There was an article in Slate a few years ago about how it seemed like Jewish kids mostly watched "A Charlie Brown Christmas" and "How the Grinch Stole Christmas" much more than any other specials.
Is that so different from what Christian kids watch? Are there more explicitly religious Christmas specials aimed at kids that are shown every year on network TV?
Happy Hanukkah! Any holiday with candles and fried potatoes is clearly made of pure awesome.
Ugh, Ginger, the dog drama (and, damn, a dog next door who can undo latches? Impressive, and terrifying). I'm vibing hard for a good healthy outcome for Mr. Peabody, and also that he pees right quick so you don't have to spend too much time following him around with cotton balls on a stick. But, mostly, that everything works out for him, and you and he and the vet work out something that does as well for him as Sass's meds do for her.
Bah, the date was filled out wrong by the JP on our marriage certificate. So, it has to be sent back to him and then sent back to city hall. No name changing for me today and no check cashing either. Christmas shopping with Mom instead.
Aw, sj, after all that having to work yourself up to it. Will it be ready to try again for onerous task day?
Christmas shopping with mom is good.
Is that so different from what Christian kids watch? Are there more explicitly religious Christmas specials aimed at kids that are shown every year on network TV?
I think the point was more that the Jewish kids weren't watching Frosty and Rudolph and stuff like that as much as the Christmas-celebrating kids were. I have no actual figures to bear this out, but I do know that my parents tended to try to kind of limit the Christmas deluge, so they'd try to not let us watch every single Christmas thing on TV. Not so much a particular objection to Rudolph, more just, "We'll let the kids watch some of these, but we'll turn it off when we've had enough Christmas." But Charlie Brown Christmas was something we looked forward to and made a point of watching, and the Grinch was one that we usually saw. A bunch of my friends said similar things. But I have no idea whether this holds true for anyone outside my group of friends and that Slate writer's group of friends. (And the writer's group also watched "The Year Without a Santa Claus," which I hadn't seen until last year and doesn't fit into my theory, so I'm conveniently ignoring it.)
It will probably be at least a week.
The Girl does secular-cultural Judaism, with holidays and even occasional fasting but no G-d. I found it difficult to relate to at first, being of the practising (Christian) persuasion, but if nothing else there's been five years of lots of holidays and great theological debates. If children every came along*, it would get more complicated. But I think we could make the cross-cultural thing work.
*hah - like they'd appear as if by magic.
*hah - like they'd appear as if by magic.
You never know - you could get drunk one night and wake up the next morning with a turkey baster next to the bed....
I hope you realise that's the stuff of actual nightmares.
Semi-practicing pagan that I am, the only part of
Charlie Brown Christmas
that I make a point of watching is Linus' telling of the Christmas story.
The Snoopy Dance is worth a look-in, too.