Tag Archives: Thanksgiving

Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade Ratings 2022

The 96th Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade drew 27.7 million viewers on Thursday when counting both linear viewing on NBC and streaming on sister platform Peacock.

Last year, across all platforms, including its inaugural stream on Peacock, the parade drew 27.4 million viewers (25.4 million viewers on NBC alone), meaning 2022 got just enough of an edge on last year to land the parade’s most viewers in five years.

The three-hour special that aired 9 a.m.-noon in all time zones and the 2 p.m.-5 p.m. repeat, plus digital viewership as well as streaming on Peacock, brought in a total of 27.7 million viewers and a 7.2 rating in adults 18-49, according to early Nielsen fast nationals provided by NBC.

Looking at the live telecast alone, the parade got 22.3 million viewers and a 5.5 rating, still topping 2021’s comparable figure of 21.7 million live viewers and matching the live 5.5 rating.

Per NBC, “the parade was Peacock’s most popular entertainment simulstream event ever, more than doubling reach for the 2021 parade.” It was also NBC’s highest-rated and most-watched entertainment program of the year.

In 2021, the parade saw the return of crowds to the event after the 2020 parade was downsized and closed to the public amid the COVID-19 pandemic — being filmed as a broadcast-only event in the Herald Square area.

NBC followed the parade on its Thanksgiving Day lineup as usual with “The National Dog Show Presented by Purina.” That program got 11.2 million viewers and a 2.8 rating, including streaming viewership.

The Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade is one of television’s oldest annual traditions. The parade began as a ballyhoo event for the famed retailer in Manhattan’s Herald Square in 1924. NBC began covering the event in 1953. The telecast is a massive live production for NBC. The parade, with its signature blend of giant inflatable character balloons, floats, marching bands and performance segments, and has turned into a prime promotional showcase for family friendly entertainment fare.



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Storm after Thanksgiving could make messy travel in eastern U.S.

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An unwelcome slop of heavy rain and thunderstorms is working across the country, set to bring flooding to some, the chance of severe weather to others, and even a dose of plowable snowfall to residents in west Texas and eastern New Mexico. It’s the second of at least three back-to-back storm systems traipsing through the Lower 48, part of an active weather pattern that looks to linger into early December.

D.C.-area forecast: Brief showers today. Saturday’s the pick of the weekend.

Most heavily affected will be a broad swath of the Deep South and southern Plains, where a general 2 to 4 inches of rain could bring localized flooding. Some of the heaviest could fall in the greater Houston metro, where flood watches are in effect through Saturday.

The storm isn’t terribly intense, as strong winds and tornadoes won’t be an issue, but it comes during arguably the worst possible time of year as people travel home after the Thanksgiving holiday. During this peak of post-Thanksgiving travel, 55 million Americans are expected to drive 50 miles or more. Millions more will take to the skies or rails. Anytime travel is involved, the weather becomes crucial.

The storm is intensifying over the Texas Trans-Pecos and northern Chihuahua, Mexico, where a pronounced counterclockwise swirl can be seen on water vapor satellite imagery. Ahead of the system, comparatively mild, more humid air is swirling north, with chillier Canadian air crashing south in its wake.

Where the moisture and cold air are overlapping, plowable snows are falling. That’s the case in southeast New Mexico, western parts of Texas Hill Country and the Big Bend of Texas. Winter storm warnings are in effect in Marfa, Tex., and Carlsbad, N.M., with a winter weather advisory for Lubbock. The Interstate 10 corridor could be heavily impacted.

Farther to the east, rain was falling on the warm side of the system between Abilene and the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. Additional downpours and a few thunderstorms were lurking offshore of Houston.

As the system intensifies, it will draw a tongue of Gulf of Mexico moisture northward. That would lead to a conveyor belt of downpours repeatedly targeting Houston. The National Weather Service Weather Prediction Center has drawn a level 3 out of 4 moderate risk of excessive rainfall and flash flooding around the city.

The local National Weather Service office warns that “rainfall rates up to 2 inches per hour are expected with higher rates up to 4 inches per hour in the stronger and slower moving storms.” That could rapidly lead to serious accumulations that would overwhelm the ground’s ability to absorb runoff, especially in cityscapes and more densely populated areas.

Farther north and west, Austin, Dallas and Longview could see an inch or more, with some slight delays likely along Interstates 10, 20, 30 and 35.

