Daily Press

You’re on PBS, Charlie Brown: Apple to share holiday specials with public TV

- By Brian Steinberg

Good grief! Charlie Brown’s famous “Peanuts” holiday specials, once available in broad fashion each year via ABC and CBS, are now caught up in some of the complexiti­es of the streaming era.

Apple, which in October unveiled its new rights to classic properties such as “A Charlie Brown Thanksgivi­ng” and “A Charlie Brown Christmas” as well as “It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown” for its streaming-video Apple TV service, said it would make the specials available on PBS and its PBS Kids outlet, adopting a “windowing” model for a classic kids property that has begun to take root in a new era for the TV business.

Apple in 2018 establishe­d ties to Charles Schulz’ time-honored “Peanuts” empire, which has its origins in a daily comic strip about characters such as Lucy, Linus and Peppermint Patty. The pact initially called for Apple to develop original series, specials and shorts, including one featuring iconic canine Snoopy as an astronaut that would teach kids about science, technology and math. But the company’s bid to snap up the holiday specials raised eyebrows, as it placed the shows behind a paywall of sorts, even though Apple has promised to make them available for

free viewing for a limited period of time. Apple’s streaming-video service costs $4.99 per month, and requires the subscriber to have a broadband connection in the home.

A Charlie Brown Thanksgivi­ng” aired on PBS and PBS Kids on Sunday night, while “A Charlie Brown Christmas” will air on PBS and PBS Kids at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 13, the company said. Apple will stream “Thanksgivi­ng” for free

between Nov. 25 and Nov. 27 and “Christmas” between Dec. 11 and Dec. 13. A window for the Halloween-themed “Great Pumpkin” appears to have already closed.

Other big media companies have grappled with the prospect of securing a popular kids’ media property traditiona­lly considered part of broader viewing. That gave it first access to new episodes of “Sesame Street,” which were subsequent­ly made available to the show’s longtime home, PBS, after a period of a few months. More recently, NBCUnivers­al’s streaming-video hub Peacock announced it would be the first home of a new season of “Curious George,” long a staple of the PBS lineup.

Apple and PBS will make the specials available in a format to which some viewers may not be accustomed: free from advertisin­g. The trio of “Peanuts” specials aired for decades on CBS, which began running “A Charlie Brown Christmas” in 1965; “It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown” in 1966 and “A Charlie Brown Thanksgivi­ng” in 1973. Ads for Coca-Cola and Dolly Madison cakes and pastries appeared in early broadcasts, followed later by commercial­s for candies such as Almond Joy, Mounds and York Peppermint Patties (which had no tie to the “Peanuts” character with a similar name). ABC secured rights to the animated specials after 2000.

PBS has long positioned itself as having a strong mission to help bring early education to children, particular­ly those in low-income homes who may not have access to the latest technology or programmin­g that runs on cable or digital media. PBS has more than 330 member stations, and in 2016 launched the PBS Kids digital-cable network to give younger viewers more access to programs such as “Daniel Tiger,” “Molly of Denali” and “Nature Cat.”

 ??  ?? The“Peanuts”gang now find their home on Apple TV+ for both old and new original shows and specials.
The“Peanuts”gang now find their home on Apple TV+ for both old and new original shows and specials.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States