Here's the scoop from USA Today:
"It's hard to say, but this much is clear: The CBS movie starring Rob Lowe was the only new holiday program this year to make a mark among TV viewers.
Aside from Shoes and a few reliable chestnuts such as Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, Frosty the Snowman and A Charlie Brown Christmas, other specials turned out to be lumps of coal.
Though Shoes averaged 16.6 million viewers, tops among holiday programming, newer specials such as ABC's Dear Santa and CBS' Home for the Holidays drew much smaller audiences. Holidays, which aired Friday, averaged a meager 4.7 million viewers, while Sunday's NBC special America's Greatest Holiday Decorations mustered 5.2 million.
Yet time-tested specials such as Rudolph, Frosty and NBC's Christmas in Rockefeller Center easily won their time periods, Dr. Seuss's How the Grinch Stole Christmas did well for WB and TBS, and NBC scored with its 20th airing of It's a Wonderful Life.
"It's hard to create perennials these days," says Kelly Kahl, CBS' scheduling and program planning chief. "Most of those (specials) came from 20-plus years ago and were established at a time when there were three networks and they commanded huge numbers, so the exposure was great. Those are shows that are really cross-generational, and I don't know that that's the case for some of the newer shows. Parents don't remember them."
Shopping, vacations, feature films and repeats depress TV viewing levels in late December. That makes it hard for newer specials to find an audience.
Yet networks like them, anyway. They provide something of a festive halo around other programming, and they are family-friendly shows that gift-selling advertisers love to sponsor.
"One thing holiday specials do that repeats don't is bring in viewers who ordinarily might not watch the network," says Magna Global USA analyst Steve Sternberg.
Although Nickelodeon does well with kid-targeted animated specials, the bigger networks have shied away from ambitious new fare. Fox struck out two years ago with Olive, the Other Reindeer. And not all nostalgia is golden. NBC dropped plans to revive Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol, TV's first animated holiday special. It premiered 40 years ago this month. "
"It's hard to say, but this much is clear: The CBS movie starring Rob Lowe was the only new holiday program this year to make a mark among TV viewers.
Aside from Shoes and a few reliable chestnuts such as Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, Frosty the Snowman and A Charlie Brown Christmas, other specials turned out to be lumps of coal.
Though Shoes averaged 16.6 million viewers, tops among holiday programming, newer specials such as ABC's Dear Santa and CBS' Home for the Holidays drew much smaller audiences. Holidays, which aired Friday, averaged a meager 4.7 million viewers, while Sunday's NBC special America's Greatest Holiday Decorations mustered 5.2 million.
Yet time-tested specials such as Rudolph, Frosty and NBC's Christmas in Rockefeller Center easily won their time periods, Dr. Seuss's How the Grinch Stole Christmas did well for WB and TBS, and NBC scored with its 20th airing of It's a Wonderful Life.
"It's hard to create perennials these days," says Kelly Kahl, CBS' scheduling and program planning chief. "Most of those (specials) came from 20-plus years ago and were established at a time when there were three networks and they commanded huge numbers, so the exposure was great. Those are shows that are really cross-generational, and I don't know that that's the case for some of the newer shows. Parents don't remember them."
Shopping, vacations, feature films and repeats depress TV viewing levels in late December. That makes it hard for newer specials to find an audience.
Yet networks like them, anyway. They provide something of a festive halo around other programming, and they are family-friendly shows that gift-selling advertisers love to sponsor.
"One thing holiday specials do that repeats don't is bring in viewers who ordinarily might not watch the network," says Magna Global USA analyst Steve Sternberg.
Although Nickelodeon does well with kid-targeted animated specials, the bigger networks have shied away from ambitious new fare. Fox struck out two years ago with Olive, the Other Reindeer. And not all nostalgia is golden. NBC dropped plans to revive Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol, TV's first animated holiday special. It premiered 40 years ago this month. "