Easter DVD Prize Pack! Veggie Tales, Ice Age, and Peppa Pig!

Posted on March 21, 2017 at 7:00 am

I am thrilled to announce a spectacular new contest! Just in time for Easter I have a fabulous Fox Family Home Entertainment prize package including:

Here Comes Peter Cottontail DVD
Ice Age: The Great Egg-scapade DVD
Peppa Pig: Around the World DVD
Veggie Tales: ‘Twas the Night Before Easter DVD
Veggie Tales: A Very Veggie Easter Collection DVD
Veggie Tales: An Easter Carol DVD
Veggie Tales: Easter Double Feature: An Easter Carol/Abe and the Amazing Promise DVD
Veggie Tales: Easter Double Feature: Twas the Night Before Easter/God Made You Special DVD
Veggie Tales: Esther, the Girl Who Became Queen DVD
Veggie Tales: Noah’s Ark DVD

To enter, send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with Easter in the subject line and tell me your favorite Easter memory. Don’t forget your address! (US addresses only) I will pick a winner at random on March 30, 2017. Good luck and happy Easter!

Reminder: My policy on conflicts of interest

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Contests and Giveaways For the Whole Family Holidays

Movies to Ring in the New Year

Posted on December 31, 2016 at 10:00 am

Garry Marshall’s “New Year’s Eve” shows us a variety of happy, poignant, and romantic encounters on the night of December 31.

“When Harry Met Sally” has a memorable New Year’s Eve dance.

Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn “step into a waltz as the old year dies” while the fancy society engagement party for him and her sister goes on downstairs.

Other movies with New Year’s Eve scenes: “About Time,” “The Holiday,” “The Godfather Part II,” “Rent,” and “The Apartment”

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Film History For Your Netflix Queue Holidays

Merry Christmas! Yule Logs Galore

Posted on December 25, 2016 at 7:00 am

TIME has the history of one of the most unusual programs in television broadcast history: the Yule log. A three hour television program that was nothing but a burning fire in a fireplace accompanied by Christmas music first ran in 1966 and it was so popular that it became an annual tradition.

The New York Times called it “the television industry’s first experiment in nonprogramming.” It was a surrealist’s joke, a postmodernist’s dream — the television, literally, as the family hearth — and an immediate success. The Yule Log became a TV mainstay in New York that regularly won its time slot; dozens of other U.S. cities either picked up the WPIX footage or shot their own. The Log did have its drawbacks, however. The original 16mm footage (shot in Gracie Mansion, home of New York Mayor John Lindsay) was only 17 seconds long, and the flames skipped noticeably every time it looped. In 1970, with the original film deteriorating, WPIX decided to reshoot the video as a six-minute 35mm loop.

Here’s an update for the digital era:

Merry Christmas!

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