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Thanksgiving Day pumpkin pie with whipped cream, autumn and winter  dessert
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PIE CHARTS

Mapped: America’s favorite Thanksgiving pie

Google Trends data reveals where US states stand in the great pie debate — pumpkin, pecan, or apple?

Millie Giles

Whats more American than apple pie (besides, of course, death, taxes, and the stock market going up relentlessly)? On Thanksgiving, at least, it’s pumpkin pie.

In the run-up to Turkey Day, bakeries big and small, and home cooks good and bad, have been making, decorating, or defrosting one or another form of pie… most likely something squash-based. A recent YouGov survey found that 29% of Americans said their favorite type of pie to eat on Thanksgiving is pumpkin, followed by apple (20%), pecan (14%), sweet potato (9%), chocolate (9%), and cherry (5%).

However, like many dinner-table conversations that’ll take place on Thursday, the type of pie that’s presented post-meal depends a lot on where you’re from and where you live.

Over the past 30 days, there were more search queries for “pumpkin pie” than any other type of pie in all but six US states. Indeed, only Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and New Jersey googled “apple pie” more often or as much as its pumpkin counterpart… while only Southern states Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi saw a greater search volume for “pecan pie.”

However you slice it… 

America has a long, storied history with pumpkin pie. According to the Library of Congress, colonial settlers in New England were making the sweet treat as early as 1655, appearing in published cookbooks by 1796. Today, pilgrims or otherwise, pumpkin spice still has a firm place on the Thanksgiving table, but now the flavor holds a broader cultural significance in the “autumn vibes” space (see also: the Starbucks PSL).

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Thieves are targeting “Pokémon” cards in robberies since they’ve skyrocketed in value

A real-life mishmash of different Team Rocket wannabes is having a lot more success thieving “Pokémon” cards than Jessie and James ever did in their attempts to pilfer Pikachu throughout the anime series.

The Washington Post reports on a string of DC-area heists of “Pokémon” cards, with CGC Cards Vice President Matt Quinn quoted as saying, “Any time you’re carrying around collectibles that are worth money, whether it be gold bars, Pokémon cards, coins, toy trains, or whatever it might be, you have to be vigilant with knowing that you’re carrying collectibles that can be easily stolen from you,” adding that these episodes are happening across the country.

Gotta thieve ’em all is an outgrowth of the massive boom in the value of “Pokémon” cards, with The Wall Street Journal reporting on 3,000% returns earlier this year. Their meteoric rise has been a big boon to GameStop, whose collectibles business has played a critical role in the stabilization and nascent turnaround of its operations.

Both individual cards and unopened packs have been targeted in robberies of stores and personal residences, per the Post report.

Stealing unopened packs of “Pokémon” cards is effectively thieving and buying call options at the same time: an individual pack might not be worth much on its own, but the most valuable cards in the recently released Mega Evolutions set are going for over $1,000. And at about 23 grams per pack and relative differences in security, the logistics seem a lot less onerous than trying to rob a gold dealer.

(Note: I don’t know for sure. I’m not a thief, besides that Klondike bar one time in high school.)

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iHeartMedia surges on report Netflix, competing with YouTube, wants its video podcasts

Video podcasts are becoming a key part of Netflix’s efforts to keep pace closely behind YouTube in the streaming wars.

According to reporting by Bloomberg, the streamer is in talks to exclusively license video pods from iHeartMedia. Shares of IHRT surged on Tuesday morning.

Under the deal, iHeartMedia, which produces shows like “Las Culturistas,” “The Breakfast Club,” and “Jay Shetty Podcast,” would reportedly stop posting full episodes on YouTube — the site that more than a billion people use to watch podcasts every month.

Netflix made a similar deal with Spotify last month and will begin streaming 16 video podcasts produced by Spotify Studios early next year.

According to the Nielsen Gauge, YouTube pulled in 12.6% of all TV viewership in September, compared to 8.3% for Netflix.

Under the deal, iHeartMedia, which produces shows like “Las Culturistas,” “The Breakfast Club,” and “Jay Shetty Podcast,” would reportedly stop posting full episodes on YouTube — the site that more than a billion people use to watch podcasts every month.

Netflix made a similar deal with Spotify last month and will begin streaming 16 video podcasts produced by Spotify Studios early next year.

According to the Nielsen Gauge, YouTube pulled in 12.6% of all TV viewership in September, compared to 8.3% for Netflix.

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