Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

As virus cases surge, plan for Thanksgivi­ng on Zoom

- RexW. Huppke rhuppke@chicagotri­bune.com

As coronaviru­s cases surge and talks of shutdowns in Chicago and across the country resume, Americans are realizing traditiona­l Thanksgivi­ng get-togethers are largely off the table.

It’s a bummer for many, I know. But when you think about it, Thanksgivi­ng gatherings always have the potential to be disasters.

Rather than feel sad about our pandemic-induced holiday limitation­s, perhapswe should view them as a Thanksgivi­ngDay disaster-tunity— a chance to have an entirely different kind of turkey-centric experience. Consider this normal scenario: It’s 2 p.m. on Thanksgivi­ngDay and the turkeywent in the oven later than planned, so the feast will be hours late and people are already complainin­g that they’re hungry. The relatives are already here, includingU­ncle Tim and Aunt Mirna, who everyone agrees are dreadful to have around. Tim drinks too much and starts making sexist comments and Mirna never stops complainin­g about her sciatica.

There are children running about, yelling and intermitte­ntly breaking things, and you honestly aren’t sure who all the children are— they just blur into one loud, destructiv­e, knee-high force that isn’t helping the headache you have from making small talk with people you, for good reason, only see once a year.

There are adults in the living room yelling about something, a teen in the corner moping and composing awful poetry in his head and other teens in the backyard, either vaping or reflexivel­y rolling their eyes.

The cousin who promised to bring the pies doesn’t showup, a grandparen­t starts to feel “a bit wobbly” for no particular reason, the stuffing is missing something (and you just knowAunt Mirna’s going to point that out at the dinner table) and another blurkid just shot you in the eye with a Nerf gun, causing the mopey teen in the corner to briefly smirk.

Finally, dinner is served. Everyone eats too fast and talks too loud, then there are a ton of dishes and the house is a mess and everyone either leaves or sleeps over and snores loudly.

Sounds fun, right? Nowconside­r a quarantine­d Thanksgivi­ng:

You and the family members who live with you (you know, the ones you actually like) wake up whenever youwant. You cook whatever youwant and don’t worry about Aunt Mirna’s opinion. You eat dinner with a laptop on the table and your extended family members spaced out in tidy little “Brady-Bunch”-style boxes on Zoom, your finger never far fromthe mute button.

Then you close the laptop, do a few dishes, watch some television and go to bed.

Sure, you miss seeing some of your relatives. We’ll call them “the good ones.” But a virtual Thanksgivi­ng dinner will allow you to separate the wheat from the chaff, family-wise.

All you need is the right mindset and, hopefully, a few improvemen­ts fromZoom and other videoconfe­rencing platforms.

To get your mind right, repeat my Thanksgivi­ngDay mantra: “All that matters is the food, all that matters is the food, all that matters is the food ...” Say that approximat­ely a thousand times, unless you’re already a believer, and then have someone you don’t like spill red wine on your carpet while a child you don’t knowyells in your ear. Then, and only then, will you be emotionall­y prepared to embrace Quarantine­sgiving.

The next step requires the help of the aforementi­oned videoconfe­rencing platforms.

We have the technology to mute people, which is a blessing. Butwe need more tools to properly handle a virtual family gettogethe­r of this magnitude.

I encourage Zoom and the other less-awesomely named companies to immediatel­y consider adding the following options:

1) An emoji that indicates someone should stop saying things that are racist. I imagine this as a red slash over a cartoon caricature of an uncle holding a bottle of whiskey.

2) An off-screen isolation chamber for relatives you dislike. This functionwo­uld allowthe user to remove people fromthe Zoom meeting without them knowing it. Those removed would be placed in a video gamelike space on another screen that contains any number of the following: murder hornets, a hungry lion with dull teeth, an evil-looking Pac-Man or Pennywise the clown. Youwould be able to occasional­ly toggle to this screen to see howthings areworking out for the people who have wronged you on past Thanksgivi­ngs.

3) An algorithm that filters out any person’smention of the names “Donald Trump” or “Joe Biden” and replaces it with something more mundane. For example, if GrandpaHer­bert says, “I like that Joe Biden,” others in the Zoom meeting would hear, “I like milk.” If your sister-in-lawsays, “I stand with Donald Trump and think the electionwa­s rigged,” others would hear, “I enjoy calmwalks along a creek in autumn.”

With those simple changes, and with your own Zen-like focus on delicious food and not spending most of the day angry, there’s no reason Thanksgivi­ng 2020 can’t be a delight.

In fact, even if the pandemic is over this time next year, we might want to stick with Quarantine­sgiving.

Enjoy the snakes, Aunt Mirna!

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 ??  ?? John Kass has today off.
John Kass has today off.

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