For those without a fireplace this Christmas, the wonderful invention that is the Yule Log is an absolute must during the holiday season. So where can you watch the Yule Log this Christmas Eve? If you ...
Hundreds of William & Mary students emerged from their textbooks and final papers to gather at the Wren Courtyard Saturday night. Bundled up in scarves and clutching sprigs of holly, they were ready ...
When you think of a yule log, you probably picture a roaring, wood-burning fire casting a warm light on an ornament-adorned Christmas tree. Or perhaps you have a sweet tooth and the first thing that ...
This article originally ran on Dec. 25, 2008. From a TV perspective, Christmas Eve 1966 looked grim. The regular Saturday night college basketball broadcast was suspended due to the holiday, and while ...
Yule logs can mean different things for different people. For some, yule logs mean warm, crackling fireplaces. For others, they bring to mind sweet, chocolate cakes. Either way, the Christmas icon in ...
When we think of the holiday season, pop culture has conditioned us to equate the ideal Christmas with sitting around a warm fire burning a Yule log. Sadly, a whole heck of a lot of us don’t have a ...
What is the Yule Log? The Yule Log is a special holiday program that was created in 1966 by New York TV station WPIX Channel 11. It debuted as a 3-hour program, originally consisting of a 17-second 16 ...
Following is a transcript of the video. Narrator: November 1966: local New York TV station WPIX had nothing to broadcast for 1.5 hours. There wasn't much on TV during the holidays, so viewers were ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Chestnuts can do whatever they want by an open fire; we’ll be roasting — courtesy of cozy blankets and flannel pajamas — in front ...
If history repeats itself, one of the most popular programs on television Christmas Day will be a looped, seven-minute piece of film that's more than 40 years old. In some cities, it's consistently in ...
Yule Log videos have become a holiday fad and a small, specific offshoot of streaming culture. They’re easier to assemble than an actual fire, they’re more practical for apartment-dwellers or people ...