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Child crushed after Santa tells him to 'lay off the hamburgers and french fries'

 
Anthony Mayse told ABC affiliate WLOS, "When (Santa) got done, he said, 'Lay off the hamburgers and french fries.' And that really just disrespected me, and I felt awful." [WLOS photo via Washington Post]

Anthony Mayse told ABC affiliate WLOS, "When (Santa) got done, he said, 'Lay off the hamburgers and french fries.' And that really just disrespected me, and I felt awful." [WLOS photo via Washington Post]
Published Dec. 8, 2016

Anthony Mayse took a seat on Santa's lap, looked into his eyes, and told the elderly chimney-hopper exactly what he wants this Christmas: an iPod touch and a drone.

But at the end of their friendly chat, the 9-year-old boy says that Santa decided to give the rosy-cheeked lad something else: an earful of Christmas-crushing body shame.

"When he got done, he said, 'Lay off the hamburgers and french fries,' " Mayse told ABC affiliate WLOS. "And that really just disrespected me, and I felt awful."

Mayse said he felt so awful, in fact, that as soon as he got a few feet away from the bad Santa he burst into tears.

As the night wore on, the child told the station, his world continued to unravel.

"It affected me so bad that I was crying until I went to bed that night," he added. "And I want to say to him, 'You don't want to disrespect a 9-year-old. Even though what shape and size you are, it doesn't matter.' "

In a final act of mic-dropping, body-affirming defiance, he even tore up the photo he took with the Kris Kringle-turned-Krampus.

The exchange allegedly occurred Saturday at an annual holiday fair in Forest City, N.C., where a crowd of children had gathered around a miniature brick house to sit on Santa's lap to take pictures and make gift requests, WLOS reported.

The Santa in question is employed by the town of Forest City, the station reported. He wasn't identified by the station.

Ashley Mayse, Anthony's mother, told the station that she took her son and his cousin out to have a festive time that included a carriage ride, ice skating and a chance to sit on St. Nick's lap. She said she expected the man to spread holiday cheer, but instead he seemed as if he "didn't want to be there to do the job."

"Very rude," Mayse told WLOS. "I've never seen anything like it. What set me off is when he started crying."

"I was just mind-blown," she added. "I wished a million times that we never went."

After her son was bullied, Mayse told WLOS that she confronted the town manager, who forced Santa to apologize to Mayse and her son.

"When he went to apologize to me, he didn't even mean it," Anthony noted.

"I'm hoping he's fired, because I don't want any kid feeling like he did Saturday," Mayse said, adding that she would never return to Santa again. "I mean, it destroyed him."

A statement from the Forest City manager says the Santa has resigned.

The Santa, who was not identified by the town, was paid $1,000 per season to portray St. Nick at the town's Thanksgiving night tree lighting ceremony, in the Christmas parade and for several weekends at the Santa House, City Manager John Condrey said.

He has been Santa for at least 10 years, Condrey said.

The Santa was scheduled for the next two Fridays and Saturdays, but has informed the town he would no longer provide his service as Santa, the statement said.

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Condrey said the town has not yet found a replacement Santa.

Information from the Raleigh News & Observer was included in this report.