Tag Archives: hey arnold

Dec. 24 – The Nostalgia Spot Christmas Special Countdown #21 – 11

Welcome to Christmas Eve 2025! Christmas Eve is the party night while Christmas Day is the more low key, family, experience. For those not wanting to spend the night at the eggnog bowl, we have eleven Christmas specials here that you would do well to kick back with and enjoy. We’re into the Top 20 and these are among the best of the best. In truth, while these are all in an order of how great I think they are the truth of the matter is I consider most of these pretty interchangeable. What likely impacts you most is personal taste in Christmas specials. Do you like your special to be wholesome? Crass? Vulgar? Musical? Nostalgia plays a big role too and certainly some would view these next 11 and say “Of course, a kid who grew up in the 90s would come up with this,” and that’s probably fair. Someone who did most of their growing up in the 70s probably has a very different list. However, I’ll defend my list as being as objective as I can possibly make it. I look for uniqueness in my specials. I like to laugh, for sure, but I also appreciate those Christmas feels. This collection of Christmas specials is pretty robust. Most have those feels in them and if they don’t it’s because they found a way to subvert the Christmas special in a fun way. And we’re taking it to 11 today, so let’s get on with it!

21 – The Tick – The Tick Loves Santa!

Not many folks can say they gave Santa a noogie.

I love The Tick. When it aired on Fox Kids in the early 90s, I didn’t appreciate it enough for what it was so, in a way, there’s very little nostalgic attachment for me here. As a kid, I wanted my superhero cartoons to be serious like Batman and X-Men. The Tick wanted to lampoon such though its target was more Silver Age than modern. As an adult, I appreciate The Tick for what it is and when I did a rewatch a few years back I was surprised at how well the show held up. It’s just very funny and also clever. The Tick is a buffoon, but a likable one. He’s more excitable than anything and that is on display here in “The Tick Loves Santa.” The Tick, being a bit childlike, is the only hero who believes in Santa Claus so when a villain disguised as Santa starts getting up to no good it really messes with his head. The real deal is going to reveal himself and personally enlist The Tick in taking down this Multiple Santa and he’s more than happy to do so. It’s a tremendously fun, off-beat, Christmas special and I especially love The Tick’s interactions with the local police early in the episode. If you dismissed The Tick as that dumb show with the big blue guy all these years then I recommend seeking this out. Especially if you’re a little fatigued with modern superhero media and want to laugh at it instead.

20 – Hey Arnold! – Arnold’s Christmas

That Arnold is such a good kid.

The Christmas episode of Hey Arnold! is such a favorite of 90s kids that I kind of resisted it for a long time. I just didn’t really vibe with Hey Arnold! as a show. I wanted my cartoons to either be action-packed, superhero, dramas or riotous toons not grounded by much of anything. Hey Arnold! was not that. It was most like Doug when compared with other Nicktoons, but even Doug had a certain silliness about it via its character designs and some of the odd lore in the show. Plus, it had Doug’s over-active imagination for when it wanted to break-out of its confines. Arnold really doesn’t have that. It’s a slice of life show with a very optimistic and well-meaning kid as its lead. He’s almost too nice, too perfect, like he’s a kid created by an adult trying to find the ideal child. “Arnold’s Christmas” makes good use of such a character and puts him to work in trying to reunite a father with his long, lost, daughter. It’s a tragic tale about a refugee in America and the struggles that come with being such. It’s probably a Christmas special we need now more than ever as many individuals in a similar situation presently face deportation for the crime of not being white enough. It’s a heart-warming Christmas special that also finds a way to weave the Helga/Arnold dynamic into the plot in a satisfying way as well.

19 – Tom & Jerry – The Night Before Christmas

This one has a nice ending – trust me!

This is a pretty by the numbers Tom & Jerry short from early in the duo’s life. It contains their original designs which were maybe a touch more realistic in terms of shape, especially with Tom, while still retaining that rounded-off, cartoon, aesthetic. What makes it special is it’s the first cartoon where the two warring entities find a way to get along for the sake of Christmas. Mostly though, it’s just freaking gorgeous. MGM and the duo of William Hanna and Joseph Barbera had something to prove. This is very much on par with the best the Disney studios were putting out in terms of technical delight. The Christmas backgrounds are wonderful and inject some lovely coziness to the feeling this one brings. There’s some good gags with Jerry and the toys and even a little bit of a heart pull moment. And I just love the ending with an adorable Jerry discovering a mouse trap placed outside his little hole in the wall is actually a Christmas present. His ending smile is just so infectious and so warming. This is a fantastic Christmas short from a wonderful era of cartoon-making.