In the Houston to Galveston corridor, also a major hub for air travel, the heaviest rain will come down Friday evening into the first half of Saturday. Anywhere from 2 to 5 inches or more is possible, with the greatest totals coming from downpours that train, or move repeatedly over the same areas.

A level 1 out of 5 marginal risk of severe weather also covers parts of the South Texas coastline, including the Matagorda Peninsula, where a brief, fleeting tornado can’t be ruled out.

Heavy rain across the South and Midwest

By Saturday morning, the strengthening low will shift toward Central Texas, spreading the main axis of moderate to locally heavy rain into Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana and East Texas. A six- to 10-hour window of moderate rains will cross through Mississippi, Alabama and Tennessee during the second half of Saturday into the overnight or early Sunday, while a lighter region of “wraparound” rains pinwheels back west around the low pressure center.

A general 1 to 2 inches of rain is likely across most of the South, with a half-inch to an inch in Tennessee. Parts of the Midwest might see some decent rainfall, too, with a bit more than an inch in most of central and southern Illinois, Indiana and Missouri. Amounts taper off east of the Appalachians.

Sunday rain along the Eastern Seaboard

The Interstate 95 corridor in the Carolinas and Mid-Atlantic will see its rain, about a half-inch to three-quarters of an inch, arrive centered around noontime Sunday, give or take a few hours. It won’t be a washout, but some moderate to heavy downpours can be expected. Lighter rains may reach all the way back to Chicago during the first half of the day Sunday; by Sunday night into Monday, the system will have withdrawn into New England.

This could make for some slow travel in between cities such as Charlotte, Raleigh, Washington, D.C., and New York City. Boston, Providence and Hartford will be most affected after dark.



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Virginia Walmart shooting: Victims remain hospitalized days after a mass shooting in a Virginia Walmart left 6 employees dead



CNN
 — 

As authorities investigate this week’s mass shooting inside a Walmart in Chesapeake, Virginia, at least two employees remained hospitalized after a manager killed six coworkers before taking his own life.

The shooting on Tuesday night – two days before Thanksgiving – began minutes after 10 p.m. inside the employee break room, where some workers were getting ready to start their overnight shift.

In addition to the six employees who did not survive, others continue to receive medical treatment.

One victim was hospitalized in critical condition on Thanksgiving Day, while another was in “fair/improving condition,” Chesapeake city officials said in a tweet Thursday. Another victim was released Wednesday, a Sentara Norfolk General Hospital spokesperson told CNN.

“On this Thanksgiving, we are extra thankful for our community and we are thinking of every victim of the Walmart shooting and their family members,” Chesapeake city officials said online.

“Today we are focused only of those hurt by Tuesday’s tragic event, but the police investigation continues,” officials said, adding that additional information will be provided Friday.

The people killed are Randy Blevins, 70, Lorenzo Gamble, 43, Tyneka Johnson, 22, Brian Pendleton, 38, Kellie Pyle, 52, and a 16-year-old boy, who’s not being named because he’s a minor, according to authorities.

As police work to determine a motive for one of at least three mass shootings in Virginia this month, Chesapeake officials have announced a vigil for victims scheduled for Monday evening at City Park.

“Chesapeake is a tightknit community and we are all shaken,” Mayor Rick West said in a message posted online earlier this week. “Together, we will support each other throughout this time.”

The tragedy, which came as many in the community were preparing to spend the holiday with family and friends, has unleashed an outburst of grief and trauma over the loss of loved ones in yet another mass shooting in the US.

Another Virginia community has also been enduring the pain of lives lost to gun violence. About 170 miles west of Chesapeake, a 22-year-old student at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville has been arrested and charged after opening fire on fellow students on November 13, killing three of them on a bus returning to campus from a field trip to Washington, DC.

Grief has also permeated a Colorado community last weekend, when a 22-year-old suspect shot and killed five people at an LGBTQ nightclub in Colorado Springs, injuring 19 others, authorities said.

These shootings, among many others, have put the US on an ominous track of making 2022 the second-highest year for mass shootings on record, according to data from the Gun Violence Archive, a non-profit that began tracking the instances in 2014.

The shooting in Chesapeake this week erupted suddenly, with witnesses saying they were in shock and disbelief when they saw the gunman pointing a firearm at them.

Walmart employee Kevin Harper said the shooter entered the break room and immediately began firing.

“He came in there and just started spraying,” Harper said in a video on social media.

