Shocking moment toddler is caught on video drinking a BEER at Texas football game – while her mom turns a blind eye
This is the shocking moment a toddler was spotted taking multiple sips of beer in the stands at Darrell K Royal Stadium in Austin during a football game in Texas.
Fans were stunned by the behavior, as the young child in the recorded video took three large swigs of the Michelob Ultra.
To the right of the toddler sits her older brother. He is drinking water, not beer.
Her mother, sitting directly to her left, has no idea of the illegal activities her daughter is participating in, while the two rows behind the child have everything captured on video.
The young girl may not have even started elementary school when she hopefully took her first sips of alcohol, let alone reached the legal drinking age of 21.
A girl was caught drinking beer during a soccer game in Austin on Saturday
The child’s mother appears to be sitting to the left of the toddler and does not stop drinking
It is unclear whether the young child was only instructed to hold the beer and did not follow instructions.
It would be even stranger if the young girl had to try her first alcoholic drink in public at such a young age.
It’s clear the girl is in the wrong place, as her face is painted white, one of the two primary Longhorn colors.
Even though there is a high probability of underage drinking on American college campuses, even during American football games, it is incomprehensible that a toddler should be given a beer.
And it seems neither parent wants to stop the behavior, even though one TikTok user says, “It’s okay, it’s just Michelob, it’s just water.”
Some people didn’t like the idea of a drinking toddler, commenting on the video by saying, “Oh my gosh!!! Why didn’t anyone tell her!!!!!” and “What I am in 1979 is this!”
Others agreed that the beer drinking wasn’t so bad, with others on social media commenting, “Finally a kid who doesn’t use an iPad” and “She’s supervised! It’s fine!”
Darrell K Royal has been selling alcohol at the venue since 2015, long before many other schools in the Southeastern Conference stopped providing dry football stadiums.