18 – Beavis and Butt-Head Do Christmas

It just wouldn’t be Christmas without these dumbasses.

Okay, this is quite a change-up from the prior three entries. If you’ve been following along with my rankings this year then you probably know that when it comes to Christmas specials of a decidedly different flavor I’ve been trying to group those together when it makes sense. Since we’re into the top 20 it no longer makes sense. This is truly my raw opinion and we’re just ranking these by my own personal enjoyment level. And I really enjoy Beavis and Butt-Head Do Christmas. It’s a subversive take on two well-trod classics: A Christmas Carol and It’s a Wonderful Life. Ordinarily, I’d rail against such an approach but Beavis and Butt-Head make it work. The duo, of course, learns nothing in their Christmas adventures. Beavis sees a vision of the future where being a loser asshole causes him to go through life without ever being with a woman and his takeaway when he wakes up is that the future is cool because he has a VCR and some porn. Butt-Head gets to see how much better Highland would be if he never existed (the guardian angel is there to encourage Beavis and Butt-Head to commit suicide), but he just concludes that the world sucks, but it would suck even more without them. It’s a rare moment when I agree with either Beavis or Butt-Head, but I have to agree with his conclusion here.

17 – A Pinky and the Brain Christmas

Who knew the Brain could cry?

A Pinky and the Brain Christmas was really rewarding for me to rediscover. It was one of those Christmas specials I saw in the moment, but kind of filed away. I was too old at that point to be paying attention to the broadcast schedules of cartoons. I know I liked it, but I don’t think I really appreciated it in the moment. Coming back to it I found it to be truly delightful. I’m not as well-versed in Pinky and the Brain as others. I experienced the duo mostly via Animaniacs and probably watched very little of their spin-off. For me, this was the first cartoon featuring the two where they nearly achieved Brain’s goal of global domination. His plan worked, but his shame of being such a dick to Pinky causes him to abort his mission and it’s a surprisingly powerful moment. Before we even get there though there’s a fun mission involving the pair traveling to the North Pole, infiltrating Santa’s workshop, and making it back home disguised (poorly) as reindeer. It’s a great Christmas special that makes use of the extended runtime over a standard Pinky and the Brain cartoon that never feels long or overstays its welcome.

16 – American Dad! – For Whom the Sleigh Bell Tolls

I can see how some would find the portrayal of Santa Claus in this one off-putting.

Merry Wednesday, everyone! This is the first of some truly “out there” Christmas episodes from American Dad! It establishes the lore that the Smith family and Santa are enemies after Steve accidentally murders Santa. He does so because Stan irresponsibly gifts him a machine gun and has him open fire on a snowman not taking into consideration that the bullets would fly through the snowman and come into contact with whatever was beyond the target. Like Santa. Why was he hanging out at the mall? I don’t know, I guess one mall Santa is the real one at any given time because the guy needs to make some extra money to pay for all those toys. Since Santa is a magical being, he can’t be destroyed and does come back to life and opts to spend Christmas Eve seeking revenge against the Smiths. The B plot is Stan absolutely hating his son-in-law, Jeff, and the two coming to an understanding by the end. It all culminates in a bloody, massive, violent, battle between the Smiths and the army of Santa. It’s definitely not for everyone and making Santa a villain (albeit, one who had a right to be pissed at the Smiths) is certainly a choice and one that probably turns some folks off. If you like your Christmas specials on the more subversive end, this is about as good as it gets.

15 – Futurama – Xmas Story

Santa Claus is gunning you dow-own!

In 1999, Futurama showed us how horrible Xmas could be in the future. In this one, we learn that humanity created a robot Santa to essentially make Santa real, only his standards were too high and he decided everyone is naughty. Worse, going on the dreaded Naughty List doesn’t earn one a stocking full of coal. It sure seems like murder is on the table as people are forced to hide in fear for their lives. Fry gets to learn all of this the hard way when he gets caught out late on Xmas Eve out looking for a present for Leela whom he unintentionally slighted with his insensitivity. It’s the first episode that seems to bring the pair together and it will be a long time before that relationship pays off. For now, it’s sweet and not overdone and I love all of the little, funny, moments that exist in this one. And all of the casual nudity is wonderfully utilized. This should be thought of as a pretty dark sort of Xmas special, but it somehow manages to avoid feeling like such and I owe that to how funny it is. Plus, there is a happy ending unlike the follow-up Xmas special.

