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12 of the most unique Michigan high school mascots
12 of the most unique Michigan high school mascots

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

12 of the most unique Michigan high school mascots

The wildcats. The panthers. The eagles. Dozens of high school teams are named for those iconic animals. But what about the Doughboys, the Chix or the Nimrods? With hundreds of schools across Michigan, some school leaders saw an opportunity for creativity. So we've compiled some of the most unique school nicknames across the state. You can find a full list from the Michigan High School Athletic Association here. A spoiler: Many Michigan high schools get their athletic nicknames from wartime or, in a uniquely Michigan fashion, from automotive themes. The high school adopted the gremlins name in 1948, changing from their previous mascot, the Orange, according to the Keweenaw Community Foundation. The name was suggested by a principal who had served as a pilot in World War I, interested in stories about "gremlins" harassing pilots in World War II. Pilots in the war jokingly blamed problems in the air on mischievous gremlins. A dreadnought (spelled differently than the mascot, for a reason that is not apparent) is a type of battleship, according to Brittanica. Dexter's school nickname, like Houghton's, likely comes from wartime, too, according to Dexter's The Sun Times News, following the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. Doughboy was once a nickname for Gen. John Pershing's troops in World War I; therein lies the origin of Pershing High's mascot, according to The National World War I Museum and Memorial. Pershing opened in 1930, named after the general. Railsplitter was once a nickname for Abraham Lincoln on the campaign trail, according to Dickinson University. The town's history as the "chick capital" of the Midwest, as well as its history as a town for duck hatcheries, explains the town's high school mascots, according to the Holland Sentinel. While Nimrod can be slang for "idiot," the name also has biblical roots, where a nimrod was a "mighty hunter" in the Old Testament, according to a state news release celebrating Watersmeet High's unique nickname. ESPN once named the Nimrods the third best high school sports nickname. A marauder is traditionally known as someone who raids and plunders from place to place, according to Merriam-Webster. While it's unclear why the high school bears the Marauder name, the mascot has been in place since 1967. According to the city of Mount Clemens, it was the mineral bath industry that made the city a destination for health spas and likely where the school gets its nickname. Mount Clemens has since ceased using the battling bathers mascot, but it lives on as a historical image. A flivver is a nickname for the Model T, Ford's universal automobile. According to the Michigan High School Athletic Association, Kingsford has had the Flivver as a mascot since the early 1930s, when there was a Ford plant in the area. The leader of an iron mining company in the area near the town of Gwinn decided the town should be a model town for miners to live in, eventually leading to the high school's unusual nickname, according to the Gwinn Chamber of Commerce. Hematite is an iron-oxide mineral, according to the Virtual Museum of Minerals and Molecules. Ishpeming is a mining town, which is where the nickname for the school came from, according to Sports Illustrated coverage of its 2012 high school football season. The high school's name came from Henry Ford, who developed the Fordson tractor for farmers. The tractor became Fordson's mascot, one of the most unique in the state. Contact Lily Altavena: laltavena@ This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: 12 of the most unique Michigan high school mascots

How the Chicken Sandwich Conquered America
How the Chicken Sandwich Conquered America

