Tag: Holidays

  • Valentine’s Day Fun Facts

    Valentine’s Day Fun Facts

    February 14th is Valentine’s Day. Here in the United States, Valentine’s Day is a $14.7 billion industry. Here are a few fun facts about the holiday…

    GIFTS:

    • Women purchase approximately 85% of all Valentines Day gifts
    • Based on retail statistics, about 3% of pet owners will give Valentine’s Day gifts to their pets.

    CARDS:

    • About 1 billion Valentine’s Day cards are exchanged each year, making Valentine’s Day the second largest seasonal card sending time of the year
    • Teachers will receive the most Valentine’s Day cards, followed by children, mothers, wives, sweethearts and pets. Children between the ages of 6-10 exchange more than 650 million Valentine cards a year.
    • Americans spend around $277 million on Valentine cards every year, second only to Christmas.
    • Each year 300,000 letters go through Loveland, Colorado, to get a special heart stamp cancellation for Valentine’s Day.

    BEING SINGLE:

    • If you’re single don’t despair. You can celebrate Singles Awareness Day (SAD) instead.
    • Or you could pop over to Finland where Valentine’s Day is called Ystävänpäivä, which translates into “Friend’s day”. It’s a holiday set aside more for remembering your buddies than your loved ones.

    CHOCOLATE:

    • Physicians of the 1800’s commonly advised their patients to eat chocolate to calm their pining for lost love.
    • Richard Cadbury produced the first box of chocolates for Valentine’s Day in the late 1800’s.
    • More than 35 million heart-shaped boxes of chocolate will be sold for Valentine’s Day.
    • Over $1 billion worth of chocolate is purchased for Valentine’s Day just here in the United States.

    FLOWERS:

    • On Valentine’s Day, nearly 189 million stems of roses are sold in the U.S.
    • 73% of people who buy flowers for Valentine’s Day are men, while only 27% are women. However, 15% of U.S. women send themselves flowers on Valentine’s Day.
    • 189 million stems of roses are sold in the United States on Valentine’s Day.

    CANDY:

    • Nearly 10 new candy “conversation heart” sayings are introduced each year. Recent additions have included “Yeah Right,” “Puppy Love,” and “Call Home.”
    • Oh, by the way, those Valentine candy “conversation hearts” have a shelf life of five years.

    PROPOSALS:

    • 220,000 is the average number of wedding proposals on Valentine’s Day each year.

    OTHER HISTORY:

    • In the Middle Ages, young men and women drew names from a bowl to see who would be their Valentine. They would wear this name pinned onto their sleeves for one week for everyone to see. That was the origin of the expression “to wear your heart on your sleeve.”
    • Groundhog Day was originally observed on February 14.
  • Thanksgiving Trivia, a Thanksgiving Song, and “I Thought Turkeys Could Fly”

    Thanksgiving Trivia, a Thanksgiving Song, and “I Thought Turkeys Could Fly”

    Have you ever wondered how some of our Thanksgiving traditions came to be? Here are the explanations for a few of them…

    Who created the holiday? A woman by the name of Sarah Josepha Hale convinced President Lincoln in 1863 to make Thanksgiving an official holiday that would fall on the fourth Thursday of November. Hale is the same woman who wrote “Mary had a Little Lamb”.

    Thanksgiving came a week early: In 1939, during the Depression, President Dwight Eisenhower moved the holiday up by one week. The move was an effort to help boost retail sales in a struggling economy. Because so many people complained about the change, Thanksgiving was moved back to the fourth Thursday of the month in 1941.

    The wishbone: Here in the United States we did not come up with this tradition. It has been passed around quite a bit. We actually borrowed it from the British. They got it from the Romans, who got it from the Etruscans — who believed that birds were Oracles. When the birds died they would keep the wishbone and hold it as they made wishes.

    Parades: The Macy’s Day parade was not started as a company marketing tool, but actually came from European traditions . In 1924, the store’s immigrant employees decided to celebrate the beginning of the Christmas season like they would have in their European countriesby having a parade with knights, jugglers and clowns. The celebrations were so much fun, the tradition stuck. The big helium balloons were introduced into the parade in 1927.

