Yule Log (TV program)
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The Yule Log is a television program which airs traditionally on Christmas Eve or Christmas morning, originally on New York City television station WPIX but now on many other stations. A radio simulcast of the musical portion was broadcast on sister station WPIX-FM (later WQCD and now WRXP) until 1988.
The program, which has run anywhere from two to four hours in length, is a film loop of a Yule log burning in a fireplace, with a traditional soundtrack of classic Christmas carols and secular music playing in the background. It airs without commercial interruption.
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[edit] Origins
The Yule Log was created in 1966 by Fred M. Thrower, President and CEO of WPIX, Inc. Inspired by an animated Coca-Cola commercial a year earlier that showed Santa Claus at a fireplace, he envisioned this television program as a televised Christmas gift to those residents of "The Big Apple" who lived in apartments and homes without fireplaces.
The original film was shot at Gracie Mansion, the official residence of the Mayor of New York City John Lindsay. An estimated $4,000 (US) of advertising (along with a roller derby telecast that night) was canceled on Christmas Eve for the show's inaugural airing. Thrower, and WPIX-FM programming director Charlie Whittaker selected the music, largely based on the easy listening format the radio station had at that time, with the likes of Percy Faith, Nat King Cole, Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops, Mantovani and The Ray Conniff Singers to name a few. During the shoot, the producers removed a protective fire grate so that the blaze could be seen to its best advantage. Unfortunately, a stray spark damaged a nearby antique rug valued at $4,000.
The program was both a critical and ratings success, and by popular demand, it was rebroadcast for 23 consecutive years, beginning in 1967. However, by 1969 it was already clear that the original 16 mm film was quickly deteriorating from wear and needed to be re-shot. (In addition, the original loop was only seventeen seconds long, resulting in a visibly jerky and artificial appearance.) Station producer William Cooper, a future recipient of a Peabody Award, again asked to shoot the loop at Gracie Mansion. However the mayor's office, remembering the mishap with the rug, refused permission. So in 1970, WPIX found a fireplace with similar andirons at a residence in California and filmed a burning log on 35 mm film there on a hot August day. This version, whose loop runs approximately six minutes and three seconds [1], has been the one viewers have seen ever since.
[edit] Burnout and Rekindling
From 1974 until 1989, a special message by WPIX-TV vice president and general manager Richard N. Hughes usually preceded the program, which ran every Christmas Eve or Christmas Day, and sometimes both. The high costs of running the program without commercial interruption prompted a new WPIX general manager, Michael Eigner, to cancel it in 1990 — the same year that director Whit Stillman included a scene of a New Yorker viewing the Log in his film Metropolitan. Despite hundreds of protesting letters, the log remained off the air. Beginning in 1997, WPIX offered various versions of The Yule Log on the Internet.
In March of 2000, Yule Log fan Joseph Malzone of Totowa, New Jersey created a web site called "Bring Back The Log" (now called theyulelog.com), and petitioned station management to put The Yule Log back on the air. Three months after the September 11, 2001 attacks, WPIX VP/General Manager Betty Ellen Berlamino announced on WPLJ radio that the special would return. Berlamino explained that people wanted "comfort food TV" following the terrorist attacks. The digitally restored program was the most-watched TV program in the metropolitan New York area for Christmas Day of that year and has won its time slot annually since.
Program Director Julie O'Neil found the original master film of the 1970 fireplace in WPIX's film archives in Fort Lee, New Jersey. The master film was misfiled in a Honeymooners film can marked with the episode title “A Dog’s Life,” which led to the title of a 2006 40th anniversary special about the Log called A Log’s Life.
[edit] The Log's Legacy
In 2003, Tribune Broadcasting, parent company of WPIX, announced that in addition to being broadcast in New York City, "The Yule Log" would be broadcast in additional U.S. television markets on other Tribune-owned television stations, and would also air in high def that year as well. The program made its "national" debut in 2004 on Chicago's WGN-TV and its sibling Superstation.
Other stations (and cable channels) have spawned imitations. Fellow Tribune station WDCW (then known as WBDC) in Washington, DC has done their own version, filming a log burning at Colonial Williamsburg. Beginning in 2003, an executive at INHD (now known as MOJO HD) was inspired as a youth by WPIX's Log, he produced his own version, which airs every Christmas as well as via On Demand. Broadcasters as diverse as Oregon Public Broadcasting, the MSG Network, and the CHUM Television group in Canada have also borrowed the concept.
In 2005, Tribune began making a version of the Yule Log video recorded in MPEG-4 format available for download, advertising it as a "Portable Yule Log" for those traveling. In addition, the producers of Animal Planet's annual three-hour Super Bowl Sunday stunt programming called the Puppy Bowl were inspired by the Yule Log when creating the annual program. [1]
[edit] External links
- The Yule Log Website
- Joe Malzone's TV Party article on The Yule Log
- WPIX website
- Slate.com video on history of The Yule Log
[edit] References
- ^ Yule Log
- Thomas Vinciguerra, "TV Rekindles an Old Flame," The New York Times, December 9, 2001