Εργαλεία
Να αλλάξει χώρα :

Screw it, it’s Christmas now

A house and yard overflowing with Christmas lights.
Christmas lights at a house in Dyker Heights, Brooklyn, New York City. | Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

After last week’s presidential election, something unusual started happening in my neighborhood: On a walk to a wine bar on November 11, I saw stoops lined with pine garlands next to skeletons and spider webs, relics from Halloween a mere week and a half prior. Someone had set up two life-size nutcrackers on their front porch; someone else’s brownstone windows offered a peep into their living room, where a fully lit Christmas tree was already aglow inside. 

But according to people all over the country, it wasn’t just my neighborhood. The early start to the most festive season seemed to be a reaction to — what else — the results of the election, which plunged many Americans into an uncanny mood they haven’t experienced since the last time Donald Trump was elected in 2016. Or, as Massachusetts social worker Dylana Becker put it: “Holiday lights because my daughter may have no fucking rights.”

Becker started putting up Christmas decor on November 6th. Rachael Kay Albers, a marketing professional in Chicago, told me she “just bought a 10-foot tree, not even on sale,” with the philosophy, “Fuck it, it’s time for twinkles.” Rachel Lewis, a social media manager in North Carolina, erected an inflatable penguin on her roof that same week. “Our neighbor said, ‘Isn’t it early?’ And we said ‘No, it’s not.’”

Much like how interest in elaborate skincare routines exploded in the wake of Trump’s 2016 election, Americans seem to be diverting their anxieties into holiday cheer, if only by sheer force. It’s not exactly a mystery as to why: In uncertain times, we seek escape and comfort, and nothing occupies a cozier or more nostalgic place in the American imagination than Christmas. Couple that with a late Thanksgiving, and people are seeing little point in waiting for the turkey to be done to put up their trees. 

For some, Christmas came even before the polls closed. Mia Moran, a children’s book editor in Queens, said she went shopping for Christmas pillows at Target in early November. “This year it just feels like we needed something,” she tells me. “[Christmas] is a good outlet, and also a neutral sense of pure joy. It’s not charged in any way.” 

It’s ironic, considering the decades-long right-wing mania about the supposed “war on Christmas” by the media establishment. This year, for the first time in recent memory, perhaps it’s the left who’s more fervently embracing the holiday. “When the polls close in your state, you are officially allowed to begin playing Christmas music,” tweeted First Amendment lawyer Adam Steinbaugh on the evening of the election. After it became clear Trump was winning, comedian Mike Drucker posted, “I’m listening to Christmas music starting tomorrow cuz fuck this shit.”

According to the Wall Street Journal, forcing holiday spirit is a “healthy response” to election stress, one that “beats sitting there saying, ‘Oh my god, this is an existential threat to the world and I’m going to enter a doom and gloom loop,’” explained Kevin Smith, a political science professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. 

It’s also entirely possible that it isn’t just the election that’s caused this year’s bout of “Christmas creep,” a term that’s been discussed and debated since the 1980s. The phenomenon itself has existed far longer, however: Early Christmas sales (and complaints about them) can be traced back to the Victorian era. It’s typical for customers to be annoyed by businesses using far-off holidays as marketing tools. What’s less common is for Americans to seemingly all agree, individually, that the time for twinkle lights is now. 

This year, per Axios, retail experts say that holiday deals are starting early partly because of the fact that there are five fewer days between Black Friday and Christmas this year, and partly because of election uncertainty. Lowe’s, for instance, launched its holiday decor line in July, a month earlier than the year before, while Amazon moved its Prime Day up to early October. 

America’s favorite coping mechanism has always been buying stuff, and if Christmas spending is any indication, we’ve been getting steadily more anxious for years. The National Retail Federation expects the typical consumer will spend $902 on Christmas gifts and decor, up $25 from last year, reports Business Insider. Prophecy Market Insights projects that the Christmas decoration industry will nearly double in the next decade, from $8.45 billion in 2024 to $13 billion in 2034. 

Charles Scheland, a professional modern dancer in Manhattan, says that in addition to putting up his tree, string lights, and nutcracker statue, he’s also already started pulling his favorite Christmas music to teach in his dance classes. He says that part of that is due to the shock and disappointment of what began as a galvanizing Democratic campaign. “I really think that the joy of the Harris campaign and the optimism of that movement got people excited, and to have that so deafening crushed, people just want to get some of that joy,” he says. 

