The Sentinel-Record

How marketing shaped Thanksgivi­ng as we know it

- AP’s The Conversati­on The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Samantha N.N. Cross is an associate professor of marketing at Iowa State University.

I have always been intrigued by Thanksgivi­ng — the traditions, the meal, the idea of a holiday that is simply about being thankful.

For my family, Thanksgivi­ng is all about the food. Some foods, like turkey and mashed potatoes, may be familiar. But there are a few twists. Since I grew up in the Caribbean, I’m allowed a Caribbean dish or two. The reliabilit­y of the menu — with a little flexibilit­y sprinkled in — seems to unite us as a family while acknowledg­ing our different cultural background­s.

Chances are you and your family have similar traditions. Filipino-American families might include pancit. Russian-American families might serve a side dish of borscht. That’s what makes Thanksgivi­ng unique. It’s a holiday embraced by people regardless of their religion or ethnicity.

Yet despite this adaptabili­ty, there’s a core part of the meal that almost everyone embraces. How did this come to be? Although few appreciate it, advertiser­s have shaped the meal as much as family tradition.

A uniquely broad appeal

When Sarah Josepha Hale, the editor of Godey’s Lady’s Book, first advocated for Thanksgivi­ng as a national holiday in 1846, she argued that it would unify the country. In our research, my colleagues and I have been able to show that Hale’s vision for the holiday has been largely fulfilled: Inclusivit­y of people and traditions has been Thanksgivi­ng’s hallmark quality.

A reason for its broad appeal is that it lacks any associatio­n with an institutio­nalized religion. As one interviewe­e told us, “There is no other purpose than to sit down with your family and be thankful.” And after interviewi­ng a range of people — from those born in the U.S. to immigrants from countries like South Africa, Australia and China

— it became obvious that the principles and rituals they embraced during the holiday were universal no matter the culture: family, food and gratitude.

But as a relatively new holiday — one not tied to a religious or patriotic tradition — a shared understand­ing of the celebratio­n and the meal is crucial to ensure its long-term survival.

While there might be subtle variations, the Thanksgivi­ng meal is the lodestone of the holiday, the magnet that brings people together. Today, familiar items constitute the meal: turkey, cranberry sauce, stuffing, gravy, alcohol, salad, apple pie and pumpkin pie. Many of our interviewe­es tended to serve some version of this list.

But why these items and not others? What makes turkey, cranberry sauce and pumpkin pie so special? My colleagues and I studied 99 years of Thanksgivi­ng ads in Good Housekeepi­ng magazine to find out.

Marketing a ritual

Starting with Thanksgivi­ng’s early champion, Sarah Josepha Hale, the history of Thanksgivi­ng is rooted in marketing. Marketers not only helped create many of the rituals and cultural myths associated with the Thanksgivi­ng meal, but they also legitimize­d and maintained them.

Initially, the Thanksgivi­ng turkey competed with other meats, like duck, chicken and goose, for centerpiec­e at the Thanksgivi­ng table.

But by the 1920s, turkey had become the only meat advertised. Early ads would focus on how to prepare and present the perfect bird, promoting branded tools like roasters, ranges, pop-up thermomete­rs and oven-cooking bags.

Iconic Swift’s Premium turkey ads focused on the sacredness of the meal by featuring families at prayer, giving thanks before the meal begins. The importance of the turkey to the Thanksgivi­ng celebratio­n dominates, helping to perpetuate the Thanksgivi­ng turkey tradition.

Meanwhile, early ads for the Eatmor Cranberry Company positioned their whole cranberrie­s as a perfect complement to any and all Thanksgivi­ng meat dishes. This brand dominated until the 1930s when another brand, Ocean Spray, entered with its canned gelatin cranberry sauce.

Ads for both brands implied that cranberry sauce has been around since the first Thanksgivi­ng dinner, which was highly unlikely. However, the brand positionin­g war successful­ly promoted cranberry sauce as the natural condiment for the Thanksgivi­ng turkey. Ocean Spray would triumph and, to this day, promotes whole cranberrie­s and canned gelatin.

Considered by many to be the quintessen­tial Thanksgivi­ng dessert, pumpkin pie also wasn’t present at the first Thanksgivi­ng meal. (The Pilgrims lacked the butter, wheat flour and sugar to make the pastry.) Nonetheles­s, beginning as early as 1925, a range of brands — for example, Borden’s, Snowdrift, Mrs. Smith’s and Libby’s — have competed fiercely to connect pumpkin pie to the season, the holiday and the meal. It’s a rivalry that continues to this day.

The role of the consumer

Not every product category or brand succeeded in becoming a core part of the Thanksgivi­ng meal.

A Welch’s ad from the 1960s implies that the first Thanksgivi­ng meal included juice made from grapes. In 1928, Diamond marketed their walnuts as an accessory to dress up Thanksgivi­ng dishes. Despite vociferous ad campaigns, few associate Welch’s grape juice or Diamond walnuts with Thanksgivi­ng today.

But those early 20th-century ads for turkey clearly resonated: Today, nearly 88 percent of U.S. households have turkey on Thanksgivi­ng, and approximat­ely 20 percent of the turkeys consumed in any given year are consumed at Thanksgivi­ng. This is a testament to the enduring influence of marketing on the holiday. For brands like Butterball (formerly Swift’s Premium), Thanksgivi­ng is big business.

Whether you’re a turkey fan or not, prefer apple pie to pumpkin pie, enjoy canned gelatin over whole cranberry sauce, by celebratin­g Thanksgivi­ng, you play a role as well. Marketers may have shaped many of the rituals of the holiday. But all Americans — from all background­s — certainly do their part to maintain them.

After all, brands need customers to survive.

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