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The Mad Hatter’s Tea Party was a popular children’s birthday-party venue that was run out of several locations in North Toronto, including strip malls at Eglinton and Avenue Road, Bathurst and Eglinton, and Woodbine and Highway 7. Every weekend, a new group of unsuspecting middle-class parents would drop off their seven- to 12-year-olds for an hour or two of birthday revelry. Former partygoers recall those afternoons as replete with bodily endangerment, ritual humiliation and untold health-code violations, all presided over by a bunch of vaguely sociopathic teenagers. They were the most outrageous, most envied, most startlingly fun birthday parties a generation of kids ever attended. (via The Grid TO | Down the rabbit hole) —Read the comments, too. Really.

The Mad Hatter’s Tea Party was a popular children’s birthday-party venue that was run out of several locations in North Toronto, including strip malls at Eglinton and Avenue Road, Bathurst and Eglinton, and Woodbine and Highway 7. Every weekend, a new group of unsuspecting middle-class parents would drop off their seven- to 12-year-olds for an hour or two of birthday revelry. Former partygoers recall those afternoons as replete with bodily endangerment, ritual humiliation and untold health-code violations, all presided over by a bunch of vaguely sociopathic teenagers. They were the most outrageous, most envied, most startlingly fun birthday parties a generation of kids ever attended. (via The Grid TO | Down the rabbit hole) —Read the comments, too. Really.

  1. nhmortgagebroker reblogged this from markrichardson
  2. natepatrin reblogged this from markrichardson and added:
    The damn goofiest thing I’ve read all month. We’re sure this was in Toronto and not Newbridge?
  3. markrichardson reblogged this from douglaswolk
  4. douglaswolk posted this