter, in the middle of a very cold snap, I didn’t have a car, and I had just done my grocery shopping for the week. It was a minimum one mile out of my way to buy ice cream and I simply wasn’t up for it, so I changed my RSVP to no. If they had told me before hand that there was an admission charge, I could have planned for it, but I wasn’t ok with it being sprung on me after the fact.Anonymous wrote:LOL OP is a troll.
No one with a brain would do this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Appreciate this thread -- even if it's a troll I think it raises a worthwhile discussion. I wasn't immediately offended by the idea but I think it's because I've been brainwashed to expect less. I work at a federal agency where we are asked to either bring a dish or contribute $ every December to cover the cost of our holiday party which usually consistent of cold cuts and veggie trays from costco. I also remember selling tickets to parties in college to cover the cost of pizza and beer and an offsite rental fee to some farmer's warehouse. My wife would never let us collect money for a party, but I understand the inclination.
I laughed out loud at “Farmer’s warehouse.” So glad our fed employees aren’t aware of the word “barn.” Explains a lot.
Not the DP, but there are differences between farmers warehouse and barn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Appreciate this thread -- even if it's a troll I think it raises a worthwhile discussion. I wasn't immediately offended by the idea but I think it's because I've been brainwashed to expect less. I work at a federal agency where we are asked to either bring a dish or contribute $ every December to cover the cost of our holiday party which usually consistent of cold cuts and veggie trays from costco. I also remember selling tickets to parties in college to cover the cost of pizza and beer and an offsite rental fee to some farmer's warehouse. My wife would never let us collect money for a party, but I understand the inclination.
I laughed out loud at “Farmer’s warehouse.” So glad our fed employees aren’t aware of the word “barn.” Explains a lot.
Anonymous wrote:$50/head minimum. You don’t want the poors coming.
Anonymous wrote:Appreciate this thread -- even if it's a troll I think it raises a worthwhile discussion. I wasn't immediately offended by the idea but I think it's because I've been brainwashed to expect less. I work at a federal agency where we are asked to either bring a dish or contribute $ every December to cover the cost of our holiday party which usually consistent of cold cuts and veggie trays from costco. I also remember selling tickets to parties in college to cover the cost of pizza and beer and an offsite rental fee to some farmer's warehouse. My wife would never let us collect money for a party, but I understand the inclination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can’t afford to throw a party, you don’t throw a party. End of story.
This, 💯.
Unless it is a wedding, in which case some people seem to have accepted that you absolutely should expect your guests to subsidize your party. I'm not sure why.
I have never been to a wedding where people charged for attendance. Yes, you're supposed to give a gift, but it's not technically mandatory and supposed to be in celebration of the marriage, not compensation for the party.
You are only obligated to give a gift if you are also invited to the reception. I have actually received a wedding invitation suggesting the amount of money to give!
According to DCUM, if I attend a wedding (no matter how lavish) and my gift amount does not cover the entire cost for my family to attend the wedding and reception, then I am a cheapskate. Sounds like an admission fee to me.