Turkey, stuffing and a helium-filled Thomas the Tank Engine were on the menu as friends and families gathered across the United States to celebrate Thanksgiving. Here's a look at the many festivities:
MACY'S parade : 'it's nice to feel so festive'
Oohing and ahhing spectators of all ages lined the route of the nationally televised Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, which counted Thomas the Tank Engine, Paddington bear and the Red Mighty Morphin Power Ranger among its six new giant balloons.
It was about 37 degrees as clowns shot bursts of confetti from canisters to get the show rolling. "This is great. It's nice to feel so festive for the holidays," said paradegoer Daryl Winchester, 17, of Queens, as she took pictures, waved and shouted encouragement to parade participants.
Steve Smith, a clown who has performed in the parade 12 years, said he loves to make children happy. "The kids, they are the ones who make the parade," he said.
At the White House, a plethora of pies
President Obama spent a quiet Thanksgiving at the White House, where the belly-stuffing menu featured all the basics.
There was thyme-roasted turkey and honey-baked ham, cornbread stuffing and oyster stuffing, braised winter greens and macaroni and cheese. Don't forget the green bean casserole, sweet potato gratin, mashed potatoes and dinner rolls.
If there was room for dessert, the Obamas could pick from among six pies: banana cream, coconut cream, pumpkin, apple, pecan and cherry. "We go all out on pies. We don't play with pie," the president said.
Obama says Thanksgiving is his favorite holiday "because, more than any other, it is uniquely American."