Mirror, mirror on the wall – who is it naked of all?
Answer: Jessie Lee.
The 21-year-old mermaid, a Disney World Resorts summer employee, is turning on NSFW social media mermaids for wearing a sexy Snow White-inspired outfit that would make them blush sleepy, depressed and embarrassed.
And virtual vultures say Lee’s clothes make her look like a “stripper.”
“Not fit for Disney,” one hater spat under viral TikTok footage of the brunette’s wardrobe, which featured a red high-neck top, mini shorts and a pair of Snow White-style Mickey Mouse ears.
“You went to a family park with kids and acted like a stripper,” commented an equally outraged viewer.
“Give dads something to look at,” wrote another.
But Lee insists her ‘adjustment to turn her head was not inappropriate. Instead, she thinks her critics are just “uneducated” about how Gen Zs really dress for fun.
“This outfit is not revealing,” Lee, a junior from the UK, told Kennedy News. “These people are more uneducated about what people wear in the parks.”
However, Disney’s modest dress code has been called into question in recent years.
When it comes to clothing dos and don’ts, Disney is clear: “Clothes which, by their nature, expose excess skin that may be seen as inappropriate in a family setting,” according to its site.
The parks also note, “We reserve the right to refuse admission or remove any person wearing clothing we deem inappropriate or clothing that may detract from the experience of other guests.”
However, a number of intrepid visitors have recently ignored the guidelines and worn whatever they wanted – often to their detriment.
Jordyn Graime, a 20-year-old from New Jersey, was flagged for showing too much skin by wearing a backless top and short shorts in the Happiest Place on Earth. The Garden State girl was forced to cover herself with a free Disney T-shirt.
TikTok tastemaker Helen thought that wearing a barely-there bikini to the mouse house would also earn her some merchandise back home. However, much to the smoke show’s anger, a Disney concierge “forced” her to buy an expensive top before she was allowed to enter the park.
But Lee claims her controversial t-shirts and tiny little ones didn’t cause a stir during her day at Disney.
From June to August, the British bombshell was based in Florida, working at Disney through its cultural exchange program.
While on the clock, she rocked her professional uniform β a white T-shirt, black knee-length skirts and an “Earning My Ears” badge β provided by the company.
But when she wasn’t scheduled for a shift, Lee and her colleagues were free to get up as they pleased.
“I wore this outfit on my day off when we had free access to the park,” she explained. “Because I worked there, I saw hundreds of people every day and what they were wearing in the parks.”
“I felt I fit in well with what everyone else was wearing.”
Lee says her questionable fashion went unnoticed by her fellow Disney employees, who are better known as “cast members.”
“No one said anything to me at the park that day,” she said “I walked into the park twice in that outfit and went to different parks in it and not one staff member batted an eyelid.”
“I was going shopping and walking,” Lee added, “and no one said anything about it or thought anything appropriate about it.”
It wasn’t until she shared visuals of her outfit online that Lee came under intense fire.
“I was in disbelief,” she said of the Internet problem. βIt wasn’t like I was in a formal setting. I was just having fun. No one thinks twice about a clean T-shirt.β
“The shorts were short,” she admitted, confessing to laughing at comments comparing her skimpy skirt to an “adult diaper.”
“However,” Lee continued, “they weren’t as revealing and short as most people wear in the Florida heat.”
And despite the viral vitriol, Lee vows to continue the bold trend.
“Wear what you want at your own discretion,” said the Disney darling. “You have to be comfortable, but you’re there to have fun.”
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Image Source : nypost.com