Posted on 10/20/2020 12:56:00 PM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
The first time It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown aired on television, it preempted My Three Sons. As in, an original episode of My Three Sons. The date was October 27, 1966, and Douglas family fans had just seen Yvonne Craig play a meter maid the previous week. Instead, CBS viewers got the Peanuts crew.
The idea of a Peanuts holiday special, and a Peanuts cartoon in general, was still relatively novel. Great Pumpkin was just the third animated special from the mind of Charles Schulz. A Charlie Brown Christmas has premiered one year earlier. The Christmas special was so popular, it revitalized the live tree industry and decimated the plastic Christmas tree trend.
The overlooked baseball-themed Charlie Brown's All Stars! aired between Charlie Brown Christmas and Great Pumpkin in the summer of 1966. Since 1966, 42 additional Peanuts animated specials have been produced for broadcast television. More importantly, the two most popular ones, the Xmas and Halloween gems, have been reaired every year as well. Until now.
In 2020, Apple TV+ procured the rights to the Peanuts holiday specials and will offer them on the streaming service. As of now, ABC, the most recent home of Snoopy and his gang, has no plans to show Great Pumpkin over broadcast television, according to People.
A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving (1973) and A Charlie Brown Christmas are slated for a similar fate.
(Excerpt) Read more at metv.com ...
'The Grinch Who Stole Christmas' hints at it when the Grinch realizes that Christmas isn't about presents and decorations. Maybe Christmas, he thought, doesnt come from a store. Maybe Christmas perhaps means a little bit more!
But nothing can top actually reading right out of the Gospel.
I felt the same way about the movie Greyhound starring Tom Hanks. I had been looking forward to seeing that film at the cinema; but, COVID hit and it never made it to the cinema. Then, Apple got a hold of it and played it on Apple TV, which I do not have; and, I do not intend to pay for another subscription just to see one film. A week ago or so there was someone on the Varney & Co. show who was talking about how much money the movie made on Apple TV. I wonder if it ever dawns on them that they could make even more money if they allowed Netflix or Amazon Prime Video to show the film as well.
Glenn Reynolds of Instapundit wrote a while back, that if we have movies (or tv series, I suppose) that we like, we had better buy them now before they either disappear, or are re-edited by some "woke" SJW, so that you won't even recognize the film. I have added the movie 1776 and The Crossing to my blu-ray collection just in case. Also, the local PBS station used to show the film How Green Was My Valley on Thanksgiving afternoon; but, they haven't shown that movie for years now, so I bought a copy.
Yeah, I just heard about that one. Didn't see it; but, I'm sure I didn't miss much. LOL
The nets will only get worse.
There is one simple answer.
Cut your damn cable and only watch what you want to watch.
The post is about over-the-air (antenna) TV.
It has nothing to do with cable.
If you aren’t familiar with the story the execs at CBS absolutely HATED two aspects of the special.
1) Linus reading the Nativity story from the Gospel of Luke
2) The jazz soundtrack by the Vince Guaraldi Trio.
They made an edited version without the Gospel reading and different music and showed it to Schultz. He threatened to walk if they did not stick to the original version, which they eventually did.
And these were TV executives in 1964. They are way, way worse now.
It is most definitely the explicit appeal to the very meaning of Christmas in this Peanuts classic that has prompted the pagan media to make this decision.
Melodramatic much? Just cause its not on your rabbit ears tv doesnt mean its going away
Apple likely bought the rights to keep it off the air.
My understanding is that the original Peanuts feature has been whittled down over the years anyway as advertisers have demanded more and more of the time slot. Its shocking when you see the original and see how much has been taken out over the years. Several minutes worth.
Just buy your own copy and watch it at your leisure.
Cut the networks out and let the full royalties go to The Schultz estate and the Vince Guaraldi Estate.
Buy them as presents for your children and grandchildren.
A year ago I decided that is was time to get a DVD of "Blazing Saddles", so I went to buy a copy, and after a bit of thought, instead purchased the entire Mel Brooks DVD collection.
Brooks is 94, and hopefully will live many more years, but not so many that he sees his masterpieces torn to shreds and destroyed in the name of WOKE.
This isn’t about me, it’s about the long-term macro effects on our culture.
I remember being in college and seeing Chuck Jones, the animator behind many of the Looney Tunes classics, give a lecture. This was at the point where politically correct censorship of cartoons was just beginning to take hold.
Jones got quite emotional about it and at one point shouted at the audience “Tell these heavy-handed idiots to stop raping my cartoons!”
I’m sure Mel Brooks could identify.
At our house we play Elvis singing Christmas songs while decorating and on Christmas day. One year we tried to change it and my adult kids revolted. They said, it isn’t Christmas without Elvis.
We don’t do mimosas, but my daughter came up with a great Christmas breakfast. Waffles made from brownie mix, topped with Vanilla ice cream.
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