Have you ever watched a holiday rom-com on Hallmark Channel or Lifetime — or any of the other many networks and streamers that now air them — and thought, “I could write that”? It's harder than you may think — but just as fun.
Regular writers of Christmas fare for Hallmark Channel, Great American Family and Lifetime share the ins and outs, misconceptions and exceptions to writing a Christmas TV movie.
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This image released by Great American Family shows Jill Wagner, left, and Jesse Hutch in a scene from "Christmas Under the Northern Lights." (Great American Family via AP)
This image released by Great American Family shows Jill Wagner, left, and Jesse Hutch in a scene from "Christmas Under the Northern Lights." (Great American Family via AP)
Executive producer and writer Anna White appears on the set of “The Holiday Junkie,” premiering Saturday on Lifetime. (Anna White via AP)
Executive producer and writer Anna White, left, talks with actor-director Jennifer Love Hewitt on the set of “The Holiday Junkie,” premiering Saturday on Lifetime. (Anna White via AP)
This image released by Lifetime shows Jennifer Love Hewitt, left, and Lynn Andrews in a scene from "The Holiday Junkie." (Lifetime via AP)
Some say the holiday season goes by quickly, but for those whose jobs depend on it, Christmas is always on the brain. Writers are always looking for their next gig so there's no real rest or downtime between assignments. The pressure is on to come up with ideas, get them sold and get writing so the films can get made and ready to air.
“I feel like when I’m not writing Christmas movies I’m pitching Christmas movies, so I feel like it’s Christmas all year round," said Anna White, who executive produced and wrote “The Holiday Junkie,” directed by and starring Jennifer Love Hewitt, premiering Saturday on Lifetime.
It can be challenging, however, to get into the mindset of Christmas when life outside doesn't match the world you're creating. Rick Garman, who wrote the 2023 Hallmark Channel hit film “Christmas on Cherry Lane," along with its three sequels this year for Hallmark+, often writes Christmas movies in June.
A resident of Savannah, Georgia, he says the high heat and humidity can be a slog. When those moments bubble up, Garman has trained himself to think big picture. “I sort of flip back to this idea that people are going to watch this movie and it's going to make them happy ... and then I sort of get over myself.”
Sometimes writing a script for a Christmas TV movie can be like listening to the same holiday song on repeat.
“If you look at the hundreds and hundreds of Christmas movies over the last several years, it is tricky to come up with a different idea or a new twist on an old idea or a classic," said Cara Russell, an executive producer of "Christmas Under the Northern Lights,” which debuted on Great American Family in November.
Selling an idea or a script can cause deja vu says Nina Weinman, whose 2024 offering was “Debbie Macomber's Joyful Mrs. Miracle," for Hallmark.
“I pitched a Christmas idea and they were like, ‘It’s so good that we have something identical to that already in development.’" You're like, ‘OK, somebody else got their first.’ That happens."
This is where writers have to push themselves to find different ways to tell stories, said White. She asks herself, “What is a new hook into this? What is something we’ve never seen? What is a world we've never seen? What is a topic we’ve never explored? That’s kind of hard because obviously now every channel everywhere does a million Christmas movies, but that’s the challenge.”
Garman admits trying to think of fresh ideas to keep himself interested as well. “There’s only so many times that they can bake cookies,” he said.
Many wonder if there’s a formula to writing a Christmas movie with certain criteria that must be met like “mistletoe kiss, check.” Weinman says absolutely not.
“That is not true. I don’t know where the rumor started that there’s a list out there. There’s not.”
Weinman credits Hallmark Channel for branching out in recent years with their Christmas content.
“There wasn’t a lot of creative freedom when I first started writing these movies. Now they've found you have to go bigger or go bolder if you want the people to keep coming back. And they are. I see a lot of feedback that the audience loves the big swings." She's especially proud of a movie she wrote that debuted last year on Hallmark called “Catch Me If You Claus” that was more of a caper. “I wrote that movie 10 years ago. It was too broad for a while. They finally said yes."
In recent years, Hallmark Channel and Lifetime added Christmas movies with LGBTQ storylines and Hanukkah-themed films too. This year, Julie Sherman Wolfe, who is Jewish, wrote both “Holiday Touchdown: A Chiefs Love Story” and “Hanukkah on the Rocks” for Hallmark Channel. Her first Hanukkah-themed movie was “Hanukkah on Rye” from 2022.
“I got to release everything anyone in my family has ever said or done that’s funny or touching or just culturally significant to Hanukkah. I just threw it all into that, but then somehow found some more stuff for "Hanukkah on the Rocks.'"