The gunman has been identified as Andre Bing, who was working as overnight “team lead.” The 31-year-old had been working for Walmart since 2010, the company said. Authorities have said he had one semi-automatic handgun and several ammunition magazines.

Two slain victims and the shooter were found in the break room, another victim was found at the front of the store, and three others died at the hospital, Chesapeake city officials said.

Jessie Wilczewski, who was recently hired, told CNN she was in a regularly scheduled meeting when the shooting began.

At first, it “didn’t register as real,” she said, until the sound of the shots reverberated through her chest.

Wilczewski hid under a table as the gunman walked down a nearby hallway. She could see some of her coworkers on the floor or lying on chairs – all still and some likely dead, she said. She stayed because she didn’t want to leave them alone.

“I could have ran out that door … and I stayed. I stayed so they wouldn’t be alone in their last moments,” Wilczewski said in a message to the families of two victims.

When the shooter returned to the break room, Wilczewski said, he told her to get out from under the table and go home.

“I had to touch the door which was covered (in blood),” she said. “I just remember gripping my bag and thinking, ‘If he’s going to shoot me in the back – well, he’s going to have to try really hard cause I’m running,’ and I booked it. … and I didn’t stop until I got to my car and then I had a meltdown.”

Briana Tyler, also a newly hired employee, said she saw bullets flying just inches from her face.

“All of a sudden you just hear pa pa pa pa pa pa pa,” Tyler said. “There were people just dropping to the floor,” she said. “Everybody was screaming, gasping, and yeah, he just walked away after that and just continued throughout the store and just kept shooting.

Beyond the shooting in Chesapeake this week, gun violence has turned many ordinary places into crime scenes around the country – from schools and supermarkets to hospitals and malls.

Brett Cross, whose nephew Uziyah Garcia was killed in a school massacre in Texas this year, described a deep sense of loss without the 10-year-old boy this holiday season.

A gunman had opened fire inside Robb Elementary School in Uvalde in May, killing 19 fourth-grade students and their two teachers before authorities shot him dead.

“6 months since our world was shattered, and I’m supposed to ‘celebrate the holidays,’” Cross wrote in a social media post on Thanksgiving Day. “How do you celebrate when your devastated. How do you give thanks, when you have nothing left to give. How do you fake it and smile when you wake up crying.”

In 2018, a former student killed 14 students and three staff members at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. Fred Guttenberg, the father of 14-year-old Jaime Guttenberg who was killed in that shooting, said there’s more work to be done in the fight against gun violence.

“Today we celebrate Thanksgiving. Unfortunately, many families will do so with an empty seat at the table because of gun violence,” Guttenberg wrote in a social media post on Thanksgiving.

Nicole Hockley lost her 6-year-old son, Dylan, in the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, where a gunman killed 20 children and six adults in 2012.

“My life had been thrown into sadness and turmoil. I felt like I was at the bottom of a gigantic hole that I could never climb out of. I didn’t know how to help myself, never mind those I loved,” Hockley wrote online in a Thanksgiving message.

“But in the weeks and months that followed, and with the support of those around me, I found a renewed sense of purpose. To keep other children and families from enduring the same fate.”



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Walmart mass shooting: The motive behind the attack in Chesapeake, Virginia, is unclear



CNN
 — 

After an ordinary workday turned deadly at a Walmart in Chesapeake, Virginia, survivors and investigators are spending the Thanksgiving holiday questioning the motive of an employee who opened fire on coworkers, killing six before fatally turning the gun on himself.

Employees were preparing for an overnight shift when a manager opened fire with a handgun in the break room just after 10 p.m., officials said.

Authorities identified the people killed as Randy Blevins, 70, Lorenzo Gamble, 43, Tyneka Johnson, 22, Brian Pendleton, 38, Kellie Pyle, 52, and a 16-year-old boy, who’s not being named because he’s a minor.

Two people injured in the shooting remained hospitalized in critical condition on Thanksgiving, and one injured victim was discharged Wednesday, a Sentara Norfolk General Hospital spokesperson said.

“I know this community and I know it well, and I know that we will come together and lend a helping hand to the victims’ families,” Chesapeake Mayor Rick West said Wednesday in a video message.

The shooting, yet another example of how horrific gun violence upends American life in the most conventional settings, has left many grieving the loss of loved ones and survivors traumatized from what they witnessed. As the long journey of processing those emotions begins, questions on what could have led to the killings linger.

