Ferrell, who is known online for taking on strange and bold challenges, went to Cedar Point with a 10-piece box of chicken nuggets and found a way to bring it onto Millennium Force. That detail matters because Millennium Force is not a slow family ride. Cedar Point’s official page describes it as a coaster that became the first to top 300 feet when it opened in 2000, with a top speed of 93 mph, making loose items a serious concern on board Six Flags.
Ferrell did manage to get the food onto the ride, but the bigger result was not the challenge itself. After the clip spread online, he was blacklisted from Six Flags parks for breaking safety rules that ban loose items on rides.
Once Millennium Force was moving, Ferrell started eating the nuggets on the roller coaster. The bit became even more chaotic when the person beside him held out dipping sauce for him to use during the ride.
By the time the ride ended, Ferrell said he had eaten seven of the 10 chicken snacks while traveling at speeds of 93 miles per hour. It was not a neat attempt either, as sauce ended up across his face during the clip. Hopefully, no one sitting behind the TikToker left the ride with any unexpected dip on them.
Why the park treated the stunt as a safety issue
The ban may sound harsh if the stunt is viewed only as a joke about fast food, but theme parks treat loose items differently on high-speed rides. A phone, keys, a drink cup, or even food can become a problem when a coaster suddenly drops, turns, or accelerates.
Six Flags has also addressed this kind of behavior more broadly. In a public safety post, the company said items such as cell phones, keys, and food are not allowed on rides because they can become dangerous projectiles or choking hazards, adding that unsafe actions done for attention or online content will not be tolerated Six Flags.
That added context is why the nugget box was treated as more than a funny prop. On a ride built around height, speed, and sudden movement, the food could have affected Ferrell, nearby riders, or people below the track if anything slipped out of his hands.
The response fits Cedar Point’s wider conduct rules. The park’s Code of Conduct says acts that management considers a safety concern, or behavior that interrupts operations or affects other guests’ experience, are not permitted. It also says violators may be removed without a refund Cedar Point.
Ferrell later spoke to FOX 8 and said he understood the park’s side of the situation. The creator, who has a following of four million across TikTok and YouTube, said: “They just don’t want other people getting hurt on the ride. But me, personally, it was a really fun challenge,” he said.
At the time of writing, Ferrell’s Cedar Point TikTok video had almost 200k views. The number is a reminder of why creators take these risks in the first place, since a strange public challenge can spread fast when it looks funny, messy, and slightly unbelievable.
“Bro, you got banned from the best park ever!” one follower penned, while another questioned: “Was it worth the ban?”
That is what makes this more than a strange food challenge. The video worked because it looked absurd, but the punishment shows that parks may respond harder when a stunt involves breaking a ride rule in front of a large online audience.
For Ferrell, the chicken nugget ride may remain one of his most talked-about challenges. For Six Flags, it became a clear example of where the company draws the line between content and conduct.