Some television stations and cable channels that have broadcast imitations of
The Yule Log simulcast the Christmas music from a radio station that is playing it, and before 1989, the WPIX version also secondarily promoted the playing of the same Christmas music in a simulcast over its sister FM station,
WPIX-FM (101.9), for those unable to view
The Yule Log on television (or for those who wanted to listen to the broadcast in stereo, as
stereophonic sound was not standard in television, nor were most television sets equipped with high quality sound systems, until the 1990s). Other television stations (and cable channels) have spawned imitations. Fellow Tribune station
WDCW (then WBDC and now owned by Nexstar) in
Washington, D.C. has produced its own version, filming a log burning at
Colonial Williamsburg. Local versions were also broadcast by
WPWR-TV in Chicago (with music provided by
WNUA 95.5 MHz) and
KOFY-TV in
San Francisco. In the 2000s, Jason Patton—an executive at INHD (later
MOJO HD, now defunct), who was inspired as a youth by WPIX's
Yule Log—produced his own version, which has been broadcast every Christmas since, via
video on demand. Broadcasters as diverse as
Oregon Public Broadcasting, the
MSG Network (as well as its former competitor, the
Empire Sports Network), the
CHUM Television group and
Télévision Quatre-Saisons in Canada as well as
Super RTL in Germany have also borrowed the concept.
WKBW-TV in
Buffalo, New York (owned at the time by
Granite Broadcasting Corporation, and now owned by Scripps), as a replacement for that day's morning newscast, introduced
The Yule Log as a replacement in 2008; it did not return in 2009, but
WBBZ-TV (who hired WKBW's former program director and Empire Sports Network's former vice president) brought
The Yule Log to their station, where it continues to air annually.
KSTC-TV in
Minneapolis–
Saint Paul, Minnesota (owned by
Hubbard Broadcasting) also produces a local version of
The Yule Log. The version aired by
KTXA (channel 21) in
Dallas, Texas beginning in 2013, featured two stockings adorned with the respective logos of KTXA and co-owned
classic hits radio station
KLUV, which produced the broadcast on its sister television station's behalf. KTXA discontinued the program in 2017, following then-parent
CBS Corporation’s sale of KLUV and the rest of
CBS Radio's Dallas–Fort Worth station cluster to
Entercom; KLUV moved its
Yule Log playlist to one of its HD radio feeds for the 2018 edition. In 2010, Gospel Music Channel (now
Up TV) aired a 24-hour broadcast of
The Yule Log from 8:00 p.m.
Eastern Time on Christmas Eve until 8:00 p.m. Christmas night. Before its conversion to a general children's format in 2017 as
Universal Kids, Sprout offered a 12-hour loop called
The Sprout Snooze-A-Thon (previously called
A Goodnight of Sweet Dreams) during the evening of Christmas Eve, which features scenes of sleeping characters from the network's programming set to soft music to soothe children to sleep before the arrival of
Santa Claus. In its early years, the
Home Shopping Network also aired the
Yule Log in place of regular programming (the network traditionally does not air live shopping programming on Christmas Day), before switching to a loop of
Tampa Bay Area choirs singing Christmas carols and host wishes in subsequent years.
QVC also airs a
Yule Log every year on December 25 (as with HSN, the network does not air live programming on Christmas).
Hallmark Movies & Mysteries airs a version featuring an orange cat and a
Jack Russell terrier, both named "Happy", intended to promote the Hallmark's Pet Project, an initiative of parent company
Crown Media Holdings to encourage shelter adoptions and proper pet care. For a period, the Canadian music channel
MuchMusic aired a similar special featuring a television in the scene playing Christmas
music videos. ESPN networks have aired
college sports-themed versions of the concept, including
SEC Network (which is set to the
fight songs of
Southeastern Conference schools), and
Longhorn Network (which aired footage of
Texas Longhorns mascot
Bevo roaming a
ranch to holiday music). In 2016,
ESPNU aired
A Very Golic Christmas, featuring then-ESPN personality
Mike Golic Jr. eating Christmas cookies in pajamas, on a decorated set with a video fireplace. A great many "video fireplace" productions with a similar format have also been marketed on
VHS,
DVD and
Blu-ray, some of which are entitled
Yule Log. The
Yule Log program also helped influence the
Puppy Bowl, an annual special broadcast by cable network
Animal Planet on the day of the
Super Bowl. In 2008,
Outback Steakhouse paid homage to
The Yule Log by having the first 20 seconds of a 30-second advertisement feature a CGI version of the log, before shifting focus to some steaks. Also in 2008, animation director
PES released a free screensaver that reimagined the yule log in the form of food, with pretzels used for the log and candy corn for the flames. In 2017, 2018, and 2019, the official
Twitch channel for the video game
Overwatch streamed an
Overwatch Yule Log, featuring the game's creative director and then-
Blizzard Entertainment vice president
Jeff Kaplan sitting in front of a fireplace. The 2017 stream recorded 40,000 concurrent viewers at one point. The stunt was repeated for 2018, featuring guest appearances by
Matthew Mercer (voice actor of
McCree), and
Charlet Chung (voice of
D.Va), and professional
Overwatch player
Jake.
Supergiant Games similarly streamed a
Hades-themed version of the concept in 2020, using an animation featuring characters from the game. Actor
Nick Offerman released his own version of
The Yule Log on December 2, 2015, in the style of his character
Ron Swanson, from the television series
Parks and Recreation. Offerman pours a glass of
Lagavulin single malt scotch whiskey as the yule log fire plays and stares at the camera for 45 minutes.
Disney+ released
Arendelle Castle Yule Log variant in mid-December 2019 based on the
Frozen franchise. ==See also==