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How donuts became Australia's Covid symbol of hope

How donuts became Australia's Covid symbol of hope


In March, daily images of empty supermarket shelves were added as toilet paper and stocked with pantry supplies worldwide. On October 26, a photo of an empty Woolworth shelf in Melbourne, cleaned of donuts that day, showed hope.

"Everyone in Melbourne had the same idea! Sold donuts!" Change.org author and executive director Sally Rugg tweeted to her 46,000 followers.

Today, November 5, is National Donut Day, the day we can all agree is a good treat.

What we want to do is to focus on not "where", but "Joe" donut is your favorite. If you were to choose just one donut from the box, which would be your choice? Which donut is your ultimate favorite?

Just hours after Victoria's Department of Health and Human Services announced the first day of zero new cases and zero deaths in early June, lock-down residents celebrated the end of the second wave of the Covid-19 infection with donuts. Started celebrating, posted photos and emojis. On social media with the hashtag #donutday.

Victoria’s premier, Daniel Andrews, declared it a “good day” and posed with a classic glazed, while the state’s chief health officer, Prof Brett Sutton (who has replaced the “O” in his Twitter username with a doughnut emoji) was welcomed home from work with a mixed box.

Six consecutive days of no new cases in Victoria, and Saturday marking Australia’s first day without locally acquired cases since 9 June, have seen the hashtag boom, with doughnut shops feeling the reverberations

“Doughnuts make people happy – I couldn’t imagine a better way to celebrate,” says Anthony Ivey, co-owner of Shortstop Coffee and Donuts in Melbourne’s city centre.

Since restrictions lifted, Shortstop’s sales have doubled, and they’ve sold out just after lunch on every double-zero (no new cases, no new deaths) day.

Here is a list of the most popular doughnuts according to thethings.com

    Glazed
    Chocolate Glazed
    Boston Creme
    Long Boston Creme
    Chocolate Frosted with Sprinkles
    Jelly
    Maple
    Powdered
    Double Chocolate
    Vanilla Frosted with Sprinkles

Do you agree with the "glazed" being the most popular doughnut? Do you think "maple" should've beaten the "powdered"? Lost of choices here but we want you to let us know what is your favorite....

“I didn’t know it was going to be a thing but one of our regular customers said he was waiting until the first ‘donut day’ to have his first doughnut after lockdown,” Ivey says.

The unexpected trend caught purveyors off-guard, with some upping output and others jumping on the news to promote deals and giveaways.

“The first four or five zero days [production] was significantly higher,” says Raph Rashid, owner of All Day Donuts in Brunswick. “We were making double or triple what we normally do.”

Although Rugg was an early trend adopter of the hashtags #donutday and #putoutyourdonuts – reminiscent of the #putoutyourpotatoes trend after Peter Dutton lost the leadership spill in 2018 – she says she had already seen the term on Twitter that morning.

Of course #donutday has also been tagged many times before, for National Donut Day in the US, first celebrated in 1938 to honor the Salvation Army "donut lassies" - women and soldiers during the First World War Donuts and coffee were served to frontline.

But in Australia, donuts have symbolized Covid's hope since 20 April, when Anthony Macali, a data and reporting analyst and founder of Covid Live, tweeted a donut emoji in praise of South Australia's third day of zero new cases .

Since then, Macali has created graphics with sprinkled sweets in place of zeros, and used doughnut emojis on Twitter as shorthand for “no new cases today”. Covid Australia, another data account, credits him with starting the trend.

“Usually waiting for Covid numbers each time is tense and anxious, so I thought donuts might be a fun … way to celebrate achievements,” Macali tells Guardian Australia, saying he got the idea from tennis, where a “bagel” or a “doughnut” is slang for a set that ends 6-0.

Although one Twitter user suggested “love day” as another tennis-themed alternative, fried food won.

“I never thought it would extend past our initial zero-case day but here we are,” Macali says. “[Donuts are] a way to treat ourselves during this lockdown [but] I think any treat is valid, it doesn’t have to be a donut.”

Melbourne’s doughnut connoisseurs have welcomed the silliness and optimism of it all, feeling connected through small indulgences. And, after spending more than half of 2020 in lockdown, Rashid says Melburnians just needed something lighter to focus on – “anything just to break it up”.