It started as a dare. It ended with a lifetime ban. Allen Ferrell, one of social media's most watched challenge creators, thought he could sneak a 10-piece McDonald's chicken nugget box onto one of the fastest roller coasters in the world — and eat it mid-ride. He almost pulled it off. But Six Flags got the last laugh.
| Allen Ferrell's viral nugget stunt on the Millennium Force has cost him access to every Six Flags property — for life. Photo: Six Flags / Allen Ferrell Instagram |
The Dare That Changed Everything
It all started when Allen Ferrell accepted a challenge daring him to eat a 10-piece McDonald's chicken nugget box while riding Cedar Point's Millennium Force — a 310-foot, 93-mph roller coaster. In the video, Ferrell stuffed the container into his shorts before boarding, retrieved it once seated, and attempted to eat all 10 nuggets — sometimes with dipping sauce — before the ride ended.
He was seven nuggets in when the ride stopped.
"I failed," he told the camera — laughing it off as just another stunt for the feed. But what he didn't see coming was the real-world consequence waiting for him on the other side of that video.
| The now-viral video shows Ferrell attempting to eat nuggets mid-ride on the Millennium Force — a stunt that cost him access to every Six Flags park forever. Photo: Allen Ferrell/Instagram |
Six Flags Drops the Hammer
The video went viral. And Six Flags was not amused.
Cedar Point spokesperson Tony Clark issued a swift and unambiguous response: "Safety is a cornerstone of our business and we have zero tolerance for inappropriate and unsafe behavior. This guest has been banned from all Six Flags parks for life."
No warning. No second chance. Just a permanent, irreversible ban from every single Six Flags property across the country — all because of a box of chicken nuggets and a camera.
Why This Is Bigger Than One Banned InfluencerLoose items on high-speed coasters pose significant risks to riders and ride infrastructure. A nugget flying off a 93-mph coaster isn't just funny — it's a potential projectile that could seriously injure another rider. Parks have strict no-loose-items policies for exactly this reason, and Ferrell knew that when he stuffed those nuggets into his shorts.
The lifetime ban against Allen Ferrell signals a turning point in how major amusement parks address safety violations by high-profile content creators. For years, YouTubers and influencers have pushed boundaries to generate views — but this decision demonstrates that even creators with millions of followers face permanent consequences when they deliberately break safety protocols.
This isn't just about nuggets. It's about where the line is — and what happens when you cross it on camera.
Who Is Allen Ferrell?Allen Ferrell has built a following of 1.86 million YouTube subscribers and over 3.5 million TikTok followers by doing exactly this kind of thing — accepting wild dares, filming the chaos, and posting it for the world to react to. Past stunts include going through a car wash with his windows down. The Millennium Force nugget challenge was just the latest — but it's the one that will follow him forever
The views were worth it, he might say. A lifetime ban from every Six Flags park in America might make him reconsider.
The Internet ReactsFans are split. Some are calling it the funniest thing they've seen all year. Others are pointing out that this was genuinely dangerous — not just for Ferrell, but for every other rider on that coaster. Either way, the video has millions of views and the debate is still raging in the comments.
One thing everyone agrees on: Allen Ferrell will have to find somewhere else to ride roller coasters.
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