The Matt Walsh Show - Why Is Christmas Music So God Awful Now? I Think I Know The Reason

Episode Date: December 20, 2025

There hasn't been a good Christmas movie or song in over 30 years. Why? - - - Today's Sponsor: PDS Debt - You’re 30 seconds away from being debt-free with PDS Debt. Get your free assessment... and find the best option for you at https://PDSDebt.com/walsh - - - 🎄✨ DAILY WIRE CHRISTMAS SALE IS HERE! ✨🎄 🎁 https://www.dailywire.com/subscribe ⭐️ 40% Off DailyWire+ New Annual Memberships ⭐️ 50% Off DailyWire+ Annual Upgrade Memberships ⭐️ 50% Off DailyWire+ Annual Gift Memberships - - - Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:27 The other day it was brought to my attention that radio stations and streaming services are still broadcasting the song The Christmas Shoes, which is the single best argument against the First Amendment that perhaps has ever been made. Any civilized society would have imprisoned everybody responsible for that song and banned it many years ago. And in case you're unfamiliar with it, the song is about a guy who's in a bad mood, he's doing Christmas shopping, and then a kid who's dressed in ragged clothing goes up to the checkout line with a bunch of pennies. He tries to buy some Christmas shoes. It tells the clerk that his mother is dying and he wants to buy her shoes so that, you know, she looks beautiful for Jesus. Listen. Sir, I want to buy these shoes for my mama please. It's Christmas Eve and these shoes are just her side.
Starting point is 00:01:23 Could you hurry, sir? Daddy says there's not much time. You see, she's been sick for quiet. a while and I know these shoes will make a smile and I want to look beautiful if mama meets Jesus tonight. Now already there are a couple of problems here beyond the very bad and melodramatic singing. First of all, if you're buying shoes or anything, there's no reason to tell the clerk why you're making the purchase.
Starting point is 00:02:00 Like nobody does that. The clerk's job is to process the transaction. That's it. Doesn't really care why you're buying it, unless you're buying the ingredients for a pipe bomb or something. There's really no explanation needed. And secondly, the song is outdated at this point. No kid is going to be counting pennies in the checkout line
Starting point is 00:02:15 because we don't make pennies anymore. And everyone's using Apple Pay anyway. Now, admittedly back in 2002, when this song came out, that wasn't true. But it was still considered a pretty big faux pot to make everyone wait while you, quote, counted pennies for what seemed like years. And it's an even bigger fo'paw when you come up short after all that. And third, what kind of person, child or not, thinks that people get to keep their shoes in the afterlife? Is the kid's mom a pharaoh?
Starting point is 00:02:42 Is this ancient Egypt? What pyramid is this woman being buried in? So at this point, even if you put aside the absurdity of wanting to dress up your dying mother, everyone in line should be furious with this kid. But then it gets worse. As Patton Oswald observed, the kid eventually makes it clear that he's a totally. little scam artist, he turns to the guy standing next to him and demands that he pays for the shoes. Watch.
Starting point is 00:03:30 I'm I gonna do? Somehow I've got to buy these Christmas shoes. So I laid the money down. I just had to help him out. Now, this pair of shoes cost $50, which in 2002 was a decent amount of money and presumably enough to
Starting point is 00:03:51 buy shoes that wouldn't get you kicked out of heaven on the spot, then we're talking about 5,000 pennies that this kid was counting. As the narrator says, it felt like it took years. imagine watching that and then the kid hits you up for more pennies. This is where you say politely but firmly, no. And you certainly don't pay for the shoes and then declare that you've discovered the true meaning of Christmas,
Starting point is 00:04:14 which is how the song ends. But if you look into it, you'll find that this song was wildly successful. In fact, it was so successful that it was somehow turned into a movie and a book series. Yes, a movie and a book series. Hollywood treated this Christmas shoes song like it was The Hobbit. They apparently got Rob Lowe to play the angry guy at the store who makes the poor kid happy. And in doing so, they provided a very important illustration of a phenomenon I want to talk about today, which is the decline of Christmas songs and movies. And conveniently enough, the Christmas shoes illustrates the decline in both of these areas.
Starting point is 00:04:49 So here's the trailer for the Christmas shoes, to give you some idea of how bad things have become, starting around the turn of the century. A special pair of shoes will lead their path. to cry. So I was still there. You're $5.50. Come back after New Year's. We'll probably be giving them away. This Christmas, two families will test their faith in themselves.
