How the Whole “NORAD Tracks Santa” Thing Started
I Guess I Can't Argue With That
Unless you’ve been living under a rock (or, well, don’t ever go online or watch the news), you probably know about how NORAD (the North American Aerospace Defense Command — don’t ask, we know it doesn’t match). But I’ll bet you had no idea how or why NORAD started tracking the insanely improbable gift-giving route of our favorite jolly old elf, Santa Claus. Well, it all started with a Sears advertisement and a total misunderstanding.
Three years after the infamous typo, CONAD became NORAD, and the agency now receives about 12,000 emails and 70,000 phone calls from kids asking, “Where is Santa exactly?” They now have an official web site to follow Santa’s journey, NORAD Tracks Santa. But modern-day technology has done us one better by giving us iPad, iPhone, and Droid apps to follow Santa. But if you’re not into the “spending every waking moment on your smartphone” thing, you can also track Santa on Google Earth.
Obviously, this is impossible. Santa would have to be the most amazing superhero ever to accomplish the task of delivering gifts to all the believing children of the world and eat their cookies. But for kicks? Definitely follow it for kicks.
(via How-To Geek, Norad Tracks Santa)
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