There is nothing wrong with asking for help. No one is an island, after all. However, there is still a not-so-fine line between a reasonable request and trying to offload labor onto other people. For example, a netizen decided to share a screenshot from a bride who wanted her guests to not only travel but just cater her wedding for her because she “couldn’t afford it.”
People online cracked their knuckles and got down to some good, old fashioned wedding shaming. Commenters also called her out and thought her entire scheme was just really really entitled.
Some folks need a bit of help setting up their wedding
Image credits: Isabella Abitboul / unsplash (not the actual photo)
But one bride took it to the next level when she thought her guests could just feed her
The bride argued with some readers in the comments
Image credits: Potential_Pick5832
Her post drew attention from some folks in the wedding shaming group
Image credits: Phil Denton / flickr (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Potential_Pick5832
Potluck weddings do exist, but they are pretty complicated
The phrase “we don’t need anything but the joy of people coming” captures something that shows up again and again in wedding entitlement stories, the quiet assumption that a couple’s vision for their day automatically becomes everyone else’s obligation. What gets framed as low key or family style often just moves the cost, labor and risk from the hosts to the guests, and the guests rarely signed up for that trade.
Potluck weddings sound charming in theory, food is love, everyone contributes, it feels communal rather than transactional. In practice they carry a long list of practical failures that etiquette writers and former guests describe in detail. Guests at one potluck wedding reported that only twenty people made it to the ceremony because everyone else was still preparing food, that there was no proper storage at the venue so dishes sat out for hours, and that the meal ended up cold by the time it was finally served.
That is not a hypothetical, it is what happens when a couple treats their guest list as an unpaid catering staff. Food safety experts and wedding bloggers who have actually run these events point out that bringing dishes cooked in different kitchens together creates real challenges around keeping everything at safe temperatures, since different foods have different needs and a few hours on a table can turn a nice gesture into a health risk. Add travel into the mix, and the problems compound. One bride who wrote about planning her own potluck admitted that guests who are cooking often arrive late, and there is rarely a good window between the ceremony and the reception for anyone to actually prepare something that needs to be warm. That is a lot to ask of someone who flew in from three states away with a carry on bag.
It’s hard to see the bride as anything but entitled
Image credits: Brooke Cagle / unsplash (not the actual photo)
The deeper issue is the entitlement underneath the request. Etiquette writers have been pushing back on this mindset for years. One guide is blunt about it, stating plainly that potlucks are not appropriate for wedding receptions because a reception is supposed to be a thank you to guests for showing up, not another task assigned to them. That framing matters because a wedding is not a family reunion or a community potluck night, it is an event the couple planned, invited people to, and is expected to host. When a bride insists she does not need gifts, just the joy of people coming, while simultaneously asking those same people to feed the room, she is not opting out of hosting duties, she is quietly reassigning them.
Bridezilla behavior gets treated as a punchline, but the actual costs are relational. Advice columnists who cover wedding etiquette have noted that the common justification, that this is the most important day of a person’s life, does not hold up well against everything else a life actually contains, the birth of a child, a hard won degree, good health news. One etiquette expert pointed out that if the wedding really is the most important day, it says something uncomfortable about how much weight is being placed on a single afternoon compared to a lifetime of a marriage. Friends and family members who get pulled into unreasonable demands, whether that is driving hours to approve napkins or cooking a full dish in a hotel room, tend to remember how they were treated long after the flowers wilt. Bridal parties dissolve, family members quietly pull back, and the goodwill a couple needs for the actual marriage gets spent chasing a fantasy of a perfect day.
The stories that end up on wedding shaming forums usually share the same structure, a request framed as sentimental or budget conscious that actually offloads cost, labor or risk onto people who came to celebrate, not to work. Chipotle trays, Costco platters, a simple cake and punch reception, these unglamorous options exist because they let a couple host within their means without turning loved ones into unpaid caterers. The brides who get remembered fondly are rarely the ones who asked for the most, they are the ones who understood that a guest list is a group of people doing you a favor by showing up.
The netizen shared some more thoughts in the comments
Readers debated the bride’s “plan”
Poll Question
Thanks! Check out the results:
Sounds fun. Friends of mine had little money to splash around. They hired a cheap local hall and their reception meal was sheep on a spit with home made salads and buns with cask wines and people brought their own beers. Awesome, awesome evening.. :-)
I love baking, and would leap at this chance. I can provide baked goods at a fraction of the cost of a registry gift. Plus-I think it is a more personal gift, because it takes time, love, and effort-rather than just buying something impersonal.
Sounds fun. Friends of mine had little money to splash around. They hired a cheap local hall and their reception meal was sheep on a spit with home made salads and buns with cask wines and people brought their own beers. Awesome, awesome evening.. :-)
I love baking, and would leap at this chance. I can provide baked goods at a fraction of the cost of a registry gift. Plus-I think it is a more personal gift, because it takes time, love, and effort-rather than just buying something impersonal.









































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