Isn’t the most obvious question being ignored here?
How the heck did he manage to snake his way inside there?
Also, did they let him keep the toy he went in after?
He had the time of his life in there!
Oh, my, she must have had a really terrifying time before he was found.
Once, I went into a book store during Christmas shopping season, and my almost three year old son disappeared when I picked up a book to look at the back cover. I went out into the mall, and looked around, panicking as I saw hallways leading in all directions, and an escalator nearby. I started walking in a random direction and found him with a couple who had found him and were about to take him into a nearby store to call security. I was so relieved!
Thank goodness this little guy was okay. The mother will probably want to install something on the front door to keep him from wandering off like that again.
Who needs a babysitter when there’s a claw machine right across the street?
Those games are such a rip-off. Has anybody ever been able to “claw” a decent prize playing one of those? If you do happen to grab an expensive prize, the game is actually programmed to “loosen the grip” so that the claw drops the prize just as you are about to get it to the chute.
Look at the size of that kid — that is one big opening in that machine for that kid to fit through.
And if he could crawl in there, then he could also crawl out.
Why would anyone in the future want to use that useless claw to get a stuffed animal when they can just send in a toddler on a rope.
I can see how this happens - when I was a toddler I snuck out of the house while I was supposed to be napping and hitchhiked to my parents work. It was 2 lane country, luckily, and since I knew the name of the place where they both worked I told the man who picked me up and he took me straight there. I can’t believe I’m still alive with some of the things I pulled before the age of 5.
Wait until he’s 6 and ‘borrowing’ cars for joyrides.
That’s cute. Danger to the boy not cute.