Americans enjoy food, football and parades
SpongeBob is hit of Macy's parade in unusually warm New York
He had a lot of cooking to do. Thousands of people braved the chilly weather for the parade before football fans from the Detroit Lions-Indianapolis Colts game across the street started showing up.
"Shoot, this is the place to be," Williams said as he warmed his hands over the glowing coals.
Across the country, millions of Americans gathered with family and friends on Thanksgiving to enjoy gut-busting feasts and take in holiday traditions such as football and parades.
In New York, where the weather was an unseasonably warm 65 degrees, the big hit of the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade was a giant yellow sponge with a red tie.
Thousands of onlookers jammed the streets to see the floating SpongeBob SquarePants and the scores of other gigantic balloons, floats and bands that mark the traditional kickoff to the holiday season.
Tim O'Connor risked total exhaustion by holding his 4-year-old grandsons Sean and Declan in his arms during the parade.
The Detroit parade took place a day after the first winter storm of the season hit the Midwest. But the weather did not stop Nick Nicholson and his family from watching the parade in person, instead of on TV as they usually do. His daughters, Katie, 10, and Lindsay, 3, sat in a little red wagon at his feet, wrapped in fleece from head to toe.
"I wanted to sleep later, but this'll be fun," Katie said.
Meanwhile, travelers at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport were thankful just to get home Thursday.
The Midwest storm stranded hundreds of holiday travelers at the airport overnight after nearly 50 flights were canceled. The National Weather Service said parts of Illinois got up to 8 inches of snow, while up to 9 inches were expected in southern Michigan.
Strong thunderstorms, high winds and icy conditions made driving conditions treacherous for thousands of other travelers.
In Florida, residents still recovering from this year's disastrous hurricane season were taking time to be grateful for the little things.
"You're thankful for what didn't happen to you, being right here in this area. You just look around and be thankful," Richard Strong said as he looked at the barrier island of Sanibel, which was pummeled by Hurricane Charley in August. "The damage is still everywhere and very evident."
In Michigan, an airport baggage area provided a setting for family reunions when about 70 members of an Army Reserve company returned home from Iraq for the holiday.
Edward Silverthorn was greeted by his wife and three children, ages 11, 9 and 5, who each wore a T-shirt that said: "My Daddy made it back from Iraq."
"I've been a single mom for too long," Silverthorn's wife, Anna, said at Detroit Metropolitan Airport. "I didn't care about the turkey. I just wanted to come here."




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