Top 5 Important Holidays During the American Calendar Year The United States has many important national holidays. These holidays range from days that the early settlers celebrated to days that different cultures celebrate. Here, we have picked five holidays that we consider to be the biggest, and we will talk about them in reverse order. Number Five: Super Bowl Sunday The fifth most important holiday is Super Bowl Sunday. Super Bowl Sunday is not an actual holiday in America, but since it falls on a Sunday, it is widely observed. It is the championship game of the NFL or the National Football League, the major professional football league. The game draws one of the biggest, if not the biggest, audiences of any TV event each year, and even people who are not usually football fans will tune in. People will usually throw barbecue parties with a lot of food and beer and play football in the street during halftime. Since the audience is so big, many companies make special commercials for the event. These are popular and many people talk about them the next day at work. Number Four: New Year's Eve The fourth most significant holiday is New Year's Eve and not New Year's Day. People like to celebrate New Year's Eve with parties or at bars with friends and family. There's usually a lot of drinking involved and games as well. The highlight of the night is the countdown to end the year, when people gather, usually around the TV, and count down the last ten seconds together. When they reach zero, they yell out "Happy New Year!" People then will kiss a loved one or a complete stranger to celebrate the new year. You can see people rush around at the last minute trying to find the right person to kiss. Number Three: Independence Day The third most important holiday is Independence Day, the fourth of July. It's a day to remember America declaring its independence from Britain. America was a group of British colonies, and after much frustration over the treatment they were receiving from the King of England, the colonists had Thomas Jefferson write the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. These days it is celebrated with games, picnics, and barbecues in backyards, at parks, and on beaches. Fireworks are also a main event on this day, and people gather to watch public firework displays.
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3ª PARTE | 17 DIC 2025 | EL PARTIDAZO DE COPE
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