Most Americans Not Interested in Black Friday
Despite the hoopla surrounding Black Friday, most Americans continue to say they will not partake in one of the biggest days of the year for shopping deals.
Despite the hoopla surrounding Black Friday, most Americans continue to say they will not partake in one of the biggest days of the year for shopping deals.
The overwhelming majority of Americans will again be giving thanks around the Thanksgiving table this year.
Thanksgiving is one of the busiest times of the year for travelers, but only one-in-five Americans plan on spending Thanksgiving away from home.
A Los Angeles City Council member has introduced a motion to add Hugh Hefner’s storied Playboy Mansion to the city’s registry of historic cultural monuments, an idea that most Americans oppose. But they do believe Hefner and the magazine he founded in 1953 which featured a nude Playmate of the Month influenced U.S. society for better or worse.
Celebrity news has been dominating lately, with continuing sexual harassment and abuse allegations coming out of Hollywood. But while most Americans think there’s too much, they’re less inclined to say so than in the past.
After the death of a fraternity pledge at Florida State University, one of multiple similar recent deaths, all fraternities and sororities at the university have been suspended indefinitely. But Americans aren’t convinced that banning Greek life is the answer.
Alcohol-induced deaths on college campuses are back in the news, and many Americans continue to question whether schools are doing enough to prevent them.
A church in Alexandria, Virginia where George Washington worshipped is removing a plaque honoring his attendance there to avoid offending visitors and potential new members. But most Americans say, why bother?
Religion is still an important part of most Americans’ lives, even if they don’t visit a house of worship regularly.
Americans aren’t taking any chances on flu season, since more intend to get the vaccine this year.
Call it a candy hangover. A whole lot of us have leftover Halloween candy in our near future.
Most Americans still aren’t convinced that President John F. Kennedy was the victim of a lone assassin in November 1963.
Megyn Kelly’s new NBC morning show isn’t raking in the ratings, possibly because Americans aren’t the biggest fans of Kelly herself.
Despite ongoing concerns about their safety, adults are still adamant that students should be vaccinated before going to school.
Some school districts in New Jersey are now doing away with homework at the elementary level, but most Americans continue to believe that homework is an essential learning tool.
Under a new law that went into effect this month, parents in a community in western New York could face fines and jail time if their child bullies other minors.
Amid renewed conversations about sexual harassment and gender equality in the workplace and beyond, very few Americans—men and women alike—think it’s better to be a woman than a man in society today.
“Anything you can do, I can do better,” so the song goes. And both men and women seem to agree.
Amid growing allegations and criminal sexual assault charges against former Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein, most Americans see sexual harassment in the workplace as a serious problem...
Americans continue to think the politics of Hollywood bend to the left and that the film industry has a negative impact on society.