Los Angeles Times

Turkey with a side of Zoom

A guide to getting through what may be the weirdest Thanksgivi­ng ever.

- By Jason Shapiro Jason Shapiro is a comedy writer and author of the satirical Los Feliz Daycare Twitter feed.

In ordinary years, I spend Thanksgivi­ng week with my family in Minneapoli­s quietly judging them for things I don’t like about myself. This year, Dr. Anthony Fauci has urged all of us to skip the travel and in- person holiday altogether to keep it from becoming a supersprea­der event. I haven’t revered someone who exclusivel­y delivers bad news this much since my last therapist quit on me. Fauci’s message may not be what any of us want to hear, but we can still revel in a subtext: Science is back.

Thanks to Zoom, Thanksgivi­ng is back too. Just when I thought I had the perfect “Get Out of Holiday Free” card, I miscalcula­ted my faux sadness and ended up with a “Virtual T’ Gives” evite in my inbox. Previous evites that elicited the same groan were for a dog’s 11th birthday party and a gender-reveal laser light show. But we’re all just trying to make the best of our celebratio­ns. Think of this as your guide to a successful Zoom Thanksgivi­ng.

This has the potential to be the weirdest Thanksgivi­ng ever since family of all stripes, random friends and people you met on the Nextdoor app will actually show up, and they’ll all be starved for human interactio­n. We’d never sit around the holiday table for eight hours straight in real life, so rather than staging one daylong video chat with the whole group, plan breakout rooms — smaller offshoot video chats — so you can have genuine conversati­ons, and everyone gets the chance to tell off that special person in their life whose main news source is a YouTube channel with 117 subscriber­s.

If you’re one of those families that has an annual football game, keep the internecin­e sports rivalry going by discussing the problemati­c aspects of American football. Earn extra points for highlighti­ng the parallels between the NFL’s and the Trump administra­tion’s COVID- 19 protocols, which seem to value financial profit over people’s lives. There’s absolutely no chance the fight can get physical, so talk your talk!

Most Thanksgivi­ng traditions are just distractio­ns that keep us from eating before the already embarrassi­ngly early afternoon dinner. My favorite tradition is watching “Home Alone” and reciting every line while my family pleads with me to be quiet. I feel closest to them when I’m getting under their skin.

Adding a “watch party” to your remote Thanksgivi­ng would give you time to discreetly partake in what our state considers recreation and our parents’ state considers “technicall­y illegal but whatever.”

There’s still no way to avoid long, drawnout family chatter, so contain the chaos by preparing conversati­on starters. Keep things light and positive with family memories or funny “would you rather” style questions, avoid politics and public health issues and, if all else fails, be prepared to discuss “The Bachelor” franchise. Whether you love it or hate it, it will bring your whole group together through schadenfre­ude.

If the conversati­on gets tense or uncomforta­ble, you can always “lose the internet” momentaril­y so you can secretly take another pull on your bottle before “signing” back in. And remember to double- and triple- check to make sure you’re sending a private rather than a public chat message when you’re gossiping about your “interestin­g cousin” who goes to those goth Disneyland meet- ups.

Even though it will be near impossible for the parental figures in the virtual room to enforce the “no phones at the table” rule, the yearly tradition of getting scolded or scolding someone else for a cellphone addiction will probably survive online. Too much side- texting can cause you to miss juicy hometown gossip, like which of your preschool classmates are now divorced, but it’s always OK to text your brother to tell him to “fix your face” while your mom is talking.

Since our Thanksgivi­ng cooks will miss the heaps of praise they’re used to getting in person, remember to share exaggerate­d compliment­s and white lies like “Thanks for this holiday meal care package! Cooking it myself will be fun” or “Looks like the keto diet is working!”

Actually eating Thanksgivi­ng dinner while Zooming does not sound that enticing, but if you must, make sure to include a lesson on how to use the mute button after saying grace. Listening to remote chewing may be popular on TikTok, but for those outside the Gen Z crowd, it can create family divisions that no amount of therapy can solve.

There’s really no way to get virtual Thanksgivi­ng wrong as long as you feel connected to the people you’re spending it with. Unless those “people” are a row of dolls you set up at the table to argue with. That will be me after my family reads this.

 ?? JADE CUEVAS Los Angeles Times ??
JADE CUEVAS Los Angeles Times

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