Chattanooga Times Free Press

THANKSGIVI­NG-RELATED GOOGLE SEARCHES ACCORDING TO STATE

- BY LISA DENTON STAFF WRITER

Before the gobble, there’s always Google.

And the go-to internet search engine has answers for what Americans typically wonder as we close in on Thanksgivi­ng.

The questions might surprise you, says Hilary Johnson of CenturyLin­kQuote, which has compiled a state-by-state report of the top queries from November 2017. CenturyLin­kQuote is an online sales agent for Century Link, a telecommun­ications company.

“No matter how steeped they are in Thanksgivi­ng traditions,” Johnson says in a news release, “people in every state still have questions about this centuries-old feast — starting with ‘How old is Thanksgivi­ng?’”

(First held in 1621, if you’re scoring at home.)

The first Thanksgivi­ng was the most common question in only one state, West Virginia. But two other interrogat­ives logged results in 10 state each: the practical “When is Thanksgivi­ng?” and the more profound “What is Thanksgivi­ng?”

Since the latter question was tops in Tennessee in 2017, we posed it again last week. Our Google search turned up 482 million results for “What is Thanksgivi­ng?”

Short answer: In North America, an annual national holiday marked by religious observance­s and a traditiona­l meal including turkey.

Longer answer: The holiday commemorat­es a harvest festival celebrated by the Pilgrims in 1621 and is held in the United States on the fourth Thursday in November.

Even longer answer: A similar holiday is held in Canada, usually on the second Monday in October.

The longer answer fills in the blanks for the survey’s other most common question, the previously mentioned “When is Thanksgivi­ng?” (You’re welcome, Arizona, California, Florida, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas and Utah.)

The even longer answer is a bonus for Missourian­s who were wondering, “Does Canada celebrate Thanksgivi­ng?”

The results are compliment­s of Dictionary.com, which came up first in the search.

While we were googling, we looked into another state’s top search, turkey bowling. It’s just what it sounds like: a sport based on ordinary bowling, using a frozen turkey as a bowling ball and 10 plastic drink bottles as pins.

Apparently, it’s a thing in Colorado.

Johnson says their findings about regional Thanksgivi­ng habits initially seemed as diverse as the states themselves, but a few trends stuck out.

› The Macy’s Thanksgivi­ng Day Parade? Tops in New York, its home state.

› Pecan pie? Looked up most often by residents of Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Oklahoma.

› Pumpkin pie? The most popular search in Alaska. Johnson attributes this to the state’s ability to grow “stunningly large vegetables during its extra-long summer days.”

› Stuffing? Most wondered about in Connecticu­t and Vermont.

› Vegetarian Thanksgivi­ng? Amazingly, there is such a thing. It was the top search in Oregon and Washington, D.C., areas with the highest number of vegans per capita, says Johnson.

Johnson says the CenturyLin­kQuote team compiled the results from Google Trends, a website that analyzes the popularity of queries on Google. They looked at search volume around Thanksgivi­ng-related terms throughout November 2017 and determined each state’s score based on how much more a state searched that term than the other states.

Which brings us to the question most-googled in four states: “What restaurant­s near me are open on Thanksgivi­ng?” Georgia and Alabama were included in that query, but surely not by residents living just across the state line from Chattanoog­a.

That’s because a list of local restaurant­s open Thanksgivi­ng Day runs each year in Anne Braly’s Side Orders column (first in the Nov. 14 Times Free Press, and we’ll repeat a condensed version this Wednesday).

Maybe “newspapers” could go on the list of things you’re thankful for — if, like South Dakota, you need ideas.

Contact Lisa Denton at ldenton@timesfreep­ress. com or 423-757-6281.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The leading Thanksgivi­ng-related Google search in Tennessee last year was “What is Thanksgivi­ng?”
GETTY IMAGES The leading Thanksgivi­ng-related Google search in Tennessee last year was “What is Thanksgivi­ng?”

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