Donya Prioleau was inside the employee break room when the shooter began firing at coworkers, she said.

“We don’t know what made him do this,” Prioleau said. “None of us can understand why it happened.”

The gunman was identified as Andre Bing, who was working as overnight “team lead.” The 31-year-old had been working for Walmart since 2010, the company said. Authorities have said he had one semi-automatic handgun and several ammunition magazines.

Bing shot three of Prioleau’s friends “before I took off running. Half of us didn’t believe it was real until some of us saw all the blood on the floor,” she said.

Two slain victims and the shooter were found in the break room, while another was found at the front of the store, Chesapeake city officials said, and three others died at the hospital. Officials are trying to determine the exact number of injuries as some people may have taken themselves to hospitals.

The mayor plans to hold a vigil Monday evening at City Park, according to a tweet from the city.

“Today we are focused only of those hurt by Tuesday’s tragic event, but the police investigation continues and we expect to have additional information available tomorrow,” officials also tweeted Thursday.

A motive for the shooting remained unclear Wednesday, Chesapeake Police Chief Mark Solesky said.

Tuesday’s violence was at least the third mass shooting in Virginia this month, according to the Gun Violence Archive, and comes amid the backdrop of grief many people around the country are enduring this Thanksgiving as loved ones were lost or wounded in shootings.

Just 170 miles west of Chesapeake, a 22-year-old student at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville allegedly opened fire on fellow students November 13, killing three of them on a bus returning to campus from a field trip to Washington, DC.

Over the weekend, a 22-year-old shot and killed five people at an LGBTQ nightclub in Colorado Springs, Colorado, and injured 19 others, authorities said. And six months ago Thursday, a gunman in Uvalde, Texas, killed 19 students and two teachers, a tragedy in which victims are still seeking answers.

“How do you celebrate when your devastated. How do you give thanks, when you have nothing left to give. How do you fake it and smile when you wake up crying,” Brett Cross wrote Thursday of his nephew, Uziyah Garcia, who was killed in Uvalde.

Overall, the US has suffered more than 600 mass shootings so far this year, according to the Gun Violence Archive. Both the nonprofit and CNN define mass shootings as those in which four or more people are shot, not including the assailant.

Speaking to the epidemic, former US Rep. Gabby Giffords, who was seriously wounded in a 2011 mass shooting, tweeted a Thanksgiving Eve plea for reforms: “We cannot continue to be the nation of gun violence and mass shootings. We cannot live like this. We must act.”

In Chesapeake, the horror began less than an hour before the store was set to close after a busy holiday shopping day.

Jessie Wilczewski, who was recently hired, told CNN she was in a regularly scheduled meeting in the break room when she saw the shooter in the doorway pointing a gun.

Initially, she didn’t think what she was seeing was real, but then she felt her chest pounding and her ears ringing as a torrent of gunshots erupted, she said. At first, it “didn’t register as real,” she said, until the sound of the shots reverberated through her chest.

Wilczewski hid under a table as the gunman walked down a nearby hallway. She could see some of her coworkers on the floor or lying on chairs – all still and some likely dead, she said. She stayed because she didn’t want to leave them alone.

“I could have ran out that door … and I stayed. I stayed so they wouldn’t be alone in their last moments,” Wilczewski said in a message to the families of two victims.

When the shooter returned to the break room, Wilczewski said, he told her to get out from under the table and go home.

“I had to touch the door which was covered (in blood),” she said. “I just remember gripping my bag and thinking, ‘If he’s going to shoot me in the back – well, he’s going to have to try really hard cause I’m running,’ and I booked it. … and I didn’t stop until I got to my car and then I had a meltdown.”

Briana Tyler, also a newly hired employee, had just begun her shift when the gunfire erupted.

“All of a sudden you just hear pa pa pa pa pa pa pa,” Tyler told CNN, adding she saw bullets flying just inches from her face. “It wasn’t a break in between them to where you could really try to process it.”

The shooter had a “blank stare on his face” as he looked around the room and shot at people, Tyler said.

“There were people just dropping to the floor,” she said. “Everybody was screaming, gasping, and yeah, he just walked away after that and just continued throughout the store and just kept shooting.”

The shooter displayed some disturbing behavior in the past, other employees said.

Shaundrayia Reese, who worked with the shooter from 2015 to 2018, described him as a loner.

“He was always saying the government was watching him. He didn’t like social media and he kept black tape on his phone camera. Everyone always thought something was wrong with him,” Reese said.