There’s also another reason for the skip from Halloween to Christmas, he posits. “Thanksgiving is a tricky holiday because it is often celebrated with extended family, and sometimes we don’t agree with our extended family. So rather than getting into the trickier holiday, we’re just jumping ahead to the next.”

In the years since 2020, holidays, and to an even greater extent, seasons, have become celebrations not just IRL in the form of decor and activities, but online. People on TikTok and Instagram began to document their “winter arcs,” their “Meg Ryan falls,” and their hot girl summers as a way of marking the passage of time when it seemed like the only way to feel alive was watching someone else’s life through a screen. As I’ve argued before, dividing one’s life into seasons and leaning heavily into seasonal aesthetics is a way of romanticizing your life while also dissociating from it, a potentially useful tool when it feels like nothing makes sense. 

I’m not immune, either. After my unexpectedly festive neighborhood walk, two wines deep, I decided that I absolutely needed to make a reservation at one of those bars in Manhattan where they deck it out with festive decor for the month of December. In most respects, these are miserable establishments — the kind of bars that are overpriced and crowded to the point of sweltering, places marketed with the promise of quaintness and communal cheer but mostly exist as traps for tourists to take photos in. But in that moment, being surrounded by a million twinkling wreaths and giant red bows and exhausted holiday shoppers from New Jersey sounded like not the worst place to be. In fact, I could think of much worse things: a decaying democracy, or a man investigated for sex crimes being installed as attorney general, for instance. So screw it, it’s Christmas now. May we all find merriment where we can.


