

Kids have a way of innocently shocking their parents.
Three-year-old JK was playing ball with his grandmother while the old man was defrosting the refrigerator in their sari-sari store, security camera footage shared by the boy’s mother on her Facebook page showed.
The grandfather then went to get a pair of shorts for JK. When the grandfather returned and resumed his chore, his wife came looking for their grandson. They heard the boy’s cry and rushed to open the refrigerator, GMA News reports.
JK came out of the ref crying. He had accidentally locked himself inside but was unharmed.
In the mother’s Facebook post, she clarified that the refrigerator was unplugged and her son cried because he was afraid of the dark, according to GMA News.
Meanwhile, 8-year-old Liam of Somerset, Kentucky, USA is a regular kid who likes lollipops. He also likes to play online games on his mom’s smartphone.
Liam’s mom, Holly LaFavers, was not worried that her son also window shops in the Amazon online store just like her.
LaFlavers told ABC News’ Good Morning America (GMA) that Liam knows how to add items to the grocery cart of the Amazon app.
On 4 May, however, the mother got the shock of her life when her bank account showed a $4,200 charge from Amazon. She quickly discovered that her son Liam had placed an order on Amazon for Dum-Dum lollipops, according to GMA.
“He knows he’s not allowed to push the [order] button,” she told GMA. “This has never happened before.”
LaFlavers immediately called Amazon to cancel the order and get a refund. Still, 22 of 30 boxes of Dum-Dums were delivered to their house and the remainder they were able to refuse.
LaFlavers posted a message on Facebook offering the more than 70,000 lollipops in unopened boxes for sale.
Friends, family and strangers from Somerset favorably responded in two hours before Amazon agreed to refund the full amount of Liam’s order on 6 May, according to ABC News.