
Welcome to Qurator's Mischievous Mondays!
This will be a weekly competition that we will be hosting every Monday. We want to see a little more engagement and fun when it comes to some of our competitions so this will be a simpler and shorter competition. Easy to enter, but maybe not so easy to win. ;) This competition will be similar to the Monday Missions we had a long time ago, but instead of writing posts to enter we will now consider only the comments and answers on this blog as your entry to win.
Why Mischievous?
We all could use a little fun in our lives. We would even say that we deserve it, let loose a little and have a go at making everyone laugh or think a little, even if it is a little over the top or pure silliness. Go all out and let your creative juices flow.

If Christmas Was a Reality Show

RULES
Write a comment in this post, your comment will be your entry.
Only comments that fit the theme and style.
It has to be done by you, no plagiarism.
All entries will be reviewed by the Qurator team.
Only one entry per account.
Deadline: Before the timer on this post runs out.
Your entry will not count if you aren't following the above-mentioned rules.

The Most Terrifying Holiday Tradition My Family Has
1st Prize - 30% Upvote
@davidke20

2nd Prize - 25% Upvote
@daileen23

3rd Prize - 20% Upvote
@ogesbeauty

4th Prize - 15
% Upvote
% Upvote@hatdogsensei


Congrats to the winners!

Good
If Christmas were a reality show, the central drama would revolve around the chaos of logistics and expectations, a mix of "Survivor" and "MasterChef" with glitter and Christmas carols. The title of the show could be something like "Holiday Clause" or "Surviving Christmas Eve."
The first major point of conflict, and the driving force of the plot, would be the "Battle for the Central Location." The families of the participants (presented as rival clans) compete to host the big dinner. This generates fragile alliances, secret negotiations about who travels and emotional blackmail for "equity in the distribution of kilometers." Tension increases with each phone call, and the final decision always leaves one side feeling marginalized, setting the stage for future resentments.
The next narrative arc would focus on the "Perfect Turkey Culinary Challenge". Set on a 24-hour timer, contestants must coordinate a full menu, managing scarce ingredients, oven glitches, and covert "saboteurs" like the guy who insists on his secret stuffing recipe that no one wants to try. The drama reaches its peak when the turkey burns or the scalloped potatoes turn out to be inedible, leading to direct confrontations in the kitchen and tears in the confessional, the equivalent of the guest bathroom.
Finally, the climax of the program would come with the "Gift Exchange Gala", where expectations violently collide with reality. Thoughtful gifts, "grandma's socks" for the fifth year in a row, or the revelation that someone completely forgot a crucial gift, would lead to awkward silences and forced smiles. The drama would not be in the physical fight, but in the passive-aggressive tension that is palpable in the air while each member of the family evaluates the effort (or lack thereof) in the gifts received.
If Christmas Was a Reality Show I am thinking of the reality show Hell's Kitchen
Because for me Christmas season would always be chaotic especially on the shops and carnivals where there are a lot of things going on and the people working on businesses have a lot of pressure to deliver their goods in a fast amount of time, which is very similar with the show where the chefs are under constant pressure to deliver high quality foods in a small amount of time and their kitchen is very chaotic as well