A Charlie Brown Christmas, which debuted on CBS on December 9, 1965, is celebrating its 60th anniversary in 2025 and has become a cherished holiday tradition in American homes. This iconic special, originally sponsored by The Coca-Cola Company, was produced on a tight six-month schedule with a modest budget and featured groundbreaking creative choices that defied the norms of television animation at the time. Despite initial skepticism from network executives who found the slow pacing and lack of a laugh track unappealing, the special was a critical and commercial success, finishing second in its timeslot and winning both a Primetime Emmy and a Peabody Award.

- The special was created in less than a day after producer Lee Mendelson agreed to a proposal from Coca-Cola, with Charles M. Schulz contributing most of the ideas.
- It was one of the first children’s TV programs to feature a jazz soundtrack, composed by the Vince Guaraldi Trio, whose music has since been inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.
- The decision to use actual children to voice the Peanuts characters, rather than professional voice actors, was unconventional for the era and contributed to the authentic feel of the show.
- Linus Van Pelt’s recitation of the Nativity story from the King James Version of Luke 2:8–14 was a bold choice that some executives feared would be controversial, but it became one of the most iconic moments in television history.
- The special’s production was completed just ten days before its broadcast date, and the children’s choir that sang “Christmas Time Is Here” and “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing” were not the child actors but members of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church choir in San Rafael, California.
- The iconic dance scene was improvised by animators, with no choreographer, and the movements were drawn spontaneously to match the syncopated jazz rhythm of the music.
- The special is now exclusively available on Apple TV+ for its 60th anniversary, marking a shift from its long-standing tradition of annual broadcast on network television.
- The original version included a brief Coca-Cola reference in the intro, which has since been removed in most modern releases.