The below was originally posted by Mary
Katharine Ham at Hugh Hewitt’s
Blog on 6 December 2005, with the most excellent title of ‘And, Lo, the Network
Execs Were Sore Afraid’. I don’t know if it is any copyright violation to re-post
the whole article, but it is so good and so timely that I’ll post it anyway. The
original post can be found at Hugh Hewitt’s blog.
And, Lo,
the Network Execs Were Sore Afraid There is no time in my life that I don’t
remember “A Charlie Brown Christmas.” It’s always been there, every year. I first
watched it sitting on my dad’s lap, back when my two brothers and I were small enough
to all fit in one La-Z-Boy with him– one kid in the nook beside each armrest and
one kid in the middle. “A Charlie Brown Christmas” turns 40 this year. It airs tonight
on ABC. It’s been around so long, I’ve never bothered to think about what made it
a classic– what differentiates it from a thousand other tales of animated giving
and golden rules and striped-y stockings with silver bell soundtracks. But in 1965, execs
thought the show was “defiantly different.”When CBS bigwigs saw
a rough cut of A Charlie Brown Christmas in November 1965, they hated it. “They said
it was slow,” executive producer Lee Mendelson remembers with a laugh. There were
concerns that the show was almost defiantly different: There was no laugh track, real
children provided the voices, and there was a swinging score by jazz pianist Vince
Guaraldi. Mendelson and animator Bill Melendez fretted about the insistence by Peanuts
creator Charles Schulz that his first-ever TV spinoff end with a reading of the Christmas
story from the Gospel of Luke by a lisping little boy named Linus. “We told Schulz,
‘Look, you can’t read from the Bible on network television,’ ” Mendelson says. “When
we finished the show and watched it, Melendez and I looked at each other and I said,
‘We’ve ruined Charlie Brown.’ ” Good grief, were they wrong. The first broadcast was
watched by almost 50% of the nation’s viewers. “When I started reading the reviews,
I was absolutely shocked,” says Melendez, 89. “They actually liked it!”Thank
goodness Shulz made it in 1965. That baby would be a Veggie Tales straight-to-video
these days. With all due respect to Bob
the Tomato, I prefer the Gospel of Luke coming from Linus. But it turns out that
what scared execs about Charlie’s low-key, surprisingly soulful Christmas is exactly
what made it beloved:Parents like Molly Kremidas, 39, who grew up adoring
A Charlie Brown Christmas, watch it with their kids. “It’s the values in the story,”
says Kremidas, of Winston-Salem, N.C. She’ll watch tonight with daughter Sofia, 6.
“Would there be any programs for children on today that could get away with talking
about the real meaning of Christmas? I don’t think so.” Parents say the combination
of humor and bedrock values is what draws them and their children to the show. “It
does provide a balance, but it’s a balance that we as a society have forgotten about,”
says Patrick Lemp, 43, of West Hartford, Conn. He’ll watch tonight with son Brendan,
13. “This is one of the last shows that actually comes out and talks about the meaning
of Christmas. As a society, we’re taking religion out of a lot of the trappings of
the holiday. This one is different.”The ‘War on Christmas’ has been
a big buzz phrase this year, and I’m not going to harp on it a lot. But it makes us
look rather silly to walk around Christmas shopping, taking Christmas vacations, wrapping
Christmas presents for under the Christmas tree and pretending that this winter “holiday”
is about nothing when everyone knows what it’s about. Yes, not everyone celebrates
Christmas and it doesn’t mean the exact same thing to everyone who celebrates it.
We should be mindful of that with our friends and family– that’s just plain good
manners. But removing the word “Christ” from the holiday is kind of like spelling
out cuss words in front of your teenager. You’re not fooling anyone and there ain’t
a whole lot of harm in just saying it. Linus wasn’t offending anyone. He was just
being honest when he read, “And suddenly, there was with the angel a multitude of
the heavenly host praising God, and saying, ‘Glory to God in the Highest, and on Earth
peace, and goodwill toward men. And that’s what Christmas is all about, Charlie Brown.”
(Luke
2: 13-14) Shulz created a special for a holiday that commemorates the birth of
Jesus and in that special, he told the story of the birth of Jesus. Makes sense to
me. But these days, it takes the Peanuts kids to act like adults about it. Perhaps Linus
has a security blanket he could lend the rest of us. Judging from the tremendous
success of Charlie Brown’s honest Christmas story, network execs would be wise to
heed another
verse from Luke:Fear not: for, behold, I bring
you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people.