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Parents, please be advised that the following story contains frank, adult discussion about Santa. (Whatever the experts say, we're not taking any chances with putting ourselves on the naughty list.)
First, Santa spoiler alert! And, parents, you know what we mean. When Melissa Marion's 8-year-old son, Johnny, came home from school saying that a classmate had said Santa wasn’t real, she knew ...
Sara Haines and Sunny Hostin clashed on Tuesday’s episode of The View over whether it was right for parents to use Santa’s naughty list as a way of keeping their children in check.. Haines was ...
Parents, she found, also don’t always consider they are blatantly lying to their children about Santa by keeping the myth alive. “Some parents feel like a conversation about Santa is playful ...
Things will be magically different because the holidays have a way of bringing out the best in people: Santa or no Santa." Hayes points out one big perk to having a Santa-free household at the ...
She called her parents to let them know she was meeting a client at the Port Authority and was not heard from again. Seymour's age, occupation, and the location of her disappearance are similar to the victims of the Gilgo Beach serial killings and she is considered a potential victim who was never found. [202] 10 November 2005 Rahma el-Dennaoui: 1
Social scientists have been studying the effects of the Santa myth for more than a century, but the question of whether the legend is a hurtful lie or just harmless fun is still up for debate.
Keep Santa, but get rid of the concept of naughty and nice “In Santa's eyes, you’re either ‘naughty’ or ‘nice.’ This doesn’t capture the complexity of humans, what they’re really like.