Post
by Murfreesboro » Sat Jun 18, 2011 11:00 am
That's very surprising to me. I had always heard that Halloween (well, autumnal decor, including Halloween) was second only to Christmas. Of course, the autumnal decor might have included Thanksgiving, too. I know I have some items that I put up for Halloween and leave up for Thanksgiving. Maybe it's if you lump Halloween & Thanksgiving together that you come up with "second only to Christmas." After all, the stores stop selling the autumnal stuff after Oct. and go into full-on Christmas mode.
I do believe that some of those "minor" or "Hallmark holidays" have been gaining in commercial prominence. Valentine's is next to nothing at our house. I have never, ever been one of those women who pitched a fit if my husband didn't give me something on that day. Basically, at Valentine's, I buy strawberries and dip them in chocolate at home for the family. The kids enjoy that. My husband isn't overly fond of strawberries. But that's our Valentine's. Then, Mother's Day and Father's Day, we celebrate pretty much alike--probably a dinner out at a family restaurant, then a family movie. Maybe we saw Thor on Mother's Day weekend? We also saw Pirates, but I'm not sure it was out yet at Mother's Day. And today we are going to see Green Lantern. I mean, these days mean very, very little to any of us. We just use them as an excuse to go out as a family, maybe. We don't usually even bother with cards. But I have been aware that not only commercials on TV, but even the TV shows themselves, often schedule episodes around, say, Valentine's Day, which perhaps gives people the idea they should be doing something at that time.
Where was Easter on that list? Do people not buy for Easter at all, according to that article? we certainly spend more on Easter than on Valentine's, Mother's Day, or Father's Day.
What about the Fourth of July? Don't most people have some kind of party on or around the Fourth? We make way more of the Fourth than of Valentine's or the other two.
I enjoy Thanksgiving, but to me, it is mainly about the food. You can spend as much on that as you like, I suppose, but $25-$35 would actually buy anyone a perfectly acceptable Thanksgiving "feast." (That's if you cook it at home and make most of it from scratch, and just do the most traditional things, like turkey with cornbread dressing; cranberry sauce; sweet potatoes; green beans; pumpkin pie.)