The Christmas Episodes thread also got me thinking about something I've wondered about ever since I was a child.
Why does it seem like the networks tend to program the holiday specials (e.g. Charlie Brown Christmas, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, etc.) as early as a week after Thanksgiving in some instances--rather than hold them until shortly before Christmas (other than rebroadcasts)?
For instance, last year's ABC broadcast of "Charlie Brown Christmas" was to air on Dec. 1, but was moved to Dec. 8 due to a televised address by President Obama.
And a Titan TV listings search has revealed that on November 30 from 7-8 Central, CBS will be airing Rudolph, NBC "Christmas in Rockefeller Center," and ABC will show "How the Grinch Stole Christmas" and "Shrek the Halls"--all opposite each other. Makes me wonder what the reaction would be this year if there's another last-minute programming change for that night like last year for Charlie Brown (such as an unforeseen presidential address, breaking news, etc.)
Then ABC will follow up on Dec. 2 with "Santa Claus is Coming to Town," and while I haven't seen anything that far ahead on the schedule yet I would not be surprised if Charlie Brown will be aired on the Alphabet Network the following week.
Too early IMO. Almost equivalent to if the networks aired Thanksgiving-themed specials or episodes in very early November, before Sally was able to finish her Halloween candy (to paraphrase her quote at the beginning of "Charlie Brown Thanksgiving"). For Halloween and Thanksgiving-themed shows/specials, those usually air within a week or so before the holiday (with the obvious exception of Simpsons' "Treehouse of Horror"). Why are the broadcast time practices of Christmas specials different?
Why does it seem like the networks tend to program the holiday specials (e.g. Charlie Brown Christmas, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, etc.) as early as a week after Thanksgiving in some instances--rather than hold them until shortly before Christmas (other than rebroadcasts)?
For instance, last year's ABC broadcast of "Charlie Brown Christmas" was to air on Dec. 1, but was moved to Dec. 8 due to a televised address by President Obama.
And a Titan TV listings search has revealed that on November 30 from 7-8 Central, CBS will be airing Rudolph, NBC "Christmas in Rockefeller Center," and ABC will show "How the Grinch Stole Christmas" and "Shrek the Halls"--all opposite each other. Makes me wonder what the reaction would be this year if there's another last-minute programming change for that night like last year for Charlie Brown (such as an unforeseen presidential address, breaking news, etc.)
Then ABC will follow up on Dec. 2 with "Santa Claus is Coming to Town," and while I haven't seen anything that far ahead on the schedule yet I would not be surprised if Charlie Brown will be aired on the Alphabet Network the following week.
Too early IMO. Almost equivalent to if the networks aired Thanksgiving-themed specials or episodes in very early November, before Sally was able to finish her Halloween candy (to paraphrase her quote at the beginning of "Charlie Brown Thanksgiving"). For Halloween and Thanksgiving-themed shows/specials, those usually air within a week or so before the holiday (with the obvious exception of Simpsons' "Treehouse of Horror"). Why are the broadcast time practices of Christmas specials different?