So as you can see in the picture, I threw a party last year. AEW is a pro wrestling company, much like WWE. They had this big outdoor show at Wembley Stadium in London. Sold something like 80,000 tickets. We watched live on PPV.

It’s the first time I ever threw a wrestling watch party. I invited 4 people. I bought cheese, soft pretzels, bought chips/queso. I had vodka, whiskey, beer, and 3 different THC vape pens along with edible gummies. I also had coke (the soda), barqs root beer, and one of the special novelty mountain dew flavors.

I cooked chicken, and cut the cheese into cubes with individual toothpicks. I got out my good plates. And used the projector to make the screen 90 inches.

Only 2 people showed up. Nobody ate hardly anything. Nobody drank anything. Hardly anything was said. This picture was taken AFTER the party. We went through 1 bag of chips, and 1 1/2 jars of queso.

I literally could have just bought 1 bag of chips, 2 jars of queso, and saved $100 and 2 days of prep work.

I even had 2 different styles of BBQ sauce for the chicken.

Yes, it’s a year later, and I’m still mildly infuriated over it!

  • cordlesslamp@lemmy.today
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    2 days ago

    I have the wrong friends.

    Jokes aside, that’s way too much food for 5 people.

    Secondly, from a guy’s standpoint, that’s way too much prep work for a guys gathering/sport watching, it’s almost weird. It’s not a house party, all you need is something casual like chips and beers, then if anyone feels hungry you order some pizza or wings delivered (based on what everyone preferred at the time).

  • Pacmanlives@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    It happens my dude. I have hosted a lot of parties and we used to do a 3-4 day campout with about 20-50 people depending on the year. Some years we would go though almost all the food other years I came back with 40 lbs of pulled pork that I smoked out of the 60 lbs I made. Next year ran out of it 2 days into the 4 day camp out

    🔛🔛

  • AA5B@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Oh man, I did not need to read this now ……

    I have people coming over today. They cancelled on a previous weekend and are hemming and hawing. The event is that I have a smoker and and want to make all kinds of new foods. I have $100 of meat, an elaborate salad and sides. Dessert also goes on the smoker. I just want someone to help eat.

    This weekend’s feast is duck. Dry brined, stuffed with oranges, and smoked. Or chicken, to bribe a picky eater to come.

    But it’s cold and rainy so the outdoor seating is out and I don’t really have space inside . I have an afternoon of cooking ahead that I was so excited for but have lost my motivation, dreading wasted time and money if they don’t show up

  • Crashumbc@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    General rule of thumb, plan on less than half the people you invite actually showing up for any gathering.

    Also… Wrestling…

    • Pissnpink@feddit.uk
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      2 days ago

      I’m not a wrestling fan, in fact I’ve never gone out of my way to even pay attention to it, but it does seem to be growing in popularity. There is a local wrestling event that happens every month in my town that’s getting quite popular, and I hear and see about wrestling events passing through town quite enough. Not my bag, but it seems like it’s having more than just a passing moment

  • irotsoma@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    When planning a party, I assume about 1/3 of the people I invite will RSVP and only 3/4 of them will show. I plan with that in mind. I also explicitly state the plans around food, drink, etc., and if they should come hungry or just expect snacks. And I make sure that I understand what other events or competing parties might be going on to help adjust expectations. Also, planning an annual/regular thing so that people get used to it being something they do every year helps, but it takes a couple of times to get it kickstarted.

    Since I started doing that, I’ve had a lot fewer disappointing events. Event planning is a lot of work.

  • zipzoopaboop@lemmynsfw.com
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    2 days ago

    Looks like a tasty spread. Aside from other comments on why people may have not partaken, I didn’t see this: health. Id love to chow down on this but couldn’t because of forming health conditions and weight, and that is becoming a lot more common. Every item here has a high fat content which you need to avoid if you have high cholesterol/ is high calorie which you need to avoid if trying to lose weight

  • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    I literally could have just bought 1 bag of chips, 2 jars of queso, and saved $100 and 2 days of prep work.

