Watch mortifying moment grandma is left horrified by groom’s raunchy lap dance on wedding day
A GRANDMA was left mortified on her granddaughter’s wedding day during the groom’s raunchy garter toss.
The newlywed took the opportunity to give his wife a lap dance, which ended in him trying to scramble his head under her wedding dress in search of a garter.
A garter toss involves the groom removing a band (the garter), typically made from lace, from the bride’s leg and throwing it for a single male wedding guest to catch as a good luck token.
One of the bridesmaids from the wedding last weekend has shared a video of the moment the bride’s nan had to watch the explicit moment – and her reaction has everyone talking.
Sat in the front row, she is seen looking horrified and repeatedly mouthing, “Oh my God,” as the groom grinds and gyrates on the bride.
“Pro tip: Make sure grandma gets seated somewhere not in the front row,” bridesmaid Riley Moss, who recorded the moment, said.
“Take a sip every time grandma says: ‘Oh my God’.”
The wedding took place over the weekend, with Riley’s video going viral on TikTok since being posted two days ago.
In the clip, the grandma is comforted by those around her but cannot shake the horrified reaction from her face.
“This is for after the wedding when you’re alone, not in front of grandma,” one viewer commented.
“I’m sorry but I would never let anyone do that to me,” a second penned.
“Why are people doing this in front of their family?” a third questioned.
“I could never.”
Other viewers joked that they were even dreading having a first kiss at the altar in front of their family, let alone a raunchy lap dance.
The garter toss is seen as the male counterpart to the bouquet toss at a wedding.
A garter is a lace band worn around the bride’s leg which the groom retrieves, usually with his hands but in the case of Riley’s video, with his mouth.
It is then thrown for a single male wedding guest to catch.
The practice started in mediaeval times when pieces of the bride’s ensemble were considered tokens of good luck.
The tradition has dwindled in the UK but is still popular in the US, where the video was filmed.