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Pickles, People & Place: Thinking Like a Folklorist About Rituals

Pickles, People & Place: Thinking Like a Folklorist About Rituals

Mount Olive’s New Year’s Eve Pickle Drop was featured on NPR affiliate WFAE, with folkloristic perspective from the North Carolina Folklife Institute.

December 31, 2025

Reflections on the NPR story about Mount Olive’s New Year’s Eve Pickle Drop

This past week NPR shared a story about a place and event many North Carolinians know well: Mount Olive’s New Year’s Eve pickle drop – a playful tradition now tied to that town’s identity.1

At first glance, dropping a glowing pickle from a ladder truck might seem like a quirky holiday attraction. But for folklorists, light-hearted rituals like this are windows into how communities make meaning together especially around shared histories, values, and transitions.

Traditions aren’t simply “old things” that everyone does because they always have. They are practices and ideas that people choose to carry forward because they resonate with who they are, how they see their past, and how they want to be seen. Some traditions grow out of deep histories passed down for generations; others emerge from newer, invented practices that become meaningful because a community embraces them. Both are traditions when they connect people to one another and to their shared sense of place.

The pickle drop is a great example of the latter. It began in 1999 as a playful way to ring in the new millennium and has since grown into an event that draws thousands and gives Mount Olive an unmistakable cultural stamp.2 Like many New Year’s “drops” across the country – from acorns and blueberries to MoonPies and pierogies – this tradition expresses something about where and how people live and work. Communities often anchor celebrations in foods, products, or symbols tied to local labor, economy, or pride. They make sense of time, together.3

Rituals like this matter because they are public performances of identity. When people gather to watch an object descend and mark the passage from one year to the next, they are doing more than observing an event. They are reaffirming a sense of belonging with others to a place, to a story, to a community that persists amidst change.

As folklorists would say, tradition isn’t static, it’s lived. And in traditions big and small, we see how culture isn’t just preserved; it’s performed, adapted, and shared.


As communities across North Carolina mark the turning of the year, many do so through locally rooted traditions that reflect shared history, humor, and place. This New Year’s Eve, WFAE, an NPR member station, featured Mount Olive’s annual pickle drop – a distinctive community celebration that has become part of the town’s cultural identity.

The story includes folkloristic perspective from North Carolina Folklife Institute Executive Director Amy Grossmann, who speaks to how traditions like the pickle drop reflect community identity over time.

NCFI is glad to see North Carolina’s living traditions recognized and shared through public media, highlighting the many ways communities across the state mark meaningful moments together.

Read or listen to the full story on WFAE/NPR → https://www.npr.org/2025/12/31/nx-s1-5639938/in-one-north-carolina-town-the-new-years-eve-pickle-drop-is-brined-into-its-history

  1. https://www.npr.org/2025/12/31/nx-s1-5639938/in-one-north-carolina-town-the-new-years-eve-pickle-drop-is-brined-into-its-history ↩︎
  2. https://spectrumlocalnews.com/nc/charlotte/news/2023/12/30/mt–olive-pickle-drop-ranked-10-for-nye-drops
    ↩︎
  3. https://apnews.com/article/new-years-eve-ball-drop-times-square-460667f73acd16902ba17faa0be1b394 ↩︎

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