Starting point is 00:05:23 Thanks, Mr. And discover the magic that is the Christmas shoes. Now, again, this is back in 2002. and Christmas movies have only deteriorated from here. There hasn't been a good Christmas movie in over 30 years. None of them appear to have any understanding of Christmas, which is a pretty big problem for a Christmas movie. There's been an uptick in, I hate my family,
Starting point is 00:05:52 or I got a divorce so this Christmas is going to be weird type of films, which, you know, that's like Home Alone, which is a good Christmas movie, but they can't all be centered around that. The stakes are usually over the top where the fate of Christmas itself is on the, the line and there's often, you know, unnecessary violence as well. Take your pick, bad Santa, Red One, Elf, it's not exactly a Christmas story, it's a wonderful life, Miracle on 34th Street.
Starting point is 00:06:19 Now, for what it's worth, elf was originally supposed to be much raunchier, sort of like a Christmas themed version of old school, and that's what the studio wanted. John Favreau was fortunately able to prevent the studio for making that change, but, you know, the movie, the movie is still quite bad. So, when did this trend change? And why? For Christmas songs, it's very measurable. decline. The vast majority of the most popular Christmas songs, which made the Billboard Holiday 100 or the most played holiday songs, were written between 1942 and 1994. So starting around 30 years ago, the music industry suddenly became incapable of producing a worthwhile Christmas song. Part of the explanation we can assume is similar to the reason that TV shows and
Starting point is 00:06:58 movies have declined in quality. Writers in the entertainment industry are mostly obsessed with political messaging, most of which is explicitly anti-Christian. The doesn't exactly translate into creative writing about Christmas. And more importantly, there are only so many Christmas songs that can really exist from a practical perspective. It's a genre of music that's only played for one month a year, so people don't need 50,000 different Christmas songs. No one's going to get burned out on jingle bells. In other words, the genre is, you know, you could argue a sort of full already. And therefore, rather than risk a lot of money on a new song that might bomb,
Starting point is 00:07:32 most entertainers are happy to sing a cover of well-established classics, or they're happy to churn out garbage like Christmas tree farm by Taylor Swift or it feels like Christmas by Fallout Boy. You think a fresh start means things will be different, but it's the same system. The banks keep winning while you're stuck paying the price. Fees keep stacking up, collection calls won't stop, and every month it just gets worse. But here's the thing. You don't have to keep playing their game. Our sponsor, PDS debt, has already helped hundreds of thousands of people slash their debt and take back control of their money.
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Starting point is 00:08:51 That's pdsdestdette.com slash Walsh. PDSdebt.com slash Walsh. But it's also hard to escape the fact that, as I mentioned previously, we've become a culture that's obsessed with irony and sarcasm. are very ironically detached from everything. Recall this scene from Charlie Brown Christmas in 1965. Of course, a classic. Charlie asks about the meaning of Christmas.
Starting point is 00:09:14 And in response, he's told the story of the birth of Christ. Watch. I guess you were right, Linus. I shouldn't have picked this little tree. Everything I do turns into a disaster. I guess I really don't know what Christmas is all about. Isn't there anyone who knows what Christmas is all about? Sure, Charlie Brown, I can tell you what Christmas is all about.
Starting point is 00:09:39 Lights, please. And there were in the same country shepherds, abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night, and lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them. The glory of the Lord shone round about them, and they were sore afraid, and the angel sat unto them, fear not. For behold, I bring you tidings of great joy, which will be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David, a Savior, which is Christ the Lord. And this shall be a sign unto you.
Starting point is 00:10:13 He shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes lying in a manger. And suddenly there was with the angel, a multitude of the heavenly host praising God. And saying, glory to God in the highest. And on earth, peace, goodwill toward men. That's what Christmas is thought about, Charlie Brown. Now, CBS executives didn't want to air that. They thought it would bomb. It's also not what they had in mind.
Starting point is 00:10:54 They were looking for more generic content, which they could use as a vehicle to air Coca-Cola content since Coke was sponsoring the show. As one of the producers, Lee Mendelsohn put it, quote, I really believed if it hadn't already been scheduled for the following week, there's no way they were going to broadcast that show. Because of the tight timeline, it did air. It used actual child actors for voices,
Starting point is 00:11:14 didn't have a laugh track, featured a jazz soundtrack, all choices that were considered extremely unconventional and risky at the time. In the end, of course, Charles Schultz was vindicated. And so was one of his animators, Ed Levitt, who had insisted it would be, quote, the best special he ever make. The show is going to run for 100 years. Now, normally when an unconventional production with a unique message proves to be successful, executive tried to emulate it, but the Charlie Brown Christmas special proved to be an aberration. By 1987, this kind of Christmas messaging, the kind that unironically sincerely reflects the meaning of Christmas was replaced by propaganda from spiritual humanists.
