Planning on having multiple people over for a traditional, in-person Thanksgiving dinner? If you are dying to do that, this year that might be literally true.
According to one study “About 40% of Americans plan to attend a Thanksgiving gathering with 10 or more people.” Here’s a sobering map from the Washington Post data reporter Christopher Ingraham.

If you have more than ten people, your odds increase.

No thanks!
I’ll be participating in a Zoomsgiving, where existing households will each have their own Thanksgiving dinners, connected to other households of family and friends over the internet. I’d rather see a few additional turkeys die than any of my loved ones.

2 Comments
Well Dr. Scott Atlas said that people should have in person thanksgiving since it could be their last one.
https://youtu.be/_fd2dcix47M
Not that it applies specifically to Thanksgiving, but the Scots are giving clear direction to stay home. Clear if you have subtitles, at least:
https://vimeo.com/432378983
(language warning)