White grew up Jewish and said "one of the great things about these Christmas movies is they’re pretty like, you know, non-religious. They’re pretty much just like, what’s the pop culture of Christmas? I love that.”
With no checklist to follow, it's helpful to remember those who tune in are fans of the genre. In other words, if you want to sell a Christmas movie to a network, keep it Christmas-y.
"There’s not going to be sex, drugs and rock and roll. That’s never going to happen. It’s always staying on brand," said Weinman.
“It’s comfort food. The couple is going to end up together. Nobody’s going to die,” added Garman.
Garman has taught classes on writing Christmas movies and tells students to remember that Christmas drives the story. "How does the Christmas spirit help people achieve their goal or how does it bring these two people together or how do they find their way back to something because of Christmas?”
And, in the world of TV movies about Christmas, bad guys aren’t “an outright villain or a caricature,” said Russell. Instead, Garman describes them as “misguided” people who “usually learn their lesson by the end. Knowing that everything’s going to be OK at the end of this two hours is why people watch.”
Some people put their Christmas tree up as soon as they’re done handing out Halloween candy. Networks are aware of this and ready to meet the demand. Hallmark Channel kicked off its annual Countdown to Christmas with original films and repeats beginning Oct. 18. Lifetime waited until pumpkin spice lattes had cooled and started their schedule on Nov. 16.
Bill Abbott is the president and CEO of Great American Media and prior to that was the head of Hallmark’s parent company. Between both jobs, he’s watched the demand for Christmas movies begin earlier and earlier.
“Initially I would have thought that Christmas movies would be very popular between maybe the week before Thanksgiving through Christmas,” said Abbott. “As it’s turned out, it’s popular from October through the end of the year.”
It should be no surprise that Great American Family started their holiday season off earlier than any other network. The first Christmas movie to air this year on Great American Family was on Oct. 10, which Abbott says is ”beyond my wildest expectations.”
White majored in screenwriting at Loyola Marymount University. After graduation she spent years doing grunt work jobs because she wanted to write. She got the idea to write a Christmas movie and “watched a ton of them” for research.
"I wrote one on spec, which means, without it having anywhere to go. I sent it out to a bunch of people and got my manager that way. He hooked me up with some of the production companies that make these Christmas movies. The ball kept rolling ... There’s always demand for them and they sell, I think, really well internationally.”
This image released by Great American Family shows Jill Wagner, left, and Jesse Hutch in a scene from "Christmas Under the Northern Lights." (Great American Family via AP)
This image released by Great American Family shows Jill Wagner, left, and Jesse Hutch in a scene from "Christmas Under the Northern Lights." (Great American Family via AP)
Executive producer and writer Anna White appears on the set of “The Holiday Junkie,” premiering Saturday on Lifetime. (Anna White via AP)
Executive producer and writer Anna White, left, talks with actor-director Jennifer Love Hewitt on the set of “The Holiday Junkie,” premiering Saturday on Lifetime. (Anna White via AP)
This image released by Lifetime shows Jennifer Love Hewitt, left, and Lynn Andrews in a scene from "The Holiday Junkie." (Lifetime via AP)
Tampa Bay (7-6) at Los Angeles Chargers (8-5)
Sunday, 4:25 p.m. EST, FOX
BetMGM NFL odds: Chargers by 3.
Against the spread: Buccaneers 8-5; Chargers 9-4.
Series record: Chargers lead 8-4.
Last meeting: Chargers beat Buccaneers 38-31 in Tampa, Fla., on Oct. 4, 2020.
Last week: Buccaneers beat Las Vegas 28-13; Chargers lost to Kansas City 19-17.
Buccaneers offense: overall (3), rush (8), pass (6), scoring (5).
Buccaneers defense: overall (28), rush (11), pass (30), scoring (22).
Chargers offense: overall (24), rush (19), pass (25), scoring (13).
Chargers defense: overall (11), rush (T-14), pass (8), scoring (1).
Turnover differential: Buccaneers minus-2; Chargers plus-11.
QB Baker Mayfield is trying to lead Tampa Bay to a fourth consecutive NFC South title. He’s already matched a career-best for touchdown passes with 28, but also hasn’t done as good a job of taking care of the football as a year ago. He threw for 295 yards and three TDs in last week’s 15-point win over Las Vegas. He also turned the ball over three times in the first half to help the Raiders stay close until the fourth quarter.
