Carla Bellucci is hiding £2,000 in cash inside Easter eggs for her three-year-old daughter Blu.
There will also be an iPad, dolls, a hired Easter bunny and a trip to Universal Studios in Florida in November.
Her older children, Tanisha, 20, and Jayden, 19, are getting nothing. She says they can sort themselves out.
“They’re too old now and have their own cash,” the 44-year-old from Hertfordshire told CreatorZine.
“I think if they make their own money, then why should I have to spend my hard-earned pennies on treating them? If anything, it should be the other way around, as I have done a lot for them.”
A quieter Easter, not a cheaper one

Last year, Bellucci hosted a 40-person Easter bash that cost £5,000 and left her neighbours “fuming” over the noise.
This year she is scaling back the guest list to avoid a repeat. The budget, however, has not shrunk.
Blu’s Easter egg hunt will include cash totalling £2,000 spread across the eggs, plus the iPad hidden among them.
Previous years saw all of Bellucci’s children receive laptops worth £600 each, with Blu also getting a trip to Disneyland Paris.

This time, the spending is concentrated entirely on her youngest.
“I’m going to do an Easter egg hunt for Blu only,” she said.
“People can say I’m spoiling her all they want but I’m not raising a brat. She’s a lovely girl with such a sweet heart and deserves the world.”
‘A harsh lesson in the reality of life’

Bellucci says the unequal treatment is deliberate. She frames it as preparing her older children for adulthood rather than punishing them.
“I can’t think of any reason why they’d deserve the same treatment. Some people say I’m being unfair, but Blu is young. They both had it all when they were young.”
The Easter plan arrives weeks after Bellucci made headlines for expecting at least £500 from each of her children for Mother’s Day.
The formula is consistent: lavish spending on the youngest, high expectations from the oldest, and a comment section that reliably loses its mind over both.
She added: “Other mums are only mad at me because they can’t afford to.”
Why it matters
Bellucci is, at this point, one of the most efficient outrage generators in British tabloid media.
The structure never changes. She announces something extravagant and deliberately unequal, frames it as good parenting, and waits for the reaction.

A £2,000 Easter egg hunt for a toddler who cannot count to 2,000 is designed to provoke, and it will.
The Universal Studios trip and the hired Easter bunny are details that exist primarily to make the number feel even more excessive.
For Bellucci, the coverage is the product. Every article written about her spending is an advertisement for the brand she has built: the mum who does not care what you think, provided you keep thinking about her. It works every time.
The older children, notably, have never publicly complained. Whether that is contentment or strategy is their business.











