Breaking New: Travis Kelce Cracks Up Brother Jason When He Admits He Didn’t Know “Alice in Wonderland”’s Name — Here’s What He Thought It Was
Travis Kelce can admit to his mistakes!
On the Wednesday, June 26 episode of the New Heights with Jason and Travis Kelce podcast, the Kansas City Chiefs tight end, 34, surprised his older sibling when he revealed he’d only recently learned the name of a classic Disney film.
Sitting in front of a tea setup while discussing “a traditional English tea service” that can be found at “the Sanderson Hotel” in London, the brothers referenced Tweedledee and Tweedledum — two characters in Lewis Carroll’s 1871 book Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There.
The fictional twins also appeared in Disney’s 1951 animated film, Alice in Wonderland, an adaptation of Carroll’s Alice stories.
“I don’t know if it comes from the book or not, but fancy. This is a very Alice in Wonderland tea set,” Jason, 36, said of the products displayed before them. “This is the official Mad Hatter tea service that makes the Alice in Wonderland references make sense now.”
This prompted the 2024 Super Bowl winner to make a confession.
“Yeah. I also found out over the summer that it’s Alice in Wonderland, not Allison Wonderland,” Travis replied.
“You thought it was Allison Wonderland?” Jason asked, to which Travis confirmed.
The newly retired Philadelphia Eagles center seemed baffled by his brother’s response.
“Did you ever — we’ve watched the movie, though. You know her name wasn’t Allison,” Jason said.
Still, Travis assured his brother that he had been clueless to the classic film title: “I thought it was. Not one time did I catch that, dude.”
The siblings shared a few laughs, then moved on from the topic to eat some of the snacks seen in the tea display.
After congratulating Travis on his Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards nomination on their podcast earlier this month, they talked about their favorite childhood films and television shows.
According to the brothers, Disney Channel Original Movies took the top spots.
“Top 10, here we go,” Jason said, after pulling up a list. “Number one: Smart House. 2. Zenon: Girl of the 21st Century. Next, Halloweentown. I kinda like that one low-key more than Hocus Pocus.”
They each named a few more options, but agreed that the 1998 movie Brink was the best. During the podcast, Travis revealed that he and his brother enjoyed skating as kids, just as the teens did in the Disney film.
“I always wanted to be the oldest brother in Even Stevens,” Travis said.
“He’s the sports god, he plays every single sport and they have a banner of him in the gym and he still goes there,” Travis added. “He played more than three sports and I always wanted to do that.”
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