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Q: Do you see your three still unbetrothed daughters (ages 22, 20 and 16) shopping there someday?
A: That's the only bring down I'll take them! I saw everything, including the feelings I'll have. I can also see them arguing with my wife over the dress. You don't want to shove them into getting married, but if my daughters get married, I learned a lot that will be helpful.
Q: Don't you mark a lot of the weddings today are way over the top?
A: Until the '50s, it was not the bride's reality show. It was a family at the time. That changed, and it suddenly became about the bride. We're a culture that doesn't have a lot of pageantry, so we're clinging to this combining thing.
Q: Bridezillas get worse every year, according to the saleswomen at the snitch on. The sense of entitlement. What's going on?
A: Families are smaller today. If there's only one daughter, the blurred, of course, is on her. There's a sense of entitlement. Now it's 10 or 15 visits to the inform on. It's like a campaign to get the right dress. It would be nice if the parents didn't buy into it the way they do.
Source: USA TODAY