    Football on Thanksgiving Day: We have the Detroit Lions to thank for Football on Thanksgiving Day. The Thanksgiving day game was a ploy by the owner of the Lions, George A. Richards, back in 1934. He wanted football to gain fans and popularity in a baseball crazy city. The Lions have played every single Thanksgiving Day since then. The Dallas Cowboys joined in on this NFL tradition in 1966.

     

    And because there just aren’t that many Thanksgiving songs, here is a video of a very young Adam Sandler performing his “Thanksgiving Song”, along with Kevin Nealon on “Saturday Night Live”…

     

    And then there is this clip from the classic television program “WKRP in Cincinnati”…

     

    I was able to find the full version if you would like to watch it…


     

    Photo: Pixabay

  • Halloween Songs

    Halloween Songs

    The other day I got into a discussion with a friend about Halloween songs. There aren’t really that many songs that were written just for Halloween, but there are quite a few that could fall into a category of songs appropriate for playing on Halloween.

    I think the only song I can think of that was written just about Halloween was the song “Halloween” by Heywood Banks. Do you remember this?

    Other songs that fall into the “Halloween” category…in no particular order:

    Michael Jackson’s “Thriller”

    John Carpenter’s Theme from the movie “Halloween”

    The Charlie Daniels Band’s “The Devil Went Down to Georgia”

    Ray Parker, Jr.’s “Ghostbusters”

    Bobby Pickett’s “Monster Mash”

    Warren Zevon’s “Werewolves of London”

    Van Halen’s “Runnin’ with the Devil”

    Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition”

    AC/DC’s “Highway to Hell”

    or AC/DC’s “Hell’s Bells”

    Blue Oyster Cult’s “Don’t Fear the Reaper”

    Norman Greenbaum’s “Spirit in the Sky”

    Santana’s “Black Magic Woman”

    Creedence Clearwater Revival’s “Bad Moon Rising”

    The Rolling Stone’s “Sympathy for the Devil”

    The Rocky Horror Picture Show’s “Time Warp”

    Rockwell’s “Somebody’s Watching Me”

    The Five Blobs’ “The Blob”

     

  • Ghoulash For Dinner on Halloween!

    Ghoulash For Dinner on Halloween!

    Friday, October 31st, 2025 is Halloween. So, just what do you plan on making for dinner?

    This video is proof that I have done a lot of things in my radio career that I really wasn’t fond of doing. At some point while working at WOOD radio, someone decided (other than I), that I should do some cooking segments. Keep in mind I HATE cooking. I find no joy in it. I only do it out of necessity and even then I’m usually cursing my way through it. You will never find me just cooking something up because I enjoy cooking.

    So here I was with the task of coming up with a cooking segment every week! Ugh. I would have rather run my figures through the blades of a running blender — but I took on the task and made the best of it.

    I dug into the archives and found this old cooking segment from 15 a years ago. I’m having Ghoulash!

     

    (Pay no attention to the references to the old blog on WOOD Radio’s website…it does not exist anymore.)

  • Favorite Christmas Song

    Favorite Christmas Song

    Billboard has recently released a new list regarding everyone’s Favorite Christmas Song.

    Here is Billboard’s “Holiday 100” chart. Mariah Carey is at the top of that list (again):

    1. Mariah Carey – “All I Want for Christmas Is You”
    2. Brenda Lee – “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree”
    3. Wham! – “Last Christmas”
    4. Bobby Helms – “Jingle Bell Rock”
    5. Burl Ives – “A Holly Jolly Christmas”
    6. Andy Williams – “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year”
    7. Dean Martin – “Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!”
    8. Ariana Grande – “Santa Tell Me”
    9. Kelly Clarkson – “Underneath The Tree”
    10. Nat “King” Cole – “The Christmas Song”

    I thought it would be fun to see what the “Scott Winters Blog” top ten would look like! Vote for your favorite song from the ones above. I’ve also included an “Other” selection as well. Cast your vote below…

    What is Your Favorite Christmas Song?

