"Right," the boy answers, before loading up shopping bags with Legos, firing Nerf guns with his dad and swinging lightsabers with Geoffrey the Giraffe, Toys R Us' beloved mascot.
"When I asked my Dad for the "WHOLE Toys R Us Store" for Christmas I didn't think he would actually do it, but he did," reads on post on Sire's Instagram, which is run by his mother, Amber Joy. "Thank you Daddy! Best Christmas Ever!"
Aside from being an unbeatable Christmas present for Sire, the celebrity shopping spree gives the gift of publicity to the newly revived Toys R Us. Saddled with nearly $8 billion in debt and unable to keep up with online and big-box competitors, the company closed more than 800 stores and shuttered its doors in 2018 after 70 years of business, putting nearly 33,000 employees out of work. Now, a little more than a year later, Toys R Us has been reborn, just in time for the holidays.
"We're reinventing Toys R Us to make it fun and interactive for kids and parents," Richard Barry, a former Toys R Us executive who is leading the new venture, told The Post earlier this year.