Do you observe Thanksgiving?

Do you observe Thanksgiving?

  • I'm an American, and I observe Thanksgiving.

    Votes: 37 59.7%
  • I'm not an American, and I observe Thanksgiving.

    Votes: 1 1.6%
  • I'm an American, and I do not observe Thanksgiving.

    Votes: 6 9.7%
  • I'm not an American, and I do not observe Thanksgiving.

    Votes: 18 29.0%

Well, for urban folks.

It started off with Jewish Americans, looking for something that was open to do on Christmas, which turned out to be Chinese restaurants (we have more of them in the US than we do McDonald's) and going to the movies.

But it's such a good idea once kids aren't little and tearing into presents any more that it's become more and more popular among large portions of the population. I wouldn't say it's the dominant way to celebrate Christmas, but I see a lot of people getting Chinese takeout on Dec. 25, when I'm standing in line for my twice-cooked pork.
You guys are like actual aliens!
 

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Christmas is traditional in our house: Chinese takeout and a movie.
Is the movie A Christmas Story?

Besides, I thought the traditional Christmas feast protein was a goose. Seems odd that that's evolved for the UK given that turkeys aren't native to Europe ... but then again I guess Christmas traditions are pretty modern.

My mother's family's traditional Christmas protein was ham (German & French-Canadian roots). My wife's family does chicken or roast beef. We do turkey, chicken, beef, sometimes seafood, occasionally tacos ... no fixed menu.
 



The comical thing about anti-colonial backlash aimed at Thanksgiving is that the annual holiday in the United States was actually created to give thanks for the Union winning the Battle of Gettysburg (something I for one am still thankful for) and generally to promote the idea that the future was hopeful as 1863 came to a close. And even that is just the political circumstances that allowed activist Sarah Joshepa Hale to finally succeed at her effort to have the disparate local thanksgiving harvest festivals in New England (celebrations which, despite geography, had nothing to do with Pilgrims) made into a national holiday (with her preferred menu!).

The "First Thanksgiving" with Pilgrims and Wampanoag was an actual event, but it almost certainly took place earlier in the season (during the harvest!) and only became conflated with the annual holiday later. I would presume the conflation happened in part to sell the celebration in the reintegrated Southern states and in part because of general mythmaking and desire to make a newish holiday look like an ancient tradition, but it seems it was mostly the standardization of grade school curricula in the late 19th and early 20th centuries that really put the Pilgrims in the spotlight. Partly this was part of the assimilationist and national pride inculcating agenda of those curricula, but in defense of the school teachers I'll say that a simple story about sharing and survival from early in the country's history makes pedigogical sense for elementary students, whereas trying to explain to students why they should be thankful for Union war victories (long before they study the Civil War) does not.
 

Kind of. I'm an American and I do things on Thanksgiving, but we don't celebrate any of the usual colonialism tied to the holiday. It's really just an excuse for my aunt, uncle, and myself to go out for a nice meal.
 

GIven that you all have Christmas dinner on Thanksgiving, what do you have for dinner on Christmas day, if not Christmas dinner? I can't imagine Christmas day without the full turkey and all trimmings. It just wouldn't be Christmas!
It varies a lot depending one where you go. In my family (rural South) there was always a ham involved, one half of my mom's family would usually also have venison (deer season is in November). There is a lot of overlap between the side dishes and desserts though.
I have started to embrace the Chinese takeout dinner though, since as previously mentioned I live very far from my family and don't feel like doing stuff.
 

Yours is once place I'd worried about getting banned from due to reading about your cooking skills and the menu :ROFLMAO:
No one is EVER banned. (Some have been asked to bring ice, though.)

I’m a firm believer that everyone has a dish they can cook well. It’s just that some haven’t quite figured out which one it is, yet. And a lot of people give up on that hunt.

At past gatherings, we’ve had 2+ people bringing mac (or other pasta) & cheese. One of my cousin’s wife makes a fantastic banana pudding. Another one- generally considered a TERRIBLE cook overall- nonetheless makes some excellent creole sides.
 

Christmas is traditional in our house: Chinese takeout and a movie.

Is the movie A Christmas Story?
The amusing thing is that this actually happens in A Christmas Story. If you haven't seen it, the traditional dinner is ruined so the family end up going out for Chinese (complete with a horrific racist joke about the staff trying to sing Deck the Halls)
 

Chinese takeaway? Wow! I can't think of anything less Christmassy!

You say that's traditional? Sometimes I think I know Americans, and then sometimes I discover I have the most enormous gaps in my knowledge about their culture.

Well, for urban folks.

It started off with Jewish Americans, looking for something that was open to do on Christmas, which turned out to be Chinese restaurants (we have more of them in the US than we do McDonald's) and going to the movies.

But it's such a good idea once kids aren't little and tearing into presents any more that it's become more and more popular among large portions of the population. I wouldn't say it's the dominant way to celebrate Christmas, but I see a lot of people getting Chinese takeout on Dec. 25, when I'm standing in line for my twice-cooked pork.
It’s such a thing that it was lampooned in A Christmas Story.


(Yes, technically that’s a racist stereotype. But you’ll note the owner is trying to help his employees get it right. And a lot of Asians view it less as racist and more of a snapshot from an earlier time & place.)
To be clear, it’s not a UNIVERSAL or even COMMON thing- I’ve never done it myself, for instance- but it’s definitely infamous.
 

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