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Showing posts with label Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July. Show all posts

Saturday, July 3, 2021

YouTube Spotlight: Ethel Merman, Disco Queen

When we first stumbled upon this video, it was bizarre, nonsensical, and inexplicable: Ethel Merman performing a disco version of Alexander's Ragtime Band to a live and TV audience of children:


However, now that we know Ethel starred in Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July, as we discuss on the podcast this week, and that this performance took place not too long before that special was in production...

Nah, sorry, it's still bizarre, nonsensical, and inexplicable. And I love every second of it!

The song was a little--I don't like to use the word "dated" on a site devoted to classic television, so let's say it was a little traditional even in 1978. Even the hearty discofication of it can't change the fact that, "the bestest band what am, oh, my honey lamb," isn't gonna sound cutting edge. I doubt it did when it was written.

Ethel gives this her all, though, and if you look hard enough, you can see, or at least imagine, genuine enthusiasm from an appreciative disco-and-ragtime-crazy cross-section of America's youth. The playlist for the podcast features her singing this on The Tonight Show, but this performance is even more amazing. What better way is there to celebrate this Independence Day weekend than to celebrate Ethel Merman's attempt to cash in on disco...by watching this again and again and again...

Friday, July 2, 2021

The "Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July" playlist is now live!

After listening to this week's podcast, continue celebrating Christmas in July by watching our video playlist for this episode! Click below for Rankin-Bass clips, network promos, and of course Ethel Merman! All this plus vintage holiday-themed commercials from 1979!

And remember you can check out our official YouTube channel anytime for past podcasts and episode-specific playlists for each one!

Thursday, July 1, 2021

Show Notes: Episode 9-3: "Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July"

*Christmas in July is not an official holiday in the USA, but feel free to celebrate with us anyway!

*Special thanks again to James and Lucille for supporting the show!

*Our Season 4 episode covering Popeye Meets the Man Who Hated Laughter is right here.

*Frosty's Winter Wonderland debuted December 2, 1976.

*This special premiered November 25, 1979 on ABC at 7:00 P.M, followed by Mork and Mindy and the TV Movie When She Was Bad...  CBS had 60 Minutes, Archie Bunker's Place ("barney and the Hooker"), One Day at a Time, and the theatrical film Oh, God. NBC led off the night with Wonderful World of Disney, followed by an airing of Smokey and the Bandit and Prime Time Sunday.

*Huge Oversimplification Dept.: The "family hour" guidelines for network programming came out of the prime-time access rules which gave network programming time back to local affiliates. The idea was to encourage more "public interest" and family-oriented programming. When that didn't really happen, the networks got "back" the Sunday 7pm-8pm hour with the proviso that it be used for public affairs/family programming.

*Johnny Marks is the songwriter who wrote "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer."

*Shirley Booth is not in this special, but she appears as Mrs. Claus in The Year Without a Santa Claus (1974). Darlene Conley, a long-running soap star (notable for a long Emmy-winning run on The Bold and the Beautiful as Sally Spectra) took on the role for this one. The Mickster is Santa in Year Without as well as in this one.

*Jack Frost's own special premiered December 13, 1979, or over two weeks after his debut on Christmas in July. As Mike said off air, Rankin-Bass really was ahead of Marvel with this whole "shared universe" thing, introducing the character like this and priming the audience!

One note: Paul Frees voices Frost in this one, but in the actual Jack Frost special, the role is played by...Darlene Conley. No, it's Robert Morse.


9-3: Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July

A Christmas special in July?! Not just any Christmas in July special either. This 97-minute Rankin-Bass special might have it all...literally. Ancient history rears its head when an evil king wakes from a long slumber. If he succeeds, Rudolph could lose his shiny nose, Frosty and family could melt, Santa could lose Christmas, Ethel Merman could lose her circus, and the world could plunge into an eternal winter! Happy Christmas in July!



Check out this episode!