Skip to main content

What's a Ticker-Tape Parade?

IT’S RAINING TAPE Apollo 11 astronauts Buzz Aldrin, Mike Collins, and Neil Armstrong ride through a downpour of ticker tape in New York City on August 13, 1969. BETTMANN/GETTY IMAGES

The World Cup–winning United States Women’s National Soccer Team was honored in a ticker-tape parade today in New York City. The athletes rode up a stretch of Broadway called the Canyon of Heroes to City Hall. There, the mayor presented them with a ceremonial key to the city. The crowd cheered for the players and proudly waved American flags.

But what’s a ticker-tape parade, anyway?

Ticker-tape parades celebrate heroes and important events. New York City has held more than 200 ticker-tape parades since the first, in 1886. That parade was to honor the Statue of Liberty’s dedication. Since then, ticker-tape parades have been thrown for many different reasons. They have recognized astronauts, world leaders, and soldiers coming home from war. Ticker-tape parades have also taken place after athletic victories. These have included the Olympics, the Super Bowl, and the World Series.

During early ticker-tape parades, people tossed tiny strips of paper out of their office windows as the parade passed by. These strips were called ticker tape. That’s because they were used in ticker-tape machines. The machines printed up-to-the-minute news and information about the stock market. They made a tick-tick-tick sound as they worked.

ON THE JOB Two workers read ticker tape as it prints.

HULTON-DEUTSCH COLLECTION/CORBIS/GETTY IMAGES

Ticker-tape machines are no longer used. Newer technologies, such as television and computers, provide stock information. At ticker-tape parades, people now toss confetti made from recycled paper. Like ticker tape, these bits of paper swirl through the air, adding to the excitement of the parade.

And afterward? A second group of heroes appears, brooms in hand: The clean-up crew!