The Wednesday afternoon before Thanksgiving always begins the same way at Cowboy Jack's. The staff stocks special beer tubs, then moves most of the tables out to allow for a standing-room-only crowd in the Plymouth bar. They're getting ready for what will be the largest party of the year: Drinksgiving.
Spurred by a rush of college students and young adults returning home, Thanksgiving eve has prompted some bars and restaurants — as well as police departments — to boost staffing levels for the onslaught of preholiday drinkers. "It's our biggest drinking day of the year by far," said Angela Waaraniemi, a manager at Cowboy Jack's, far surpassing New Year's Eve and St. Patrick's Day.
"Everyone is at home with their families and no one has to work the next day, so they all come out and fill their bellies with as much alcohol as possible," she said.
Also referred to as Blackout Wednesday or Black Wednesday, Drinksgiving has likely been around for decades, but it didn't get much recognition until around 2007, when the catchy term was coined. Now it's a national phenomenon — with its own movie, 2016's "Drinksgiving." According to Womply, a small business consulting firm, the day accounted for 167 percent of normal daily revenue in local restaurants and bars last year.
So what's with all the bar hopping the night before a family holiday? Toben Nelson has an idea. Bars — not homes — have become the preferred hangout for many young people, said the University of Minnesota public health professor. The night before Thanksgiving is simply a time to get together.
"It's a pervasive social expectation," Nelson said. "These bars may be offering specials and they serve as a place to get together. Especially for folks returning from college who have recently come of age, it's just a logical thing to do."
Joseph Rollwagen, a 27-year-old Eden Prairie native who now lives in New York, said he looks forward to Drinksgiving because it marks a rare opportunity for his friends — who have scattered around the country since high school — to catch up.
"Thanksgiving is kind of a one-day deal, whereas Christmas often lasts for a week," he said. "So the night before is kind of a second Thanksgiving for the family you've chosen. And I'd rather have a beer than a turkey any day."