Atlantic

time10-05-2025

  • General
  • Atlantic

How the Chicken Sandwich Conquered America

The sun is setting on burger dominance. Photo-illustration by Elizabeth Renstrom You would have been forgiven, in 2019, for thinking that America could not possibly get more fanatical about fried-chicken sandwiches. This was the year Popeyes—a fast-food company previously known for bone-in chicken—lost the bones, added a bun (and some pickles and mayo), and set off a complete frenzy. Within days, Popeyes sold out of the sandwiches; after the chain reintroduced them permanently, its sales increased 42 percent compared with the same period of the previous year. Plenty of other restaurants had offered fried-chicken sandwiches before, but I remember this one like it was the Super Bowl, or a natural disaster: massive, bad for traffic, all anyone seemed to be talking about. That December, The Washington Post declared 2019 the Year of the Chicken Sandwich, which the paper translated into Latin—anno pulli—presumably so time travelers from the past could understand what was going on here. As a society, we had reached peak fried-chicken sandwich. Check out more from this issue and find your next story to read. View More LOL. Not even close. If, six years ago, the fried-chicken sandwich was a novelty worth standing in line for, today it is a fact of eating in America. From 2019 to 2024, fried-chicken-sandwich consumption increased 19 percent at American restaurants, while burger consumption dropped 3 percent, according to industry analysis firm Circana. Over that same period, some 2,800 fast-food and fast-casual spots devoted to chicken cropped up across the country—and about 1,200 burger joints disappeared. This is a challenge to the hierarchy that has ruled American fast food since it was invented: Burgers were the core product, and when fried chicken was available at all, such as at KFC, it tended to come bone-in, or as nuggets or tenders or 'popcorn.' Nick Wiger, who with Mike Mitchell hosts a comedy podcast about fast food called Doughboys, doesn't remember eating many fried-chicken sandwiches when he was growing up in Southern California, in the '80s and '90s. To the degree that he did, he told me, they 'were like the add-on sandwich, the bonus sandwich'—the sideshow to the main event, which was usually a hamburger. That started to change when Chick-fil-A—the Atlanta-based chain that, for years, claimed to have invented the fried-chicken sandwich—began to expand nationwide. People really loved what Chick-fil-A was selling: In 2019, it became the third-largest restaurant chain in the country by sales, even without operating on Sundays. In July 2019, before the Popeyes craze, a group representing McDonald's franchisees argued in a letter that the company needed a superior fried-chicken sandwich. 'JFK called for a man on the moon,' it wrote. 'Our call should be a category leading chicken sandwich.' Read: As American as fried chicken McDonald's released the McCrispy in 2021, and now sells at least a billion dollars' worth of it annually. Burger King offers five different fried-chicken sandwiches; Wendy's has nine. Wingstop, which had previously been so known for a different form of chicken that it's right there in the name, also now sells a fried-chicken sandwich. Fried-chicken mania may have been set off by the major fast-food chains, but it has gone wide. When Wiger visited a slice shop in Los Angeles recently, he was surprised—but not that surprised—to see a fried-chicken sandwich on the menu. 'It's now become an expectation that any place you can get solid food in America will have a fried-chicken sandwich,' he told me. Photo-illustration by Elizabeth Renstrom Indeed, chefs—including those who are better known for Michelin stars or James Beard Awards—have turned the fried-chicken sandwich into something elevated and even a little winking. They've smothered it in Kaluga caviar, cloaked it in salted duck-egg yolk, and sold it with a claw still attached to the meat for $19 a pop. For decades, the fried-chicken sandwich was an also-ran, and then it was a meme, and now it is America's favorite thing to do with meat and bread. Chick-fil-A did not, to be clear, invent the fried-chicken sandwich. One popular theory holds that fried chicken was brought to the U.S. by Scottish immigrants; enslaved people, and later free Black cooks, perfected the seasoning and preparation of the dish. Much more recently, fried chicken was put between a bun by some unknown genius, popularized by enterprising businesspeople, reimagined by a polyglot food culture, and made ubiquitous by the collision of a few significant trends in American dining. Read: Better than southern fried chicken? Fried-chicken sandwiches are particularly well suited to the ways Americans like to eat—in general, but especially recently. Eating in one's car has become far more common than it used to be, and sandwiches are car food. We tend to be pretty squicked-out by bones, Paul Freedman, the author of American Cuisine: And How It Got This Way, told me, and we love crunch. (This is in notable contrast with, for example, parts of East Asia, which go nuts for chewiness.) We also really love chicken. During the second half of the 20th century, per capita chicken consumption in the United States quadrupled. Emerging wisdom about the dangers of fat and cholesterol, and the ascendancy of diet culture, pushed health-conscious Americans away from beef and pork and toward poultry. New breeding techniques (and abysmal living conditions) for chickens made the meat less expensive. The world was also becoming aware of climate change, and chicken is significantly less resource-intensive than beef. (I don't think it's a coincidence that Generation Z, the cohort that analysts told me is driving the fried-chicken-sandwich boom, has never not known climate dread.) By the time Popeyes released its sandwich, chicken consumption outstripped that of beef. Even when it is prepared in a way that is not, by any stretch, healthy, and even though eating animals is not good for the planet, full stop, chicken was—is—now our default meat. And here's the thing about fried-chicken sandwiches: They taste amazing. Here's the other thing: They are highly annoying to cook at home—splattery, stinky, stressful for the uninitiated, impractical to make in small amounts. Fried-chicken sandwiches are just much better suited for restaurant kitchens, with their economies of scale; their giant, ever-burbling deep fryers; and their cooks' hardy, pre-scarred forearms. They're smart business, too. Pound for pound, a decent fried-chicken sandwich is much less expensive to make in a restaurant than a hamburger. Chicken is (for now) cheap, or at least cheaper than beef, and breading and frying make even low-quality meat taste pretty good. From the May 1982 issue: Roy Blount Jr. on chickens So does sauce. American eaters have become accustomed to, and expectant of, the opportunity to customize everything. This is why ordering from Starbucks feels like taking the MCAT, and another reason fried chicken is so appealing—it's a relatively bland meat that takes well to being dressed a gazillion different ways. Case in point: Wingstop's crispy chicken sandwich is available with a choice of 14 sauces, plus four dips. When it first came out in 2022, the chain sold more than a million sandwiches in six days. This, really, is the key to fried chicken: It is an ideal blank slate for a novelty-obsessed food culture. Although fried chicken can be an absolute party, texturally speaking, it doesn't have much to offer, flavorally speaking, at least not without additions. This isn't a weakness; it's a strength. 'Americans are ornament-, garnish-, kick-it-up-a-notch-oriented,' Freedman told me. (We have become less spice-averse in the past generation or so.) Fried chicken works with all manner of trend and cuisine. Right now you can find a Bolivian fried-chicken sandwich, marinated in South American beer and served with serrano-habanero-chili vinegar, in New York City; a Cambodian one with pickled papaya and long beans in Chicago; and a Thai-inspired one served with your choice of Southeast Asian–style sauces in Glendale, Arizona. The fried-chicken sandwich is one of the great American inventions—a holy mash-up of tradition and newness, convenience and indulgence, crunchy and soft. It is the perfect food for this culinary moment. But wherever we trend next, it will be there, too, because the fried-chicken sandwich can be whatever we want it to be. This article appears in the June 2025 print edition with the headline 'How the Chicken Sandwich Conquered America.' When you buy a book using a link on this page, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic. Ellen Cushing is a staff writer at The Atlantic.

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