Joshua Johnson, a former maintenance worker at the store, said the shooter had made ominous threats if he ever lost his job.

“He said if he ever got fired from his job, he would retaliate and people would remember who he was,” Johnson said.

Hear Walmart employee who witnessed shooting describe manager’s reputation

Neither Johnson nor Reese reported any concerns about Bing to management, they said.

In a statement, Walmart said it was working with local law enforcement in the investigation.

“We feel tragedies like this personally and deeply. But this one is especially painful as we have learned the gunman was a Walmart associate,” President and CEO of Walmart US John Furner said in a statement. “The entire Walmart family is heartbroken. Our hearts and prayers are with those impacted.”



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Vikings vs. Patriots score: Live updates, game stats, highlights, TV channel, NFL live stream on Thanksgiving

The Patriots and Vikings have one half of football in the books as these two clubs cap off the NFL’s Thanksgiving Day triple-header. At the break, the teams were knotted at 16 apiece. 

After being held to field goals in Week 11, both of these offenses wasted no time getting the end zone to begin this game. Minnesota needed just eight plays to travel 80 yards to score a touchdown on the opening drive of the game. Then, New England matched that score with one of their own as Mac Jones connected with Nelson Agholor for a 34-yard score. 

From there, these offenses traded field goals before Kirk Cousins connected with T.J. Hockenson for a touchdown just before halftime. With around 90-seconds left, the Patriots were able to knot the game with a last-second field goal. 

So, which one of these team will pull away in the second half? We’re about to find out. As this game continues to unfold, check out our live blog of Thursday’s matchup where you’ll find instant analysis and real-time highlights.  

How to watch Patriots-Vikings 

  • When: Thursday, Nov. 24 | 8:20 p.m. ET
  • Where: U.S. Bank Stadium — Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • TV: NBC | Live stream: FuboTV (try for free)
  • Follow: CBS Sports App   
  • Odds: Vikings -2.5, O/U 42.5 (via Caesars Sportsbook)

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Biden brings Thanksgiving pies to Nantucket first responders

NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP) — President Joe Biden on Thursday delivered at least half a dozen pumpkin pies to Massachusetts firefighters during a Thanksgiving Day show of appreciation and his toddler grandson walked away with a red fire hat topping his blond curls.

“Oh wow,” Biden was heard to say upon seeing Beau Biden, who is nearly 3, emerge from the headquarters building wearing the hat. The president was with the firefighters who had lined up outside the building to welcome him.

Biden had expressed appreciation for firefighters and other emergency personnel earlier in the day when he and his wife, Jill, spoke by telephone to the hosts of NBC’s broadcast of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York.

“I want to say thanks to the firefighters and police officers, first responders. They never take a break,” he said during the call. The Bidens spoke later Thursday with units from each of the six branches of the U.S. military, stationed in Europe, at sea, at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and at Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri, the White House said.

“We remember them every single day,” he said during the broadcast. “God bless our troops.”

Jill Biden appeared to try to get her grandson to talk to the firefighters, but Beau would not look up. She was overheard saying she did not know why he was being so quiet.

During a brief conversation with reporters, Biden said he hopes the upcoming Republican-controlled House will continue U.S. aid to Ukraine. He also said his team is involved in negotiations to avoid a freight rail strike in early December that could further disrupt the economy.

After the visit, Biden returned to the Nantucket home where he is taking in the holiday with family, including son Hunter and his wife, Melissa — who are Beau’s parents — and daughter Ashley.

They are camping out at a sprawling waterfront compound along Nantucket Harbor owned by David Rubenstein, co-founder of the Carlyle Group, a private equity firm. Biden celebrated Thanksgiving at the home in 2021.

The Bidens have a more than 40-year tradition of spending Thanksgiving on the Massachusetts island.

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Dominik and Rhea Ripley attacked Rey Mysterio on Thanksgiving

It was always going to be an awkward Thanksgiving celebration this year for the Mysterios after Dominik turned his back on his father Rey in September and joined his new family in The Judgment Day.

The holiday actually devolved into violence when Dominik and Rhea Ripley showed up at Rey’s front door looking to join the family party. Rey had his mask handy and quickly put it on before responding to the disturbance.