Starting point is 00:11:50 This was the message of the Muppet family Christmas, for example. See if you can spot the difference. What's Christmas? Yeah. Oh, don't you have Christmas? No. Well, that's when you gather together with the people you love and you wish each other peace on earth. Oh, we have a time like that. Yes, we do. As a matter of fact, we're celebrating it right now.
Starting point is 00:12:13 You see, we give each other little presents. I'm giving Boober this nice yellow pebble. And I gave Mokey that pebble last year. And I gave it to Red the year before that. And I gave it to you, Wembley, the year before that. That pebble's been a gift 37 times. 37 times? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:31 So this was the beginning of the end, as far as Christmas movies and shows we're concerned. It's a reflection of culture becoming homogenous, of every event or holiday being about our general happiness, you know, rather than any deeper meaning. By the early 2000, South Park was producing episodes about this tension over the true meaning of Christmas, which seemed to really confuse people at the time. We meet again, Jesus. You have blemished the meaning of Christmas for the last time, Kringle. I bring happiness and love to children all over the world. Christmas is for celebrating my birth. Christmas is forgiving.
Starting point is 00:13:05 I'm here to put an end to your blasphemy. This time we finish it. There can be only one. Dude, this is pretty f***ed up right here. Oh, Jesus! Zhang Kuan do! I think I learned something today. It doesn't matter if you're Christian or Jewish or atheist or Hindu.
Starting point is 00:13:45 Christmas still is about one very important thing. Yeah, ham. No, not ham, you fat. Christmas is about something much more important. What? Presents. Ah. Don't you see, Kyle? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:57 Presents. Hey, man. If you're Jewish. I wish you get presents for eight days. Wow, really? Count me in. Yeah, I'll be a Jew too. Trado, dreedo, dreedo, I made you out of clay. Now, 50 years after Charlie Brown's Christmas, this is the kind of cartoon that children are watching. You can make the case that South Park has a more complicated plot. You could say it's funnier and more profane and more ironic. All that is true. But a culture that's defined by detachment and irony that never wants to take anything seriously at a fundamental level. It's very different from a culture that values
Starting point is 00:14:28 authenticity and vulnerability and humility, true spirituality. It produces different kinds of people, different kinds of relationships. And ultimately, it produces Christmas movies like this. It's Christmas. We should celebrate, they said. Just a little get-together for the employees. Have a few drinks. Blow off a little steam. Nothing crazy. Merry Christmas, Jeremy. Great night, That makes the Christmas Shoes movie look like a best picture nominee. Christmas content has gone from authentic and memorable to trite and tacky, to openly profane and disturbing. That's the trajectory.
Starting point is 00:15:16 And one of the things that needs to change is that we need to establish a clear definition of a Christmas movie. It's a cliche debate at some level. But maybe we'll help to spell this out. A Christmas movie needs to take place on Christmas, obviously. Or at least like needs to be centered around the actual event of the actual day of Christmas, the holiday of Christmas. And as I've said before, there needs to be snow. There needs to be a big guy in a bushy white beard like Gandalf and the Lord of the Rings. There needs to be some statement, either express or implied about the true meaning of Christmas.
Starting point is 00:15:45 And it needs to make you feel merry. It needs to actually have that feeling. It can't depress you you or gross you out. It can't be about averting the end of the world or the end of Christmas or the death of Santa. It needs to make you feel like a kid watching Charlie Brown in the 1960s. The country that values Christmas movies like this, actual Christmas movies, will be less annoying and much happier. It won't be mystified about the true meaning of Christmas either. And 10 years from now, they might actually remember the new Christmas movies they're watching and the new Christmas songs they're listening to. Good Christmas content, above all else, is memorable. It creates traditions.
Starting point is 00:16:21 It's evergreen, you know, appropriately enough for the winters. You can revisit it every year. We haven't lost the technology or the ability to return to that level of quality. We just need someone like Charles Schultz to do the exact opposite of what executives tell them to do and create something worth watching. How many discounts does USAA auto insurance offer? Too many to say here. Multi-vehicle discount, safe driver discount, new vehicle discount, storage discount, legacy. How many discounts will you stack up? Tap the banner or visit usaa.com slash auto discounts. Restrictions apply.

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