Australia to get Mean Girls brunch in Sydney Melbourne

  • It has been revealed a Mean Girls brunch is coming to Sydney, Melbourne in April
  • Guests can dine on Prosecco, cocktails and food as it plays in the background
  • Strict dress code states you will have to wear pink – even if it’s not Wednesday

Get in losers, we’re going brunching.

Australia is finally getting a Mean Girls brunch, and you don’t have to be fetch to sit at the Plastics’ table. 

But you will need to wear pink. 

Millennials (and cool mums) around the country rejoiced when it was revealed that an event dedicated to Prosecco and the pivotal teen movie would be arriving in Australia in April. 

Australia is finally getting a Mean Girls brunch, which will take place in Sydney and Melbourne in April and is dedicated to the iconic movie (pictured)

The news was revealed thanks to a website, aptly titled Mean Girls Brunch, that seemed to appear out of nowhere. 

The site promises that the day will be filled with ‘Prosecco, cocktails, food, and of course the cult classic movie in the background’.

Tina Fey’s Mean Girls became an international hit in 2004 when it delved into the secret lives of high school girls.

It promises that the day will be filled with 'Prosecco, cocktails, food, and of course the cult classic movie in the background' (pictured)

It promises that the day will be filled with ‘Prosecco, cocktails, food, and of course the cult classic movie in the background’ (pictured)

Following Lindsay Lohan as Cady Heron, it forever changed how we listen to Jingle Bell Rock and cemented ‘You go Glen Coco!’ as a classic catchphrase around the world.  

The Mean Girls brunch will take part in Sydney and Melbourne and it appears there is a strict pink dress code (and don’t try to wear sweatpants – unless it’s Monday).

A menu has not yet been revealed, so it remains to be seen if you’ll be dining on avocado and toast or Kalteen bars and Taco Bell. 

The site has promised that more details will be released soon and fans can sign up to be first in line with the news.   



Read more at DailyMail.co.uk