Most Will Welcome New Year at Home
When the clock strikes midnight on New Year’s Eve, most Americans will be home to greet the arrival of 2024.
When the clock strikes midnight on New Year’s Eve, most Americans will be home to greet the arrival of 2024.
This year didn’t live up to expectations for most Americans, but many are still optimistic about 2024.
Only the Grinch could be happy about this: Christmas has lost its longtime status as America’s favorite holiday.
Santa Claus may be coming to town, but for most Americans, Christmas is still about the baby born “away in a manger.”
Nearly half of Americans believe freedom of speech has declined at U.S. colleges and universities, and more than two-thirds say anti-Semitism is a serious campus problem.
With less than two weeks to go until Christmas, many Americans haven’t even gotten started with their holiday gift shopping.
A majority of Americans believe religion makes America a better place, and support Christmas celebrations in public schools.
Most Americans will decorate their home for the holiday season, and half have already started decking the halls.
Fewer Americans have Thanksgiving travel plans this year.
While the holiday shopping season traditionally begins on “Black Friday” – the day after Thanksgiving – many Americans aren’t waiting to buy gifts.
More Americans now think they’re rich, but most still identify as middle class.
Tomorrow marks the official beginning of fall, and nearly half of Americans welcome the season.
Although two-thirds of Americans agree that racism remains a serious problem, many still think we talk too much about race.
The arrival of Labor Day marks the end of summer for many Americans, but most celebrate it as honoring the nation’s workers.
Most Americans don’t think “Generation Z” – born since the late 1990s – are better than earlier generations, and many blame Internet access for Gen Z’s problems.
Less than a third of Americans think the country’s public schools are doing a good or excellent job, and most parents of school-age children approve of homeschooling.
Although most Americans don’t pay much attention to so-called “influencers” on social media, many young adults have thought about pursuing such a career.
A larger majority of Americans now think summer camp is an important experience for children.
Although concerns about the abuse of opioid drugs have eased somewhat, by more than a 2-to-1 margin, Americans say the problem has gotten worse in the past year.
How hot is it this summer? Hot enough that nearly two-thirds of Americans suspect climate change is to blame.