He Let His Aunt Use His Streaming Account. Then She Demanded He Change His Profile Picture.

It started with football night and ended with a family standoff over a cartoon bear.

A college student had scored a discounted subscription to Peacock Premium. He originally signed up to watch the Five Nights at Freddy’s movie, and like any loyal fan, he set his profile picture to Freddy Fazbear himself. Harmless. Nostalgic. A little creepy, sure, but that was the point.

He never expected that tiny digital bear to cause a family feud.

He Let His Aunt Use His Streaming Account. Then She Demanded He Change His Profile Picture.
Not the actual photo

Here’s how it unfolded.

'AITA For telling my aunt to pay for her own Peacock Premium account when she didn't like the profile picture I set for my profile?'

Gonna keep this one brief.

Me, I am a College Student, so I had a way of signing up for Peacock Premium for a reduced rate. I originally got it for the FNAF movie, but...

They also have La Brea, which is a mom and I show. Plus I have engaged in some of my guilty pleasures.

That said, since FNAF holds a special place in my heart, the PFP I set for myself is Freddy Fazbear himself.

Either way, this is not about that. You might be wondering why my Aunt has my Peacock Account. The answer is my Uncle.

My Dad, my Dad's Fiance [Maria], and I went to go visit my Grandparents, and turns out my Uncle Jerry was visiting from out of state.

We visited on football night, so my grandfather, my dad, and Uncle Jerry were trying to watch the game.

Bad news: whatever my Grandpa uses to get his channels on his TV failed.

Uncle Jerry said we could use Peacock to watch it, but since they don't have an account they'd need to pay for it. This is where I came in.

I signed in on his ipad and they watched it a bit on there, but then they wanted to scale up so I signed in on my Grandparents' Firestick.

Simple as that. They enjoyed the game and then soon we left for home. A few days pass and I don't hear anything, but then I get a text from...

"You need to change the picture on your peacock account. It's too scary for me and the kids."

Uncle Jerry has two sons, and they're 10 and 7 respectively. They're also very much of the Christian Faith, so I bring that up because their household is not conducive...

However, Freddy holds a dear place in my heart for many reasons that I won't outline here.

I told Aunt Melinda that I didn't want to and she said that I still need to. I then told her "If you don't want to see Freddy every time...

and stopped responding. Aunt Melinda isn't a particularly vindictive person, so I think that's why she didn't respond directly to me after that.

Later on, I got a call from Dad asking what happened, and I had to explain. He wasn't mad per se, but wasn't exactly proud.. Here's everyone's position:

Aunt Melinda: Wants me to apologize and change my profile pic.. Uncle Jerry: Says I should consider doing it for Aunt Melinda and the boys..

Dad: Says that I have a point and that it's my prerogative, but says there will be an impact..

Maria: Says that since I'm the one paying for the account, I have the final say.

Mom: Told me I wasn't in the wrong at all and I should change my password and sign out of all devices that aren't mine.

I am mentally at a stalemate personally. Should I give this up? Should I just change it? Think it'll blow over? Reddit: Am I the A-hole?

A Favor Turns Into Shared Access

The account sharing wasn’t even intentional at first.

He and his dad were visiting his grandparents when his uncle Jerry happened to be in town. It was football night. The kind of night where three grown men will absolutely not accept technical difficulties as fate.

Unfortunately, whatever setup Grandpa had for TV channels failed. No game. Mild panic.

Uncle Jerry suggested Peacock. They didn’t have an account. He did.

So he logged in on Jerry’s iPad. Then, when they wanted a bigger screen, he signed in on his grandparents’ Firestick. The game played. Everyone was happy. Crisis averted.

He assumed that was the end of it.

A few days later, he got a text from his Aunt Melinda.

“You need to change the picture on your Peacock account. It’s too scary for me and the kids.”

The kids in question are 10 and 7. The household is very Christian. Horror movies are not exactly family movie night material.

Still, this was his account. His discounted student subscription. His profile.

And Freddy Fazbear meant something to him.

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The Request That Rubbed Him the Wrong Way

At first, he simply said he didn’t want to change it.

His aunt insisted. Said he still needed to.

That’s when he replied, “If you don’t want to see Freddy every time you open Peacock, get your own account.”