WR Quentin Johnston bounced back from a couple of tough performances to make five catches for 48 yards and a touchdown against the Chiefs. But inconsistency has been the defining trait of the slow start to Johnston’s NFL career, so being able to follow it up will be telling. The Chargers needed the 2023 first-round pick to step up with rookie Ladd McConkey sidelined because of knee and shoulder injuries last week. With McConkey's status to play Sunday uncertain, Johnston could be called on again.
Chargers RB Kimani Vidal vs. Buccaneers LB Lavonte David. Vidal, a rookie from Troy, seems to have increased his standing in the Chargers’ backfield that definitely missed J.K. Dobbins (knee). Vidal had eight carries for 34 yards while playing 53% of the offensive snaps in Kansas City, more than starter Gus Edwards. The Chargers are going to stick to the run under coach Jim Harbaugh, which means the newcomer Vidal will have to outfox a 13-season veteran in David. At 34, David remains a force, making seven tackles, a sack, a tackle for loss and recovering a fumble against the Raiders. He is eight tackles away from his 11th season of triple-digit stops.
Bucs S Antoine Winfield Jr. left last week’s game with a knee sprain and is expected to be sidelined a couple of weeks. S Mike Edwards (hamstring), OLB Markees Watts (knee), LB K.J. Britt (ankle) and WR Kameron Johnson (ankle) will also miss Sunday's game. Leading rusher Bucky Irving has a back injury and is listed as questionable. … Chargers QB Justin Herbert is dealing with a sprained left ankle, but was a full participant in practice Friday. TE Will Dissly (shoulder) and WR Jalen Reagor (finger) are out.
While the Chargers won eight of the first nine meetings between the franchises, Tampa Bay took the past three. … This will be the Buccaneers’ third trip to Los Angeles and second to SoFi Stadium, where they lost 34-24 to the Rams in September 2021.
The Bucs are 7-1 in December/January regular-season games going back to last season. They’re 19-5 in those games going back to 2020, the first of Tom Brady’s three years with Tampa Bay. … WR Mike Evans needs 17 receptions and 426 yards over the next four games to finish with his 11th consecutive season with at least 60 catches and 1,000 yards receiving. … Evans had seven receptions for 122 yards and a TD the previous time Tampa Bay faced the Chargers (Oct. 4, 2020). … The Bucs have rushed for 100-plus yards in 10 of 13 games. That’s after doing it just nine times over 34 games the past two regular seasons. … With leading rusher Bucky Irving sitting out most of last week’s game against Las Vegas with a back injury, starter Rachaad White took up the slack with 90 yards rushing on 17 attempts — both season highs. He also scored two TDs, one receiving. … White’s rushing TD was the 14th for Tampa Bay. That’s more than the Bucs scored on the ground in 2022 (five) and 2023 (eight) combined. … The Chargers have turned the ball over a league-low six times. The franchise record for fewest giveaways in a season is 15, which they did in 2006 and 2017. … Herbert hasn’t thrown an interception in 11 straight games. That is tied with Brady for the longest streak in NFL history. Brady closed out the 2010 regular season for New England without being picked off after Week 5. … S Derwin James Jr. has three tackles for loss and two sacks in his past three games. … PK Cameron Dicker has made 65 of 66 field goals under 50 yards in his career, with his 98.5% success rate the best in league history. Dicker has made all 30 attempts inside of 50 yards at home. … The Chargers defense allowed 17 of 31 third down conversions (54.8%) in two games against the Chiefs. They have held their other 11 opponents to 45 of 146 (30.8%).
The Buccaneers find ways to play shootouts, with eight of their games seeing the winner score 30 or more points. The Chargers find ways to play grinding affairs, with only two of their games seeing the winner score 28 or more points. Whoever dictates the style of play will determine how much fantasy value comes out of this game.
AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/NFL
Los Angeles Chargers head coach Jim Harbaugh speaks during a news conference following an NFL football game against the Kansas City Chiefs Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Ed Zurga)
Tampa Bay Buccaneers head coach Todd Bowles walks on the sidelines during the first half of an NFL football game against the Las Vegas Raiders, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Jason Behnken)
Los Angeles Chargers running back Kimani Vidal (30) struggles for yardage during the second half of an NFL football game against the Kansas City Chiefs Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)
Tampa Bay Buccaneers linebacker Lavonte David (54) sacks Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Aidan O'Connell (12) during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Jason Behnken)
Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert (10) runs with the ball as Kansas City Chiefs safety Chamarri Conner (27) and defensive end Mike Danna (51) defend during the first half of an NFL football game Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Ed Zurga)
Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield (6) passes in the pocket against the Las Vegas Raiders during the second half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)