    View Results

    Loading ... Loading …

    If you answered “Other”, please feel free to leave the name of your favorite song in the comments below for others to see. Some people may agree with you!

     

    Photo: publicdomainpictures.net

  • Sweethearts Valentine Heart Candies are Back — But Many are Without Messages

    Sweethearts Valentine Heart Candies are Back — But Many are Without Messages

    For as many years as I can remember, Valentine’s Day always meant those little candy hearts with messages on them. I don’t think there was ever a year I didn’t see them on the shelves in the stores. Then, in 2019 we had to celebrate Valentine’s Day without those Sweethearts little candy hearts.

    What happened? Well the company that made the candies — Necco — declared bankruptcy in 2018. (Yes, Necco is the same company that used to make the Necco Wafer candies. Very few people liked the black licorice Necco wafer.) The original plant closed and their candy brands were sold off. The rights to Sweethearts were acquired by Spangler Candy Company on September 21, 2018, but that did not give the new company time enough to produce the little heart candies for 2019…so we had to do without.

    I have good news and bad news…

    Sweethearts CandiesSweethearts heart candies are back this year! That’s the good news. The bad news…they may not be available in many places and very few of the hearts have messages on them.

    Here’s why…The process to move Sweethearts’ equipment from the Necco’s factory in Revere, MA, to another plant took almost a year. Sixty truckloads of equipment had to be taken apart, packed up, and moved. Some of the bigger pieces of equipment actually had to be lifted out through the roof of the building with a crane.

    The other problem the new company faced was the printer that Sweethearts used to print sayings like “Be Mine”, “Cutie Pie”, and “Love Me” on the candy hearts was unreliable. The company purchased a new printer to replace the old one. Then, the replacement printing equipment was damaged during production, and Spangler could not get it fixed.

    Sweethearts Candies with MessagesI found some of the candy hearts at Meijer over the weekend. I bought a multipack of the candies that contained six small boxes. I opened up a few of the individual boxes and sure enough the candies are back! Each of the boxes contained about two dozen candy hearts, but in most boxes I only found one or two hearts that had sayings on them. Most of those messages were almost unreadable.

    So at least the candies are back, but they are in limited supply this year. And don’t expect a lot of the hearts to have the familiar messages on them. Let’s hope that Spangler Candy can get all of the kinks worked out so that in 2021 everything can be back to normal!

  • What is Your Favorite Halloween Candy?

    What is Your Favorite Halloween Candy?

    Halloween is coming up on Wednesday, October 31st, 2018. What is your favorite Halloween candy?

    The website CandyStore.com put together their list of America’s Top 10 Halloween Candy. If you want to be the most popular house in the neighborhood, here is the list of the candy you might want to consider handing out. (Bonus points if you hand out full size packages!)

    1. Skittles
    2. M & M’s
    3. Snickers
    4. Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups
    5. Starbursts
    6. Candy Corn
    7. Hot Tamales
    8. Hershey’s
    9. Tootsie Pops
    10. Jolly Ranchers

    The website also broke down America’s favorite Halloween candy by state. According to their poling, Michigan’s favorite Halloween Candy is Candy Corn (really?). Here is what they said about it: “Candy corn is a divisive candy. It was ranked #2 in our Worst Halloween Candy survey. But people do love it. Though the trolls don’t believe me, Mighty Michigan still has a love affair with candy corn. This is the third year in a row. The favorite Christmas candy in Michigan is also reindeer corn, which is the same thing in Xmas colors. Michigan consumes over 150 thousand pounds of candy corn around Halloween. Starburst and Skittles come in a respectable second and third.”

    I thought it might be fun to do our own poll to see if everyone agrees with the candy and rankings listed above. I’ve taken the Top 10 candies and also all the candies voted number 1 by all the fifty states in the U.S. and put them in the poll below. Vote for your favorite and let’s see what comes out at OUR #1 Favorite Halloween Candy!

    What is Your Favorite Halloween Candy?

    View Results

    Loading ... Loading …

     

     

    Photo: YouTube/MrKsummer7a