Home / Lifestyle / Japan's Unlikely Christmas Feast: Fried Chicken Frenzy
Japan's Unlikely Christmas Feast: Fried Chicken Frenzy
3 Dec
Summary
- Millions of Japanese families traditionally eat KFC for Christmas.
- KFC's Christmas campaign in Japan began in 1974.
- A statue's 'curse' affected a baseball team for decades.

KFC in Japan has cultivated a unique Christmas tradition where millions of families gather to enjoy special festive buckets of fried chicken. The "Party Barrels," complete with chicken, sides, and dessert, are a popular holiday choice. Reservations for these meals often begin as early as November, with Colonel Sanders statues donning Santa attire.
This unusual Christmas feast dates back to 1974, with theories suggesting it arose from a desire to replicate Western holiday meals. Christmas Eve is KFC Japan's busiest day, seeing a tenfold increase in customers. The brand's founder, Colonel Sanders, has also become intertwined with Japanese popular culture through an unrelated baseball legend.
The "Curse of the Colonel" legend involved a statue of Sanders being thrown into a river by fans of the Hanshin Tigers baseball team in 1985. The team's subsequent championship drought was attributed to this act until the statue's recovery in 2009 and its eventual retirement in 2023.



