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Forums - General Discussion - What happens when you invite Facebook to your birthday party?

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Facebook Army Trashes Luxury Home

12:30pm UK, Wednesday December 03, 2008

Julia Reid, Sky News reporter

A Facebook 'army' has trashed a £1m luxury townhouse after gatecrashing a teenager's birthday party in Brighton.

 

The gang, calling itself the Facebook Republican Army (FRA), smashed lights and burnt carpets, as they rampaged through 16-year-old Georgina Hobday's home.

Four adult 'bouncers' could only look on as the group broke shed windows and knocked over plants.

Georgina's 'coming of age' party was inspired by the MTV reality series My Super Sweet 16, which follows wealthy teens preparing for extravagant celebrations.

But her decision to invite a hundred guests via an online invitation led to what her mother called "an absolute horror show".

"I will never have a party for my daughter here again", advertising executive Sylvia Hobday told the Brighton Argus.

 

She had no idea who most of the people were and they were rampaging through the house.

Sylvia Hobday on her daughter's disastrous party

"The garden has been ruined, the grass is just mud. People were walking through the pond and I heard one boy was trying to headbutt the mirror.

"My front garden was full and some people were climbing up the balcony and trying to get through the windows."

She also complained of cigarette burns on doors, floors blackened by dirty shoes and lightbulbs taken out and stamped on.

Ms Hobday said: "When the police came they'd tried to hide under the decking so they could just carry on.

"When I left the house there was no alcohol in the house - but when I came back there were beer cans and vodka bottles everywhere."

Georgina would not comment on the disaster.

This is not the first time the FRA has destroyed a teenage celebration.

A 16th party at a London community centre was overrun by hooded invaders after only one bouncer was put in charge last month.

And in March, Sarah Roscoe's family mansion in Devon was wrecked after her 18th birthday party was advertised online.

A Facebook summer beach party in Torbay had to be cancelled after almost 4,000 people signed up to attend.

The group claims they do not 'intend' to cause trouble but they scour the internet for parties to target and even hire coaches to transport their gang.

A Sussex police spokeswoman told Sky News they are not pursuing the group, in spite of needing 28 officers to disperse the mob.

She said:"This was well-to-do kids and it was the sheer volume of people that caused the problems.

"There have been no arrests and no complaints. If you are planning an event and don't want uninvited guests, our advice would be do not send online invitations."

 

The next obvious question is, what happens when you invite VGC to your birthday party?



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I have that answer. 70 people would be horded around your TV set, constantly plugging and unplugging your A/V connections, fighting over what system to hook up and play. In the end, nothing would actually get played, and all that time would have been wasted bickering.



it would be a total geek fest =P and then a huge fanboy argument would arise and people would rip each others eyes out for who plays what!



I would go to Soriku's b-day. and DMeisterJ and I'd give him a hooker.



When I was 16 or 17 I had a party at my house and invited 50 or so people, and somehow 200+ showed up. But they didn't trash the place. We just partied really hard and I cleaned it all up before my parents got home and they never found out.

One time though, a hundred strangers showed up at another party I had and they were total dicks. The cops showed up after a noise complaint and asked me what was going on, and I just said "Me and 10 friends are trying to have a small birthday party and all these assholes crashed it. Can you help me get rid of them?" The cop was happy to help, and we got rid of everybody except the 30 people I hid in my bedroom, and then we got back to a respectable-sized party.

I would never put my address on a party invitation on the internet though. That's just asking for trouble. If I was organizing a VGC party I'd have it at a Chuck E Cheese or something similar by my house so everybody could come, and then if it were small enough, maybe move it back to my house later with a ton of booze. And weapons for the brawling on the roof.



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The bigger question is: Why do people put people they don't know on their friends lists on social networking sites?



I would cite regulation, but I know you will simply ignore it.

steven787 said:
The bigger question is: Why do people put people they don't know on their friends lists on social networking sites?

I have no idea.

I guess some people think "social networking" means "collecting as many arbitrary strangers as you can and listing their photos next to your hobbies on the internet."

The only strangers I've ever added were at least Transformers or something.

One friend of mine tried to add every random MySpace slut, and after a few hundred "thanks 4 the add <3" comments with glittery angels and devils he changed his mind and deleted them all.



I have my house phone number on facebook but I have it locked so only my friends see it. I don't have any people I don't know on my facebook.



The Ghost of RubangB said:
When I was 16 or 17 I had a party at my house and invited 50 or so people, and somehow 200+ showed up. But they didn't trash the place. We just partied really hard and I cleaned it all up before my parents got home and they never found out.

One time though, a hundred strangers showed up at another party I had and they were total dicks. The cops showed up after a noise complaint and asked me what was going on, and I just said "Me and 10 friends are trying to have a small birthday party and all these assholes crashed it. Can you help me get rid of them?" The cop was happy to help, and we got rid of everybody except the 30 people I hid in my bedroom, and then we got back to a respectable-sized party.

I would never put my address on a party invitation on the internet though. That's just asking for trouble. If I was organizing a VGC party I'd have it at a Chuck E Cheese or something similar by my house so everybody could come, and then if it were small enough, maybe move it back to my house later with a ton of booze. And weapons for the brawling on the roof.

 

4chan's anon would rip the place to pieces.



An open invitation on a chan? They wouldn't show up anyway unless it WAS a b-day party for a girl 17 or younger.



I would cite regulation, but I know you will simply ignore it.