Then he stopped responding.

The silence that followed wasn’t peaceful. It just shifted the drama elsewhere.

Soon his dad called asking what happened. His aunt wanted an apology and the picture changed. His uncle suggested he consider doing it “for the boys.” His dad said he had a point but warned there might be fallout. His dad’s fiancée said since he pays for it, he has final say.

His mom? She took a stronger stance.

Change the password. Sign out of all devices. Problem solved.

And that’s where he’s stuck. Is this worth standing his ground over? Or is this the kind of petty hill that turns into Thanksgiving tension?

Boundaries, Mooching, and Principle

On the surface, this is about a profile picture.

Underneath, it’s about boundaries.

He didn’t offer them a long-term subscription. He helped them watch a football game. Somehow that turned into ongoing access and then into demands about how he should customize his own account.

That shift matters.

When someone is using something you pay for, especially without formally asking for continued access, it’s strange to start issuing aesthetic demands. It flips the dynamic. Suddenly the person providing the service is being managed by the person benefiting from it.

And while Freddy Fazbear might be mildly unsettling to a seven-year-old, he’s just a static icon on a streaming menu. Not a horror scene playing automatically on loop.

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There’s also a practical issue. Many streaming services restrict account sharing. If Peacock flags unusual activity across households, he could lose his student discount altogether.

So now this small argument has layers. Respect. Autonomy. Financial risk.

Could He Just Change It?

Sure. He could swap the profile picture to something neutral. A landscape. A generic icon. No drama.

But now that it’s escalated, it feels less like compromise and more like surrendering to entitlement.

That’s the part that makes it tricky.

Because once you adjust something small under pressure, it can set a tone. The next time it might be, “Don’t watch that show.” Or, “Can you not have that title in your watch history?”

It sounds silly. Until it isn’t.

See what others had to share with OP:

Most commenters sided with him. Many echoed his mom’s advice: sign out of all devices and change the password. Problem eliminated.

[Reddit User] − Mom: Told me I wasn't in the wrong at all and I should change my password and sign out of all devices that aren't mine. This is...

[Reddit User] − NTA. I’m with your mom here, sign out of all devices and the problem is solved. If they’re so christian about it, let them login into jesus’s...

dishonestgandalf − Gonna keep this one brief. Mission failed. ​ NTA. I prefer your mom's approach, but if you want to let them keep access, that's fine too. Definitely don't...

Some pointed out that if the household is that strict, maybe the solution isn’t controlling someone else’s profile picture but simply getting their own account.

RoyallyOakie − NTA. ..They need to do the Christian thing and pay for their own account.

[Reddit User] − NTA - you are paying for the account. Sign out, change the password and Auntie and niblings won't have to be traumatized by a pic of "Freddy...

StAlvis − NTA I then told her "If you don't want to see Freddy every time you open Peacock, get your own account. " and stopped responding. F__king a.

goldenfingernails − NTA but wow, family drama! You are giving Aunt Melinda and Uncle Jerry free access to Peacock. If they don't want FNAF avatar grinning gruesomely at them, they...

Good luck!

A few joked that it would be more “Christian” to pay for their own subscription instead of riding on his.

My2Cents_503 − NTA Mom's right. Log out all devices and change your password. Not only are they wrong for criticizing you for something you let them use, you risk losing...

EmmyHomewrecker − Who pays for Peacock monthly? You are genuinely the first person I ever hear does that. NTA. This is an argument that babies would have.

BluePopple − NTA- the exact correct response. You pay for this service and kindly allow them to use it. Info- Did you ever intend on them using it ongoing? It...

It’s also not very Christian of her to hold a grudge over something as trivial as a streaming service. Maybe you should mention that the good, Christian thing to do...

You could never live with yourself for leading the little lambs astray. Change the password and sign out.

This wasn’t really about a creepy animatronic bear.

It was about ownership.

He pays for the account. He set the profile picture. He did a favor. That favor quietly became expectation, and expectation turned into criticism.

Sometimes the simplest boundary is the clearest one. If you don’t like what you see when you log in, open your own account.

So is he the villain for keeping Freddy as his icon?

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Or is this just a reminder that free access doesn’t come with customization privileges?

 

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