Mall Santas drink for a reason. Awkward questions, thirsty moms, and 8 hours trapped in a hot red suit and hat. It's a rough gig when you think about it. Here are the best mall Santa stories from all around the world. Some are told by mall Santas themselves, others are told by (former kids), and others are told by parents. All paint a picture of what it's like to work with children around the most magical time of year.
56. This kid has very specific needs
55. Reindeer on the naughty list
54. The real gift here was to the turkeys
53. Oooh, what a twist
52. Stewie Griffin, is that you?
51. That's what big sisters are for
50. "I want daddy to go away"
My ex's dad owned a restaurant and I worked there part-time in my late teens so I witnessed this. Christmas Eve was usually really busy, so to earn more money his wife came up with the idea to pretend to be Santa for a few hours on Christmas Eve and charge something like $2 per kid.
This one dad came up to my ex's dad (my ex's dad was Santa) and paid the money for his kid and then went to the toilet with his other child (a baby) leaving the kid with "Santa."
"Santa" asked the kid what he wanted for Christmas, and apparently the kid whispered into his ear, "I want daddy to go away." He asked the kid to explain why, and apparently the dad... well, let's just say he had a temper.
"Santa" then asked the kid for his address, and told my ex (who worked in the kitchen) to call the police. I think some police went to the house, and then some turned up at the restaurant to arrest the dad.
49. Cover up for Christmas
48. It's a lot easier when they want Barbies
47. You might need that later, kid
46. Two can play at that game
45. This girl is not down for santa
44. Making the naughty list
43. That poor santa
42. Who 'settles' for a giant squid?
41. When the saint comes marching in
40. The girl who stole North Dakota
39. Santa ain't no rebel
38. Being a mall Santa is not for the faint of heart
37. Just kicking it
36. Mission: Implausible
35. Warm tidings for the season
34. Oh, you want coal do you?
33. Santa gets revenge
32. Trainee Santa makes a new friend
31. Maybe he's Scandinavian
30. Nothing like toddler mispronunciations
29. Goody two-shoes
28. This one is sad, but it has a happy ending
27. On the (gingerbread) house
26. This is my brother, Simba
25. A piece of Santa's sleigh
24. "I think Santa misheard you, did you say you wanted counseling?"
23. "I asked Santa for my parents to do it"
22. Santa always comes through -- even if it takes 10 years
21. "I want to control my parents"
20. Making it rain on Santa
19. A stab in the dark
18. Getting fleeced
17. The cursed Santa suit
16. Your mom is technically Mrs. Claus
15. Starstruck meeting Santa Claus
Every year, I get dressed up as Santa and tour around my town in a horse drawn carriage, stopping at scheduled places to distribute Christmas biscuits to the town's kids. It's a bit of an emotional rollercoaster.
Last year, I had JUST chased off a boy who was trying to set my beard alight, when a little girl of 4 or 5 shyly handed me a little homemade snow globe. She was obviously starstruck to be meeting Santa and her older sister was gently pushing her towards me.
I thought that she just wanted my opinion, so I looked at the snow globe and said that it was very pretty. When I turned to give it back, she had run away into the crowd.
One of my most prized possessions is a home-made snow globe that was given to me by a random little girl. It has pride of place on my desk.
14. Mall Santa goes the extra mile
13. Made the kid a believer
12. A happy ending for everyone... except the fish
11. I want an elephant for Christmas
10. Are you sure it's better than pushing carts?
9. Chicks dig Santa
8. Eyes or Ninja Turtles
7. So you want to be Sarah Palin?
6. Bribing Santa
5. Walk a mile in my skin
4. Now that's a snack for Santa
3. Being a Santa is a tough gig
2. This is why mall Santas are so important to kids
1. The math teacher who stole Santa's beard
I was a primary school student, aged about 5.
Anyway, my primary school was a village school, so it was small. It had about 150-200 students. One Christmas, they decided to throw a Christmas party for the kids and parents. If you enjoyed hearing the song "diallo" playing on loop with the occasional sound of a parent chiding their kid for drinking the Blue-coloured drinks, then this is your kind of thing.
Towards the end of the night, all the kids were high on food colouring, and it was time to meet "Santa" himself! We queued up patiently to sit on Santa's lap and tell him what we'd like for Christmas. It was my turn.
I sat on his lap and looked at his beard, and noticed that it had a string on it and it was wonky. I was like "You're not Santa! Your beard has a string on it!"
The Santa had a sad look on his face, then he started a convincingly sobbing, "For thousands of years I had a fantastic beard. I don't have a real beard any more because somebody called Mr. Johnson [my math teacher who has a large beard and was very proud of] stole it. I asked him nicely if he could give it back, but he didn't listen. Maybe you and your friends can find Mr Johnson and get my beard back in time for next year?"
I was only 5 so I believed him, so I was furious at Mr. Johnson. The next time we had Math after Christmas, me and most of my class gave him a piece of our minds for stealing Santa's beard. We told him that we would not do our work until he gives Santa his beard back. The kids were furious, and Mr. Johnson was even stricter than usual.
After a few weeks of this, he finally came into school without a beard. Any time we asked him what happened to his beard he would tell us off. We assumed that he had given it back to Santa.
Here's the interesting part that I found out many years later: It turns out that the Santa was actually my English teacher Mr. Brown, and he deliberately made the beard look fake. Why? Because Mr. Johnson was banging Mr. Brown's wife and Santa found out. Because of this, Mr. Brown decided to get as many kids as he could to hate Mr. Johnson. Mr. Brown knew that Mr. Johnson would either have to deal with children who hated him or he would have to shave off his beard that he loved dearly.