List of fictional holidays
This is an incomplete list of fictional holidays and list of fictional holidays created by fictional characters.
- Summerween - A holiday similar to Halloween, but taking place during the summer, celebrated on June 22nd. - Gravity Falls
- Durin's Day - Dwarven equivalent of New Years Day. The secret entrance to the Mountain above Dale and Esgaroth becomes visible. - The Hobbit
- Hogswatch in Discworld.
- Weasel Stomping Day - Day in unnamed fictional town that celebrated when every one spreads mayonnaise on the lawn, puts on Viking helmets and boots, then proceeds to kill weasels by stepping on them - "Weird Al" Yankovic song of the same name, also Robot Chicken.
- Whacking Day - The day (May 10) where everybody beats snakes to death with clubs - The Simpsons
- Hogswatch in Wincanton Somerset England Discworld.
- Decemberween - Fictionalized Christmas-Halloween hybrid, celebrated on December 25 - Homestar Runner
- Freedom Day - Counterpart of American Independence Day celebrated in 3000's Earth, with the saying If you wanna do something, you do it, and to spleckh with the consequences.[1] - Futurama
- Emperor's Day - Similar to Christmas, gifts are placed in bowls rather than stockings. - Warhammer 40,000
- Winter Veil - Celebrated on December 25, it is the Azerothian equivalent of Christmas - Warcraft
- Harry Potter Day, the day that Harry Potter defeated an evil wizard in the Harry Potter books. This day is actually Halloween, and referred as such in all the books.
- Black Drinking Day - An African-American day, (October 7, started in 2009) dedicated to drinking alcoholic beverages. - The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien
- Black Jewish Drinking Day - A Jewish day, (October 12, started in 2009) given to African-Americans, dedicated to drinking alcoholic beverages. - The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien
- Vermintide - Celebrated every 13 years, the Chaos moon is full for 13 days in a row. the Skaven hold many ceremonies dedicated to their patron deity, the Horned Rat. - Warhammer
- Colonial Day - Commemorates the signing of the Articles of Colonization which incorporated the Twelve Colonies of Man during the First Cylon War. - Battlestar Galactica reimagining
- Australian Christmas - [Fictional] Australian Christmas version in Team Fortress 2. Every December the 17th, children in Australia make weapons and hats for Old Nick, a crotchety old man who lives at the South Pole. After receiving all of his gifts, Old Nick realizes he received many duplicates of gifts, so he sells them off for incredibly low prices!
- Sadie Hawkins Day - Pseudo-holiday that originated in Al Capp's classic hillbilly comic strip, Li'l Abner (1934–1978). This inspired real-world Sadie Hawkins dances, where girls ask boys out.
- First Contact Day - Commemorating the first contact between humans and Vulcans on 5 April 2063 in Star Trek
- Federation Day - Second Monday in October (Earth Calendar), Commemorating the founding of the United Federation of Planets on October 9, 2161 in Star Trek
- Barzzle Snurfing Day - Holiday originating in the Facebook community that celebrates the first internet meme to waste an entire day's productivity being forwarded among co-workers. Since no one knows exactly when this was, the holiday is declared randomly each year by the same committee that determines when "celebrity look-alike" week and "love your sibling" day are. If a consensus cannot be reached by the fall equinox in the northern hemisphere, the holiday by default falls on the first day after the first full moon in the next month to contain 5 Saturdays (even if that day occurs in the following year).
- Heaven's Day - Essentially Christmas with a different name. Alex Rosewater even states that it's the day God's son was born. - The Big O
- Lady Hewitt Smythe Day - A holiday that is celebrated with an annual game played similar to croquet and polo whilst riding on elephants. - Mike, Lu & Og
- Unification Day - A celebration of the Alliance's victory over the Browncoats in the Unification War. According to Nathan Fillion, the main actor in Firefly, the holiday is on September 20th. - "Firefly (TV series)"
Fictional holidays created by characters
- Dogbert Day - from Dilbert animated TV show, created by Dogbert as a holiday designed to replace all holidays and be incredibly bothersome while doing so. It includes elements from all normal holidays, including big dinners, a parade and "visits from unpleasant relatives", and some that derive from Druid holidays, such as virgin sacrifice.
- Robanukah - robot holiday made up by Bender as an excuse for not working. The characters later decide to actually celebrate it - by "doing the robot dance", with Jewish-style music playing in the background. - Futurama
- Do Nothing Day - made up by Nobita who uses one of Doraemon's magical gadgets to declare it. -Doraemon
- Winter-een-mas - a multi-day January holiday invented by Ethan in the Ctrl+Alt+Del webcomic to celebrate video games. Within the webcomic, it turned into a surprise hit and even led to a brief kidnapping plot when a corporation wanted to take advantage of its popularity.
- Scotchtoberfest - pun from Oktoberfest, create by Skinner made up "Scotchtoberfest" as part of a sting to catch Bart in the act of breaking the rules. Finding out that it was in fact not a real holiday did not sit well with Groundskeeper Willie. - The Simpsons
- Merlinpeen, a festival of mouth pleasure from Secret Santa along with fictional religion "Verdukianism" create by Frank, Toofer, and Lutz from 30 rock have Kenneth give them things they claim to need for "Merlinpeen," the Verdukian Holiday of Mouth Pleasures (such as meat-lover's pizza and having their teeth flossed by a blonde virgin). Their famous holiday song is, "Oh, Meatbowl of Verduke, you bring me such pizza. Meatbowl." When Tracy Jordan (Tracy Morgan) tells Kenneth that they made up their religion, he goes into shock at the idea that all religions are made up by man. - 30 Rock
- Hive Day, an annual technology release party from HiveTech on September 29th, from the book "Hive Propolis" by Daniel D.W.
Some commentators suggest that fictional holidays, particularly in television shows' Christmas episodes, have become one of the many clichés. Meredith Blake in the Los Angeles Times said about Merlinpeen, "here we have yet another Christmas television trope: the goofy, made-up holiday. See also: 'Chrismukkah' or 'Festivus.' It's a favorite device of TV writers, but I'm not sure why."[2]
References
- ↑ Futurama Encyclopedia
- ↑ Blake, Meredith (2009-12-11). "'30 Rock': The most wonderful time of the year?". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2009-12-30.
External links
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