
The Easter Bunny Horror Story: A True Account
Editor’s Note: From time to time, we at Commonplace Fun Facts wander slightly off our usual path of historical oddities and curious trivia. This is one of those times. While today’s story from our chief writer may lack a centuries-old manuscript or a footnote in Latin, it possesses something far rarer: a moment so unintentionally perfect that it simply refuses to remain untold.
Working on our recent article about hidden mother photography brought back a memory that, in hindsight, sits comfortably at the intersection of comedy and childhood trauma. Nominally, it was an Easter Bunny horror story. Practically, it was hilarious for at least one observer—namely, me—and almost certainly the origin story for a lifetime of trust issues for one unfortunate child.

The setting was a Walmart photo studio in the days leading up to Easter, when retail establishments transform into seasonal wonderlands of forced cheer and polyester mascots. The promotion was simple: bring your child, place the little ankle-biter on the lap of a silent, oversized rabbit, and capture the moment forever. What could possibly go wrong?
Someone had been hired to wear the Easter Bunny costume. One can only assume that this represented either a bold career pivot or the absolute best option available on a résumé that had seen better days. The job itself was not for the faint of heart. Imagine spending hours sealed inside a suffocating fur suit while small children alternated between crying, pinching, tugging on your ears, and occasionally treating your lap like an exploratory science experiment. To make matters worse, the Easter Bunny does not speak. Santa Claus at least gets to issue gentle commands. The Easter Bunny suffers in silence.
On this particular afternoon, I happened to be passing by the photo area just as a mother and her young daughter were wrapping up their visit. Everything appeared to have gone according to plan. The child had survived the experience. The bunny had survived the child. A photo had been taken. Candy had been dispensed.
As the pair began to leave, they paused for one final, heartwarming exchange of waves with their oversized, mute friend. It was, for a brief moment, a Norman Rockwell painting brought to life—if Norman Rockwell had a sponsorship deal with Walmart.
Then everything unraveled.

The Easter Bunny, having completed his duties, stepped behind a partition—presumably to take a short break and preserve what little sanity remained. What happened next can only be reconstructed through speculation. Perhaps he removed the head of the costume and set it on a nearby table. Perhaps the table was unstable. Perhaps gravity simply decided it had been ignored long enough.
Whatever the cause, I suddenly heard a thump, followed by a startled exclamation.
And then, in a moment that will remain etched in memory forever, the giant Easter Bunny head popped back into view.
It bounced once. Then twice. Then it rolled—deliberately, almost purposefully—across the floor before coming to rest directly at the feet of the departing child.
The girl stared down at it, her expression shifting instantly from joy to existential horror. She opened her mouth and released a scream of such impressive pitch and volume that it probably triggered garage door openers within a five-mile radius.
The mother, blissfully unaware of the unfolding catastrophe, turned just in time to take in the full tableau: her terrified daughter, a decapitated Easter Bunny head on the floor, a panicked employee scrambling to retrieve it, a disembodied voice shouting instructions from behind the partition (its owner wisely unwilling to expose the rest of the illusion), and—unfortunately for me—an innocent bystander overcome with uncontrollable laughter.
For reasons that remain unclear, the mother decided that I was the appropriate target for her outrage. This was puzzling, as I had played no role in the mechanical failure of the Easter Bunny’s structural integrity. My only offense was recognizing the situation for what it was: an objectively absurd collapse of seasonal magic.
The last I saw of them, the mother and daughter were making a swift and solemn exit from Walmart. The mother looked furious. The child looked as though she had just witnessed something that would require years of careful unpacking.
It is also worth noting that this was the last time I ever saw the Easter Bunny.
I prefer not to speculate.
You may also enjoy…
The Most Bizarre Easter Traditions Around the World (And Why They Exist)
Discover the most bizarre Easter traditions around the world—from water fights and flying bells to witches and crime novels. Learn the surprising history behind these unusual customs.
Why Didn’t People Smile in Old Photos? Because “Say Cheese” Hadn’t Been Invented Yet
Why Didn’t People Smile in Old Photos? Learn the fascinating history about photographs before the era of “say cheese.”
Steve Allen Defines What is Funny
Steve Allen, master of comedy, explains how humor works and tells us what is “funny.”






Leave a Reply