Lue koko artikkeli aiheesta: vox.com
Undefeated Chiefs have 1972 Dolphins’ attention and respect: ‘Same design that we had’
The Chiefs will be in Buffalo on Sunday night as two-point underdogs, Mahomes versus Josh Allen renewing their epic rivalry, and you better believe that ’72 Dolphins fullback Larry Csonka, 78 next month, and guard Larry Little, 79 years young now, will be watching from their respective homes.
nypost.com
What’s Behind Trump’s Controversial Cabinet Picks
Trump’s nominees share two main attributes: loyalty and loathing.
theatlantic.com
Meet the woman who blows kisses to unsuspecting subway riders in NYC — see how they react
“I hear about all the bad stuff going on on the train, so I just wanted to put myself out there by spreading love,” lifelong Bronxite Tamia Jones told The Post between air kisses at the 50th Street B/D/F/M station this week. 
nypost.com
What is a Charlotte Russe cake?
What is a Charlotte Russe? The pastry confection has been in the news this week after Whoopi Goldberg claimed a bakery refused to make them for her birthday due to politics.
foxnews.com
Bill Maher Skewers Democrats Over ‘Stupid’ Policies That Got Trump Elected
"When you’re in a hole, stop digging. [Don't] keep digging," said the HBO host.
nypost.com
Military suicides were on the rise last year, despite a massive investment in prevention programs
Military suicides ticked up once again last year, following a dark long-term trend where the Pentagon has struggled to make meaningful progress.
foxnews.com
Wasserman Schultz sparks backlash for claiming Tulsi Gabbard is a Russian asset
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., is facing backlash online for claiming that Tulsi Gabbard, President-elect Trump’s pick for Director of National Intelligence (DNI), is “likely a Russian asset."
foxnews.com
Fire engulfs hospital ward in northern India, killing 10 newborn babies
A fire tears through a neonatal intensive care unit in a hospital in northern India, killing 10 newborn babies and injuring 16 others.
latimes.com
Ex-rapper Shyne, who was involved in Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs club shooting, prays jailed mentor is ‘able to reform’
Shyne, who is now a politician in Belize, tells Page Six he feels no satisfaction in seeing Combs behind bars.
nypost.com
Arizona state Senate candidate John McLean killed in suspected DUI crash: ‘True public servant’
A Democratic candidate for a seat in the Arizona Senate was killed in an early morning DUI crash in Tucson on Friday, police confirmed.
nypost.com
Israeli troops reach deepest point in Lebanon since Oct. 1 invasion, Lebanese media say
Israeli ground forces have reached their deepest point in Lebanon since invading six weeks ago but pulled back after battles with Hezbollah militants.
latimes.com
Who Killed Alex Cross’s Wife Maria In ‘Cross’ On Prime Video?
We finally know who killed Alex Cross' wife in Prime Video's Cross series!
nypost.com
‘Doctor Odyssey’ Episode 7: Drag Queens And John Stamos Are “Hot To Go”
Chappell Roan doesn't board the Odyssey, but her music does!
nypost.com
Dan Aykroyd reveals the future of ‘Ghostbusters’: ‘We knew it would be successful’
“I think probably they're going to move on to advancing it beyond the originals, which they should,” Aykroyd said
nypost.com
Vanderpump Dog Foundation Gala: Lisa Vanderpump, Trixie Mattel, Lance Bass and more
Lisa Vanderpump, Trixie Mattel, and Lance Bass are among the stars who attended the 6th Annual Vanderpump Dog Foundation Gala.
nypost.com
NYC students’ futures could be derailed over delayed vote on specialized HS exam
Eight of New York City's elite, specialized high schools could be without a freshman class in 2026 if a contract to provide the admissions exam is not approved next week, parents fear.
nypost.com
Dolly Parton's older brother, David Wilburn Parton, dead at 82
Dolly Parton's older brother, David Wilburn Parton, died at the age of 82. A cause of death was not revealed. A spokesperson for Dolly did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
foxnews.com
Netflix streaming debacle for Jake Paul-Mike Tyson fight sparks concern for Christmas NFL games
Netflix has about six weeks to figure it out.
nypost.com
American Kakistocracy
Italy knows a thing or two about what the United States faces—but there are key differences between the two countries’ experiences.
theatlantic.com
Antonio Brown’s live stream of Jake Paul-Mike Tyson fight saved 7.6 million fans from Netflix issues
As buffering issues threw Netflix’s viewers of the Jake Paul- Mike Tyson fight into fury, the boxing world was placated by an X livestream from an unlikely hero from AT&T Stadium in Antonio Brown.
nypost.com
A brunch that leaves vegetable lovers sighing is back
Kismet's scones and big, Turkish-inspired brunch plate are back, plus check out the lineup for the 101 Best L.A. Restaurants reveal party
latimes.com
‘The Great British Baking Show’ “‘70s Week” Was So Wild I Wondered If Cocaine Invaded The Tent 
Alison’s antics, collapsed cakes, and too much booze for even Prue!
nypost.com
I Had a Simple Rule for My Kid. I Now Realize What a Hypocrite I Am.
I was worried about my daughter becoming a device addict—but I might have been the biggest one of all.
slate.com
Why Puerto Rico’s statehood referendum was a ploy for Democrat seats in Congress
The non-binding vote was all about boosting Democratic reprentation.
nypost.com
BetMGM Bonus Code NYP1600DM: Score a deposit match up to $1.5K for any event, including UFC 309 Jones vs. Miocic
Sign up with a BetMGM bonus code to unlock an exciting welcome offer, available for any event, including the Jon Jones vs. Stipe Miocic fight at UFC 309.
nypost.com
Kate Upton shares concerning message about a ‘drunk and high’ dad in cryptic scenario: ‘Is this an emergency?’
