As misunderstandings go, I'm not sure you can do much worse mangling the phrase "Getting hitched!" for an engagement party than
this:
Oooh. Not good.
In the same vein, how's this for a bang-up job?

Not a word, Troy. NOT. A. WORD.
Thanks to Wreckporters Amy R. and Jenn G. for these knee-slappers.
Regional accents, perhaps?
ReplyDeleteYes! Proper use of the apostrophe to indicate that "Jenn is"....marring her intended. Hey, can't win 'em all.
ReplyDeleteFun to watch Food Network Challenge last night and have Kerry Vincent refer to one showpiece as "The worst cake wreck we have ever had in Challenge..." Jen, do you have a copy right on that phrase???!!!
ReplyDeleteSoooo Anonymous(9:42),
ReplyDeleteYou think Jenn really is marring Troy?
WV: Honch: "I have a honch that they meant to say Jenn is marrying Troy"
Nothing worse than messing up the spelling on a cake - particularly these examples!
ReplyDeleteWell they say love hurts.
ReplyDeleteha ha!!!
ReplyDeleteI know it is awful, but as someone with southern roots I totally can hear the pronunciation of the 2nd cake.
mar·ring
ReplyDeletetransitive verb
1: detracting from the perfection or wholeness of
2 inflicting serious bodily harm on
Wow! Thank goodness Jenn isn't marrying Troy!
Probably the wreckorators are just reflecting their own experience of marriage here.
ReplyDeleteWell...maybe these are actually true...different strokes and all....
ReplyDeletewv-dibrida: Poor Troy --wait until he sees what dibrida is gonna do to him....
Freudian slips?
ReplyDeleteAnd all the married or formerly married folks in the room looked at the cakes and said, "FINALLY! Someone has the guts to be honest!"
ReplyDeleteAhh the jokes you could do with this...
ReplyDeleteIt's about time someone gave the prospective grooms the what-for on how the bride wears the pants in the family! At least they can't say they weren't warned!
ReplyDeleteWay to go wreckreators!!!
No, that first cake is clearly a beautiful, frilly, pink boxing cake. I bet Holyfield orders one every match. Clear the ring, the cake's here!
ReplyDeleteLove is a battlefield.
ReplyDeleteIt is too a word! Oh, you meant...
ReplyDeleteGiven the non-violent definition of to marr (Sue W's first one), perhaps that cake was ordered by Troy's mother, who does not approve of Jenn and thinks she'll ruin her beloved son's life (and the family photos)? After all, this would be a really sly way to hint at that: "but, dear, the wreckerator clearly got 'marrying' wrong! I would never [outright] insult you, dear"
ReplyDeleteIf Jenn's marring Troy, that's domestic abuse!
ReplyDeleteOUCH!
ReplyDeleteIs Jenn marring the guy, or the city in New York?
ReplyDeleteDon't call the bakery for help. Got it.
ReplyDeleteOh, I thought the first one was a crude reference to what would be going on during the wedding night, if you know what I mean.
ReplyDeleteAnd I was thinking along the same line as Aliza with the second. MIL must not care for Jenn!
My worst nightmare is spelling something wrong on a cake. Do you think they do it on purpose for the Cake Wreck exposure?
ReplyDeleteI really hope that Jenn wasn't marring Troy. And if she was, I'm sure she didn't want it publicized on a cake. That's not a great start to a new life together!
ReplyDeleteAva
Clearly the 'marring' cake was a way for Troy to subtly alert his family to Jenn's abusive nature...
ReplyDeleteNow it would be perfect if you switched the order of the cakes, that way Troy would be marred AND getting hit at the same time!
ReplyDeleteActually, it is a word. Marring, as in "to Mar" 1. to damage or spoil to a certain extent; render less perfect, attractive, useful, etc.; impair or spoil. 2. to disfigure, deface, or scar. So, she marred him.
ReplyDeletePerhaps Jenn was Helen's rather unpopular sister, and the inscription on the cake is a translation of ancient graffiti. (No offense, Jen-with-one-n.)
ReplyDeleteSurely the transitory embarrassment of asking a customer to verify what they want written on a cake is nothing compared to the prospect of producing a wreck.
Recently divorced people should not decorate cakes.
ReplyDelete-Barbara Anne
Actually it is a word. They use it all the time at Epcot.
ReplyDeleteI'm trying to put a positive spin on these wrecks...
ReplyDeleteUm...
Okay, I think the lettering on both cakes were done in very nice colours.
Lol at the first one.. if that was at my wedding boy would someone be chased out the door with a rolling pin in my hand. Well it would make the cake true after all lol. Man I can only imagine what went through Troy's head seeing that cake.
ReplyDeleteBut "to marr" is to make more awful, yes? To uglify or otherwise make unpleasing. Thus, the cake is spot on.
ReplyDeletesounds like a cry for help....
ReplyDeletebut how neatly they pipe while abuse is going on...
wv: "boath." which cake is more disturbing? Boath.
Best known line from "Jane Err": "Reader, I marred him."
ReplyDeletelittlefoot