This bridezilla told her bridesmaids how she really felt via email, and it happened to go viral. Click below to see what she said!!!
She might be the biggest Bridezilla of them all.
One woman’s over-the-top email of demands to potential bridesmaids has gone viral since it was posted on Gawker.com.
“You all have a big roll [sic] in this wedding, so before we continue I’m going to be setting some ground rules and it’s very important you read and think everything through before you accept this honor to be a bridesmaid,” the unnamed bride-to-be begins.
If recipients don’t answer emails when outside the country, can’t attend every wedding-related event, or don’t have the cash for several flights and a bridesmaid’s dress, they might not make the cut.
“If money is tight and you can’t afford to contribute to the bachelorette party or won’t be able to afford a dress, then [I] don’t have time to deal with that, I’m sorry,” the woman wrote.
Of course, she’ll aim for what’s affordable, but, “If you think it’s going to be a $25 Forever 21 dress then you’re going to the wrong wedding.”
The lucky bridesmaids must also be available — at any moment — between February and August.
“If you don’t think you’ll be able to attend one party but can make the rest of them, I’m sorry, but I’ll have to take you out as a bridesmaid and put you as a guest,” the woman wrote.
And please, don’t ignore phone calls.
“I don’t have time to wait around for responses, everyone has their phone on them,” she wrote. “It shouldn’t take you more than a day to get back to me.”
Luckily, local bridesmaids say the extreme email isn’t the norm.
“If I was sent that email, I would have declined and say I couldn’t make all the weekends — that is just crazy!” New Yorker Andrea Huisking told the Daily News.
Huisking added that sometimes it’s just “more fun to be a wedding guest,” not a bridesmaid.
Anne Reinking, who lives in Brooklyn, said her experiences have been “totally the opposite.”
“They understood if something was too much money or a time commitment. They tried to keep it really on budget, but I’ve heard other horror stories.”