Allen Ferrell is banned for life from all Six Flags parks after filming himself eating McDonald's Chicken McNuggets while riding Cedar Point's Millennium Force on May 19. The ban, confirmed May 29, turned a stunt built for clicks into a permanent bar from the chain's parks.
The timing matters because Ferrell's clip had already been circulating online by the time Six Flags made its decision public. Ferrell, a Michigan-based content creator who has spent the past six years taking viewer-submitted challenges, said this was the first time one of those dares had ended in a ban.
Six Flags did not frame the move as a joke or a content dispute. Tony Clark said the company acted because of safety concerns, adding that the chain has zero tolerance for inappropriate and unsafe behavior. He also said guests who violate the Code of Conduct are not welcome in the parks and that Ferrell is banned from all Six Flags parks for life.
Ferrell had been dared by a follower to eat 10 chicken nuggets during the ride, but he only managed seven before the coaster ended. That detail is what gives the clip its shape: the stunt was not just reckless, it was unfinished, and the unfinished part is now part of the reason it drew attention in the first place.
Millennium Force is no ordinary ride. The Cedar Point coaster opened in 2000 as the world's first giga coaster and now marks its 25th anniversary, climbing 310 feet and reaching 93 mph. Six Flags owns Cedar Point, which means the penalty reaches far beyond one Ohio ride and into every park under the company's name.
Ferrell has not said this will stop him from making challenge-based content, only that he has never had a challenge end this way before. What comes next is less about the coaster now than about whether he keeps taking on viewer dares after losing access to every Six Flags park for life.

