The television special “A Charlie Brown Christmas” debuted fifty years
ago in 1965, and CBS was flooded with letters from viewers, thanking them for
keeping Christ in Christmas. At a time when network broadcasting aimed to
please everyone and offend no one, executives and sponsors avoided religion.
Cartoonist Charles Schulz agreed to script a Peanuts Christmas special,
but stood firm on two points. First, no canned laugh track would be used.
Second, the nativity story from the Gospel of Luke would be included. The true
meaning of Christmas had been lost in commercialization, but it would come
through for Charlie Brown.
For one whole minute, Linus recited the gospel story. The producer
protested. The network executives weren’t excited about the finished product.
But over fifteen million households watched the show and many were moved to
tears as Linus concluded, “That’s what Christmas is all about, Charlie Brown.”
The simple television show that was a hard sell among the executives was deemed
a “special that is really special.”
When was the last time you watched “A
Charlie Brown Christmas”? Revisit Linus’ momentous minute here: http://www.crosswalk.com/special-coverage/christmas-and-advent/just-drop-the-blanket-the-moment-you-never-noticed-in-a-charlie-brown-christmas.html
Merry Christmas!
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ReplyDeleteThis is my all time favorite Christmas cartoon.
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas!
We watch it every year! Merry Christmas Terri!
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Thank goodness Charles Schultz stood his ground! This program never grows old and it is needed today as never before!
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