Dom and Rhea were not invited, so Rey told them to go away. That didn’t sit well with Ripley, who barged in anyway and led a violent home invasion. Dominik didn’t hold back one bit in beating the crap out of his dad. He even attacked Rey’s injured foot with household objects:

Rey recently tried to get away from his family problems in WWE by accepting a trade from Raw to SmackDown. But that little shithead Dominik just couldn’t leave him alone, and so here we are with a ruined Thanksgiving holiday for the Mysterio family.

What’s your reaction to Dom and Rhea’s heinous actions, Cagesiders?

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Cowboys vs. Giants score: Live updates, game stats, highlights, analysis for NFC East bout on Thanksgiving

Sandwiched between two other Thanksgiving games is our Texas-sized matchup between the Cowboys and Giants. This is a rematch of what was a highly competitive Week 3 matchup that saw Dallas prevail after Trevon Diggs clinched the Cowboys’ 23-16 win with a late interception. 

Both teams enter Thursday’s game with playoff aspirations. Dallas (7-3) is currently the fifth-seeded team in the NFC standings, while New York (7-3) would face the 49ers in the wild-card round if the playoffs started today. Both teams are trying to stay within striking distance of the one-loss Eagles for first place in the NFC East division. 

Fans will be treated to a star-studded matchup befitting a Thanksgiving Day game. The big matchup to watch today will be Daniel Jones and the Giants’ offense against the Cowboys’ top-ranked scoring defense. Jones will certainly lean on running back Saquon Barkley, who is just 47 yards from his third 1,000-yard rushing season and first since 2019. Jones will try to avoid throwing in the direction of Diggs and Defensive Player of the Year candidate Micah Parsons. 

Worried about missing a play or two between helpings? We’ve got you covered in our live blog below. Be sure to follow the blog after kickoff for updates, highlights and analysis in real time. 

How to watch Giants-Cowboys 

  • When: Thursday, Nov. 24 | 4:30 p.m. ET
  • Where: AT&T Stadium — Arlington, Texas
  • TV: FOX | Live stream: FuboTV (try for free)
  • Follow: CBS Sports App   
  • Odds: DAL -9.5; NYG +9.5; O/U 54.5 (via Caesars Sportsbook)

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Al Roker misses Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, but is on the mend



CNN
 — 

Al Roker missed his first Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in 27 years as he recovers from a health scare.

The famed “Today” meteorologist recently shared that he had been hospitalized after a blood clot in his leg traveled to his lungs.

“After some medical whack-a-mole, I am so fortunate to be getting terrific medical care and on the way to recovery,” Roker wrote on his verified Instagram account. “Thanks for all the well wishes and prayers and hope to see you soon.”

It kept Roker from his traditional co-hosting of the annual parade along with his “Today” colleagues Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb.

NBC meteorologist Dylan Dreyer filled in for Roker at the event on Thursday and fielded a call from President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden, who inquired about how Roker was doing.

Dreyer told them her colleague is doing “great.”



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Mariah Carey BLASTED by fans for ‘blatant lip-syncing’ during Thanksgiving Day parade

Mariah Carey made her sparkling return to to the 96th annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade on Thursday after a seven-year absence – but fans quickly called her out for lip-syncing.

The songstress, 52, who has branded herself the ‘Queen of Christmas’ was in her element as she performed All I Want For Christmas Is You to crowds in Manhattan, while clad in a red dress and sparkling tiara. 

Mariah pulled off an elaborate festive performance  surrounded by dancers in matching marching attire – which officially rang in the holiday season in New York and across the US.

However, the star, who has landed herself in hot water before for dodgy miming, was again accused of ‘blatant lip-syncing’ as fans noticed her flawless vocals sounded extremely similar to the recorded version of the 1994 track.

Did she? Mariah Carey made her sparkling return to to the 96th annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade on Thursday after a seven-year absence – but fans quickly called her out for lip-syncing

One fan wrote: ‘Mariah Carey lip syncing always SENDS me cuz it’s so blatant. Like she doesn’t even try to hide it.’

Another typed: ‘So @MariahCarey don’t sing foreal anymore? Smh’ while a third typed: ‘I wish I could get paid to stand and look cute lip syncing like Mariah Carey … that chick sang not one note.’

Another fan penned: ‘And here she is ladies and gentlemen! The self proclaimed Queen of Christmas, Mariah Carey. …and yeah, I think she’s lip synching.’

One fan added: ‘Mariah Carey is lip syncing. What a shock’ while another typed: What a great performance from #MariahCarey , totally live!! Lol’.