"Truly asking ... lawyers/judges/advocates/law enforcement/ parents," the supermodel added alongside the mysterious message via her Instagram Story.
nypost.com
Jake Paul Beats Mike Tyson In Underwhelming Netflix Fight Plagued By Streaming Glitches
"I didn't want to hurt somebody that didn't need to be hurt," said Paul after the fight.
nypost.com
Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson Live On Netflix: See All The Stars Who Attended The Fight
Joe Jonas, Shaquille O'Neal, Charlize Theron, and more attend Netflix: Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson: See All The Stars Who Attended The Fight
nypost.com
USPS announces Betty White stamp will be released in 2025
Betty White will be honored with a stamp in 2025, the U.S. Postal Service announced on Friday.
cbsnews.com
The Inner Lives of Musicians
Learning where famous artists sleep and what they eat is like finally glimpsing the unknowable.
theatlantic.com
NYC man wants Air France to pony up $600K for his delayed flights to brother’s funeral: suit
A Staten Island man claims he deserves $600,000 because there were delays during his Air France trip to France to attend his brother's funeral.
nypost.com
Actress Amanda Seyfried Ditched Living in Los Angeles for the 'Peace' of a Rural Farm
Actress Amanda Seyfried recently explained that she abandoned her home in L.A. for the "privacy, peace, and nature" of her farm in New York, The post Actress Amanda Seyfried Ditched Living in Los Angeles for the ‘Peace’ of a Rural Farm appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Assassins in L.A. killed on a budget, police say
The alleged hitmen were sloppy, leaving a trail of evidence, authorities said.
latimes.com
New candidate emerges in crowded field as possible replacement for Vance's Ohio Senate seat
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine is considering attorney Mehek Cooke to fill the seat being left by Sen. JD Vance once he moves on to the White House in January.
foxnews.com
Husband and wife restaurant owners share family recipes in new cookbook
At the critically acclaimed Vietnamese restaurant Madame Vo, every dish is inspired by husband-and-wife owners Jimmy Ly and Yen Vo’s families. Now, they’re sharing the recipes with their first cookbook.
cbsnews.com
Russia's Gazprom Shuts Off Natural Gas Shipments to Austria
Russia's state-owned natural gas company Gazprom stopped supplies to Austria early Saturday, according to the Vienna-based utility OMV after it said it would stop payments for the gas following an arbitration award. The post Russia’s Gazprom Shuts Off Natural Gas Shipments to Austria appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
How Clydesdale horses support a non-profit for fallen soldiers, first responders
Folds of Honor is a non-profit that provides scholarships for the families of fallen and disabled military members and first responders. The organization says no partner is too big or too small — and one key partner’s size is undeniable. Dana Jacobson reports on how Clydesdale horses help support the group’s mission.
cbsnews.com
New book from famed photographer focuses on the forces behind the global food chain
Award-winning photographer George Steinmetz has released his sixth book, "Feed the Planet." The book focuses on the people and places powering the world’s food chain, and highlights how those resources are increasingly under strain.
cbsnews.com
Mom living with alopecia reacts to liberal women shaving heads to be 'unattractive' after Donald Trump's win
Liberal women began shaving their heads to be more "unattractive" to men after President-elect Donald Trump won the 2024 presidential election.
foxnews.com
Angry fans believe Jake Paul ‘carried’ Mike Tyson through awful Netflix fight
As Jake Paul’s bout against Mike Tyson dawdled on into the wee hours of Saturday morning, the internet came aflame with accusations that the YouTuber-turned-boxer was stringing the fight along. 
nypost.com
Fire Engulfs Hospital Ward in Northern India, Killing 10 Newborn Babies
A fire tore through a neonatal intensive care unit in a Jhansi, India, killing 10 newborn babies and injuring 16 others
time.com
"The Voice" winner Sundance Head recovering after shooting at his Texas ranch
The 46-year-old Houston native – whose name is Jason Head – was putting a gun away at his ranch when it "slipped out of the holster, hit the side of the jeep and discharged into his stomach area," his publicist said.
cbsnews.com
'No Farmers, No Food' -- UK Farmer Tractor Protest Descends on Labour Party Conference
Hundreds of enraged farmers took to their tractors and descended upon the Labour Party conference in Wales to protest the leftist government's planned tax raid on farmers. The post ‘No Farmers, No Food’ — UK Farmer Tractor Protest Descends on Labour Party Conference appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Nick Cave Wants to Be Good
“ I was just a nasty little guy.”
theatlantic.com
Maryland recommends knocking down, rebuilding Chesapeake Bay Bridge spans
Officials say new, potentially wider, bridge spans across the Chesapeake Bay could ease traffic snarls, particularly during busy summer months.
washingtonpost.com
Everyone’s Favorite Rom-Com Bestie Finally Has a Movie of Her Own. Why Did It Have to Be This One?
But why’d it have to happen like this?
slate.com
Jim O’Heir Looks Back On His “Incestuous” Make Out With ‘Parks & Rec’ Co-Star Aubrey Plaza: “That’s The Day She Became A Woman”
"Let me tell you, we went full force," he said. 
nypost.com
Has California’s progressive facade been shattered beyond repair?
Battered by some of the nation’s highest prices — and suffering from public policies that seem to encourage crime, drug use, and more — California’s residents are fed up.
nypost.com