Christmas on Television: The Praeger Television Collection
Autor Diane Wertsen Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 dec 2005 – vârsta până la 17 ani
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780275983314
ISBN-10: 0275983315
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Seria The Praeger Television Collection
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0275983315
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Seria The Praeger Television Collection
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Notă biografică
DIANE WERTS initially worked in television as a writer/director/editor for Beyond Our Control, the award-winning Midwest sketch satire of the 1970s and 1980s. Her writing has appeared in TV Guide, The Los Angeles Times, and other publications. She served two terms as president of the Television Critics Association, as well as on juries for the American Film Institute and the Banff International Television Festival. She now works as television writer for New York's daily newspaper Newsday.
Cuprins
IntroductionTV Waits in the WingsThe First (TV) NoelWhite ChristmasThe 12 Kinds of TV ChristmasI'll Be Home for Christmas(Not) Home for the HolidaysChestnuts Roasting on an Open FireHere Comes Santa ClausAll I Want for ChristmasAn "Old-Fashioned" ChristmasO Come All Ye FaithfulChristmas with a ConscienceA Christmas Carol and It's A Wonderful LifeHark the Herald Angels SingRun Rudolph RunThe 12 Other Kinds of Christmas TV(A Baker's Dozen) We (Don't) Need a Little ChristmasThat Christmas FeelingTV's Christmas EssentialsBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
[I]ndispensable for anyone--viewer, fan, or fanatic--who wants a complete catalogue of the medium's yuletide output over the past sixty years or so.
For those who think the best holiday shows were the ones they watched as a kid.
Bing Crosby and David Bowie sang duets in a 1977 Christmas show. Collie star Lassie may have outdone them for weirdness nearly 20 years earlier munching fake candy canes. Bony actors have donned the red suit with varying results, most series with more than 13 episodes in the can have cranked out a Christmas project, and the sensitive can rejoice in that both Kwanzaa and Hanukkah have had their time on the tube, with Hanukkah celebrants including an armadillo. Journalist Werts treats all this with the appropriate seriousness, covering early television, alternate holidays (Festivus for the rest of us!) and tips on how to create a holiday show. Particularly interesting are her comments on Christmas specials, ranging from family warmth, revered traditions, perverse Santas, miracles, social statements, dance numbers, cartoons, impressions of Dickens and lots and lots of people wishing they had never been born.
The line between obsession and expertise can be a fine one, but thanks to Werts' new book, Christmas on Television, the Newsday TV columnist has made it safely over to the expert side, with a detail-rich exploration of television's long love affair with Christmas..With commentary on everything from The Sopranos' Christmas episode _ remember the Big Mouth Billy Bass Meadow gave Tony? _ to South Park she's also kept faith with the Ghost of Christmas Present.
Newsday TV critic and friend Diane Werts is onto something with her new book, Christmas on Television, which explores the nakedly visceral emotions stirred by Christmas shows. She also looks back at how television began to acknowledge Christmas with specials in the 1960s and then followed with series episodes in the 1970s and after.
It revisits classics like A Charlie Brown Christmas while, invaluably, offering a critical reading of themes in Christmas episodes from sitcoms to Westerns up to The O.C.'s 'Chrismukkah.
Werts, a full-blown Christmas fanatic, covers most of the heights and depths of TV's love affair with holiday fare..[i]t's a yeoman effort.
For those who think the best holiday shows were the ones they watched as a kid.
Bing Crosby and David Bowie sang duets in a 1977 Christmas show. Collie star Lassie may have outdone them for weirdness nearly 20 years earlier munching fake candy canes. Bony actors have donned the red suit with varying results, most series with more than 13 episodes in the can have cranked out a Christmas project, and the sensitive can rejoice in that both Kwanzaa and Hanukkah have had their time on the tube, with Hanukkah celebrants including an armadillo. Journalist Werts treats all this with the appropriate seriousness, covering early television, alternate holidays (Festivus for the rest of us!) and tips on how to create a holiday show. Particularly interesting are her comments on Christmas specials, ranging from family warmth, revered traditions, perverse Santas, miracles, social statements, dance numbers, cartoons, impressions of Dickens and lots and lots of people wishing they had never been born.
The line between obsession and expertise can be a fine one, but thanks to Werts' new book, Christmas on Television, the Newsday TV columnist has made it safely over to the expert side, with a detail-rich exploration of television's long love affair with Christmas..With commentary on everything from The Sopranos' Christmas episode _ remember the Big Mouth Billy Bass Meadow gave Tony? _ to South Park she's also kept faith with the Ghost of Christmas Present.
Newsday TV critic and friend Diane Werts is onto something with her new book, Christmas on Television, which explores the nakedly visceral emotions stirred by Christmas shows. She also looks back at how television began to acknowledge Christmas with specials in the 1960s and then followed with series episodes in the 1970s and after.
It revisits classics like A Charlie Brown Christmas while, invaluably, offering a critical reading of themes in Christmas episodes from sitcoms to Westerns up to The O.C.'s 'Chrismukkah.
Werts, a full-blown Christmas fanatic, covers most of the heights and depths of TV's love affair with holiday fare..[i]t's a yeoman effort.