Return; The songstress, 52, who has branded herself the ‘Queen of Christmas’ was in her element as she performed All I Want For Christmas Is You to crowds in Manhattan, while clad in a red dress and sparkling tiara

Oh dear: However, the star, who has landed herself in hot water before for dodgy miming, was again accused of ‘blatant lip-syncing’ as fans noticed her flawless vocals sounded extremely similar to the recorded version of the 1994 track

Back on NYE 2016 Mariah suffered through a nightmare train wreck performance in Times Square as technical problems left her completely out-of-sync with her lip syncing track – causing her to storm off stage.

The megastar diva was supposed to herald in 2017 and say good riddance to 2016 before the traditional ball drop by performing two hits, Emotions and We Belong Together.

However, on stage in New York City she appeared unable to hear any backing track, so stopped pretending to sing and put a hand on her hip while the vocal track of her voice carried on without her.

Furious with the unfolding disaster in front of millions inside Times Square and watching at home, Carey, who was dressed in a stunning pink bodysuit, began pacing in frustration across the stage.

Lol: One fan wrote: ‘Mariah Carey lip syncing always SENDS me cuz it’s so blatant. Like she doesn’t even try to hide it’

Trying to keep calm, she stopped and told the crowd that despite the performance falling apart at the seams, ‘I’m trying to be a good sport here’.

Her backup dancers bravely carried on, but quickly became confused leading Mariah to say, ‘It is what it is. It just don’t get any better’ – at which point she walked off the stage.

Letting emotion get the better of her, the star also said, ‘I wanted a holiday too. Can’t I just have one?’ 

Mariah later tried to brush off the huge blunder, writing ‘s*** happens’ in an Instagram post after the set   

‘We didn’t have a check for this song… we’re missing some of the vocals, but it is what it is. I’m just going to let the audience sing,’ said the singer before her fit of pique.

Reaction: Fans took to Twitter to question why Mariah was lip-syncing 

Oh dear: Back on NYE 2016 Mariah suffered through a nightmare train wreck performance in Times Square as technical problems left her completely out-of-sync with her lip syncing track – causing her to storm off stage

‘We didn’t have a sound check for this New Year’s baby, it is what it is.’

‘Get these monitors on please.’

At that point, Carey appeared to give up, and went over to one of her dancers and said: ‘just for laughs, do the lift.’ The dancer then lifted Carey’s leg in the air, as she sang a few notes.

‘I wanted a holiday too, can’t I just have one,’ she said as the first song wrapped up.’

After the second song wrapped up, Mariah sarcastically said,’bring the feathers, it just don’t get any better,’ before walking off.     

A crowd of 3 million people gathered on Manhattan’s streets to catch the 96th annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

With temperatures rising to a high of 50 on Thursday along with clear skies, spectators should have had a clear view of the 16 giant balloon characters and plethora of performers taking the streets.

Loved it: Some fans came out in support of Mariah’s performance

Details: The star was surrounded by festive dancers as she perforned

Glitz: The star carried a bejeweled parasol as she headed to stage

While all eyes were on the parade, viewers may have noticed the absence of The Today Show’s Al Roker who missed the event for the first time in 27 years after being hospitalized for blood clots.

Among those wishing Roker a speedy recovery was President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden, who called into the show as they also thanked first responders and the troops.

Tweeting on Thursday morning, Roker shared a picture of himself watching the parade from the hospital, enjoying the show on TV like more than 20 million viewers as he noted he will be discharged in time to have dinner with his family.

‘So much to be #thankful for on the #thanksgiving day. Leaving the hospital and home for #thanksgivingdinner,’ Roker wrote.

Despite Roker’s absence, the show went on without the popular host as Broadway singer Lea Michele kicked off the festivities with a performance of ‘Don’t Rain on My Parade’ from her Broadway Show ‘Funny Girl.’

Following other Broadway performances, spectators were fixed on Abdul’s energetic performance of her hit, ‘Straight Up,’ as the 60-year-old proved she can still awe audiences.

Along with the iconic balloons, the parade also featured 28 floats, 12 marching bands, 700 clowns and several music stars who made their way through on Thanksgiving Day.

Organizers said the parade would begin in the city’s Upper West Side and end at Macy’s iconic store at Herald Square.

The attendance was predicted to include 500,000 more people than last year. The 2020 parade was a TV-only festival due to the pandemic.

Glamour: The star looked sensational as she attended the parade

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