    Don’t forget the beer, but YEAH! You way over prepared for five whole people. If you had invited 10ish, maybe 15 (because then 10 show up), then yeah, but this is waaaay too much for 5. Especially depending on your ages, they may not have expected such hospitality and ate beforehand if they weren’t warned “hey come hungry and sober, there’s food and libations abound,” etc.

    Don’t give up, learn from this and adjust a little for next time! Just invite a few more, warn ‘em of the full plans (food, booze, ykwim), or make less food. If you do it regularly (like say Football Sundays at your house) the event will grow and more food will be necessary, but start small! This looks like a good hang, I’d have joined for the food and I don’t even like wrastlin’, just needs some restructuring!

    At least the booze and weed don’t go bad!

  • Beardedleftist@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    Sorry man. Feels like 2024, no more no less. Friendship and willingness to be around people (in person) is an old fart thing. Nowadays I only invite or make plans with my really close friends. Friends that are more family than friends.

    Those casual friends we used to have are gone for good between laziness and socializing on-line, whatever that is.

    If you were my neighbor and invited me I would’ve totally attended and decimated those delicious quesitos!

  • rsuri@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    This is why I always eat all the food I can at a party. Everyone else is being too polite and someone’s gotta eat all that food.

  • superkret@feddit.org
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    3 days ago

    I don’t know if that makes you feel better, but for my 40th birthday I invited 20 people, prepared accordingly, and 3 showed up.
    Not even my wife was there, cause she ate too much of the dough for the weed brownies she had made for the occasion.
    She crashed half an hour before the guests showed up.

    We sat around the table, emptied a couple bags of chips, I was the only one who drank beer. My friends left after 2 hours.

      • ThePyroPython@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        It’s ok, not every social event is going to go well and most of the time it’s nothing personal, we’re all just kind of bumbling along through the confusing and absurd reality that is life.

        May I join this group hug?

    • 4lan@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      This reminds me that expectation is the enemy of happiness. I didn’t plan anything last year for my 34th, just hung out with my dog like a regular day and went on a hike. No disappointment, just another day!

    • arefx@lemmy.ml
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      3 days ago

      I dont even have parties because I know no one will show up so that’s pretty good.

  • 𝔼𝕩𝕦𝕤𝕚𝕒@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    That’s fucked up I’m sorry, I’d have eaten an entire plate of cheese hors d’vors myself and taken half that chicken with me afterwards. I’m not even into wrestling and I’d have come for that food.

    You’re a good friend for providing that for a watch party (on top of paying for ppv) and I’m sorry your friends don’t appreciate how well you maintain your half of the bridge. The least the 2 could have done is tried the cheese and chicken.

    Edit holy shit are those pre stuffed pretzel bites. Bro wtf is wrong with these people I’d have asked if anyone wanted any and eaten the entire plate. (I may or may not have portion control issues but seriously, they didnt touch any of that delicious looking food)

    • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.worldOP
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      4 days ago

      Yep, and they were locally sourced from a bakery. I think they cost about $25, and I put them in the convection oven at a low tempature. Not enough to cook them, but enough for them to be always warm, with melty cheese inside.

      Edit: oh, and that stack of 2 plates? It was 3 plates. I used a plate for the chicken, and cheeses. I also had a few beers, and some jack n cokes.

      The other 2 plates, their plates, you can see were unused. Everybody just ate chips off the orange serving platter.

  • GraniteM@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    There’s a tough lesson I learned about trying to get my friends into board games: It’s easier to turn gamers into your friends than it is to turn your friends into gamers. I’ve learned that some of my friends are never going to share my interests as much as I’d like, but that just means I needed to find people who were already in whatever hobby and start hanging out with them and some of them will eventually be your real friends.

    Making and keeping friends as an adult is way more difficult than it seems it should be, but it’s a painful reality.

    • Graphy@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      What I learned trying to turn gamers into board gamers is that most people don’t want to read so we end up making our own bullshit rules.

      I found a different group to play board games with irl but then they suck at online games funny enough.