Happy Thanksgiving.
In the spirit of the holiday and following the lead of newspaper editors, television magazine executive producers, radio talk show hosts, and others who have taken holidays off for their entire careers, the Real Reality Show Blog is taking today off and repeating some of the best from years past posts.
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Once upon a time all of the traditions that we hold so dear on Thanksgiving weren’t. They weren’t traditions, they weren’t habits, they might not have even been normal. But they stuck. For some reason everybody decided that on Thanksgiving we would have turkey and stuffing with cranberry dressing. Turkeys are impossible to cook properly, cranberries are the sourest of all the fall fruits we could possibly pick, and to quote a well know TV celebrity chef, stuffing is evil. Somehow, this terrible trio became the standard for our most family-centric holiday.
Eventually we learned how to prep that bird so it stayed juicy throughout cooking, figured out how to sweeten those bog berries, and learned that you could make a stuffing that actually cooked all the way through when you do it in Pyrex rather than poultry. The imperfections guided our practices to make a new normal.
Thanksgiving 2014
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Think way back, back to the day when all of those stores were closed on holidays, Sundays and most other days after 5. But even then there was a corps of people who knew that when the holidays came around they were just as likely to be at work as they were on any Thursday afternoon. To these people we say, “Thank You!!!”
Thank you to… Firemen, policemen, paramedics, and ambulance drivers. First responders of every kind. The members of our armed forces. Hospital workers in every department except administration. Priests, ministers, rabbis, and other men and women “of the cloth.” Newspaper production and delivery people, reporters, television and radio engineers, producers, directors, and on-air personalities. Toll collectors, train engineers, pilots, co-pilots, flight attendants. Bus drivers and taxi drivers. Air traffic controllers, airport security, baggage handlers, and airplane maintenance. Train station and bus depot ticket sellers and collectors. Hotel receptionists and housekeepers. Restaurant cooks, servers, bus-people and hosts/hostesses. Bartenders. Electric company, gas company, telephone company, water company, sewage company, alarm company, and cable company employees employed outside the executive offices. Tow truck drivers, snow plow drivers, and street repair people on a moment’s notice. Commercial truck drivers and freight handlers. Couriers. Nursing home, personal care home, retirement home and home health care workers. Security guards. Heating and air-conditioning technicians, plumbers, and electricians when they least expect it. Gas station attendants and clerks at convenience stores with convenient hours (yes, retail stores but they have always been open).
Thanksgiving 2011
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The holiday may be called ThanksGIVING but if not for what was GIVEN we can’t appreciate the joy of being special to someone and a target of his or her special gratitude. What have you done that someone can thank you for?
Each of us has an amazing story since last year’s celebration and a special thank you to give at this year’s. The really amazing stories are in the special thank you that you have been given.
Thanksgiving 2013
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Give thanks.
Be thankful.
Live thankfully.
Say thank you.
Thanksgiving Every year
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That’s what I think. Really. How ‘bout you?