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Breastfeeding mom kicked out of movie speaks with ABC7

“Happy. Whole. Content. Being a bad mom feels really, really, good!”

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A group of nearly 50 women attending a screening of the new movie, “Bad Moms” were not pleased with their experience at the Regal theater in Fort Myers, Florida.

However, noting that there were several other children in the movie queue for Bad Moms who were under the age of 6, Valverde questioned the manager on why they weren’t being asked to leave as well. She turned to the online group for advice on what to do with the baby, and naturally, the group encouraged her to bring her along for the movie.

She and Valverde went into Ice Age, and then slipped into Bad Moms while their babies were asleep, but the theater manager busted them and told them to leave.

During an appearance on the Today show on American TV, she said that mummy blogs and other parenting sites should come with a simple message: “As long as you love your kid, you won’t fail”.

A movie theater ended up with a crowd of mad moms after they were kicked out of the flick “Bad Moms”.

Meanwhile, Jane Marie writes at Jezebel that she thinks the guys who wrote the screenplay “probably don’t like their wives very much” and that the “condescending” film is nothing but “PTA drama” amid a “confluence of upper middle class, white people problems”.

And eventually, she and Julianna snuck into Bad Moms anyway, with their sleeping babies. “Which I was covered up because I always have a blanket with me so I wasn’t fully exposed”.

Wanda Schultz of Rockledge relayed a tale or two about why she should be a gold medal contender for “screwing up motherhood”. Aside from nonstop profanity and a handful of sex-themed punchlines the actual chaos these moms cause is incredibly tame, like staying out late or having a few too many drinks.

Realizing that the relentless manager wasn’t going to bend the rules for them, the majority of the group asked for a refund on their tickets and moved their night out to a Mexican restaurant instead. “I have to do this and trust that she is going to be an awesome baby”. However, the theater manager caught them in the act and forced them to leave. “I don’t need anyone’s approval to feed my baby”. Bad Moms follows a blueprint for comedic storytelling that has been used a hundred times or more throughout the history of cinema, but thanks to terrific performances and a heart of gold the film finds a way to make the familiar feel new once again. While in the lobby of the theater her daughter needed to nurse.

No, he should have been more flexible.

In Florida, state law allows women to breastfeed in any public or private location, but some women face criticism for nursing in public.

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Valverde said it’s just sad it has to go this far. “The employee was like ‘You can either cover up or you can leave.’ I was just, at that point, I was so hurt and walked away”.

Angry Mothers Leave Florida Movie Theater After Breastfeeding Woman Asked to Cover Up