A $33 martini that arrives after the fried chicken and before the apology was the last straw for one diner at the NFL stars’ glitzy chophouse.

Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes built a destination steakhouse. TikTok just turned it into a cautionary tale about celebrity gloss versus dinner on a Tuesday night.

The latest viral review doesn’t just gripe about prices; it details service fumbles you can’t hide behind LED ice buckets. If the playbook is luxury, the execution can’t be preseason.

The Moment

A TikToker named Nicole Rose says she spent roughly $650 for two at 1587 Prime, the Kansas City steakhouse backed by the Chiefs superstars, and called it the “worst fine-dining experience” she’s had. In her video, posted in March 2026, she recounts a 45-minute wait for a martini, a wrong drink, and no staff check-ins.

She describes a made-at-the-table martini that finally appeared at $33 after the table’s fried chicken hit first. Sauces for a pricey steak were allegedly forgotten, her friend was nearly finished by the time they arrived, and a $100 steak was cooked incorrectly. The swiftest moment of the night? “Collecting the bill,” she says.

It’s not good, and it is not worth it… the worst fine-dining experience I’ve ever had.

Rose does toss a few roses: mashed potatoes, broccoli, and bread. But the overall verdict is a hard no, made more stinging because it was meant to be a special night with friends, including one preparing for a six-month military stint.

The Take

I don’t root for people to have a bad meal, but I do root for the truth to cut through the fog machine. And celebrity restaurants live by a fog machine. The economics are brutal: eye-popping build-outs, A-list name tax, a crowd that wants spectacle and steak cooked to temp. If the front of house wobbles or the kitchen loses timing, the whole illusion cracks like a sugar dome in July.

Rose’s video isn’t a lone outlier; it tracks with a 2025 write-up from a respected Kansas City critic who called 1587 Prime’s vision of luxury “parched,” big on theatrics and thin on craft. Translation: VIP vibes, everyday errors. That’s the cardinal sin at this tier. High-end dining is a choreography of seconds; the bar cart can be Broadway, but not if Act One is “Where’s our server?”

Here’s the cultural rub: we keep mistaking access for excellence. Sitting where the stars sit doesn’t season your steak. When a room asks you to pay top-tier prices, the room has to move like a Swiss watch, especially when social media is the instant replay. One viral table miss, and the fan cam becomes the referee.

Call it the Super Bowl problem: 1587 Prime sells a ring ceremony, but diners keep catching preseason fundamentals. You can’t swagger your way past cold sauces and late drinks. Not at $33 a martini.

Receipts

Confirmed:

  • 1587 Prime is a Kansas City steakhouse associated with Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes; the restaurant announced its opening in September 2025 via its official channels.
  • A TikTok video by user Nicole Rose, posted in March 2026, details her experience, including a 45-minute wait for a martini, missing sauces, and a final bill of around $650. Her direct quotes appear in the video.
  • A widely shared 2025 restaurant review by Kansas City critic Liz Cook characterized 1587 Prime’s concept as an underwhelming version of luxury and included language to that effect.

Unverified/Reported:

  • Exact service timelines, dish temperatures, and the steak’s doneness are Rose’s claims; no official response from 1587 Prime was available at the time of publication.
  • Whether Rose’s experience reflects typical service is unknown; social media includes both positive and negative diner accounts that have not been independently audited.

Backstory (for the Casual Reader)

Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes at the opening of their Kansas City steakhouse 1587 Prime in September 2025
Kelce and Mahomes opened up their steakhouse in Kansas City back in September. – Daily Mail US

Kelce and Mahomes, two of the NFL’s most visible stars, extended their Kansas City footprint with 1587 Prime, a high-design steakhouse that leans into tableside moments (think martini carts and premium cuts). The name nods to their jersey numbers. The opening drew immediate interest, with celebrity sightings fueling demand and bragging rights over reservations. As the buzz settled, critiques surfaced: some diners praised the scene, while others flagged uneven service and concerns about value. A 2025 review from a local critic captured that split, flashy touches that didn’t always add up to a great plate.

Fans pack 1587 Prime hoping to spot Taylor Swift amid the restaurant's celebrity buzz
Swifties have regularly packed out the restaurant, hoping to see the singer there. – Daily Mail US

None of this is unique to 1587. Athlete-owned dining rooms are a genre now, merch meets menu, and the challenge is the same everywhere: make the sizzle match the steak, every single night, long after opening-week fireworks fade. If 1587 Prime wants to win the long game, it’s not about star power. It’s about hot plates, tight timing, and a martini that arrives before the chicken.

If you’ve splurged on a “celebrity” restaurant, what mattered most in the end: the spectacle or the execution, and did the bill feel worth it?

Sources:

  • Nicole Rose, TikTok video (March 2026).
  • 1587 Prime official opening announcement (September 2025).
  • Liz Cook published a restaurant review (2025).

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