14 – Rocko’s Modern Christmas

Rocko makes a new friend this Christmas.

We have yet another Nicktoon on our hands and this one stars a character I pretty much loved from the start. Rocko’s Modern Life is a show that holds up remarkably well. Even ignoring the obvious adult jokes they managed to slip into the show (that have subsequently been cut, unfortunately), the humor is surprisingly wide ranging as the show sought to lampoon exactly what the title implies – the modern world. Rocko is a young adult newly on his own just trying to scrape by and he runs into all kinds of challenges along the way. The poor guy gets crapped on, but he’s so good-natured that the show manages to remain funny as opposed to abusive. In his Christmas special, mostly the same is true. Rocko tries to celebrate Christmas with a little get-together with his closest friends, but it blows up on him when Heffer’s family basically invites themselves over as well. Not wanting to let anyone down, Rocko rolls with it and prepares to host a massive party, but when Mr. Big Head starts a vicious rumor about diseased elves attending it blows the whole thing up. Rocko ends up exactly where he didn’t want to be – alone on Christmas. Moving in across the street are actual elves and a little, mute, elf takes a liking to Rocko leading to a pretty wholesome and heart-warming resolution. Along the way though there’s a lot of great gags. My personal favorite is the Christmas tree which behaves like a dog, until its murdered by Heffer when he cuts it down. A touch dark, perhaps, but totally in-line with the humor of Rocko’s Modern Life and the slightly more edgier Nicktoons. It’s yet another Christmas special I really liked as a kid, but kind of forgot about until I started doing this blog. That’s the gift The Christmas Spot has given me in that it’s brought some of these specials back into my life or introduced me to them for the first time.

13 – A Charlie Brown Christmas

I bet you’ve never heard of this one!

One special I definitely did not need this blog to reintroduce me to is A Charlie Brown Christmas. I’ve seen this one way more times than I could possibly count. I’ve been watching it (along with several others) over and over every December since 1987. It’s the first ever Peanuts special and it’s a great introduction to Charlie Brown as a character who, despite being a good kid, seems to be disliked by his peers and has wretched self-esteem. He’s a punching bag, and Christmas just makes him depressed which is certainly a relatable feeling for a lot of people. He’s given a lifeline by Lucy to direct a Christmas pageant, only no one seems interested in taking it seriously. When he produces a laughably bad Christmas tree for the pageant, everyone basically dismisses him by first tearing him down and then laughing their asses off at him. Linus then reminds him of the true meaning of Christmas and old Charlie Brown finds renewed purpose and the other kids basically come around and realize they’ve all behaved like jerks. It’s a Christmas special that captures that awkward stage of adolescence where it feels like all of one’s actions are heavily scrutinized by their peers. Linus injects a secular element as well which helps endear it to another audience since the vast majority of these specials ignore that aspect of Christmas. Due to its repeated airings, A Charlie Brown Christmas is obviously a classic and there’s no way I couldn’t put it somewhere in the top 20. Leaving it outside the top 10 is probably sacrilegious for some, but I’m content with this placement. I enjoy this one, I will watch it multiple times a year, but I definitely enjoy the 12 specials ahead of it more. And maybe even some of the ones grouped just behind it, but let’s not scrutinize the placement any further or else I’ll go back to tinkering and never finish this thing.

12 – It’s a SpongeBob Christmas

This thing is gorgeous.

This Christmas special from SpongeBob Squarepants is brilliant. Many specials that came before it have found a way to reference the classic Christmas specials, but few embraced them like this one. A SpongeBob Christmas was a network-aired, prime time, Christmas special constructed in stop-motion animation like the classic works of Rankin/Bass. Genius! And it manages to exceed the gimmick by just being a really good, fun, Christmas special. Plankton, the resident villain of Bikini Bottom, concocts a plan to turn everyone into jerks with tainted fruit cake. By doing so, he’ll seem like a saint by comparison and make it onto Santa’s Nice List to finally receive the secret formula to the Krabby Patty recipe. The only problem is that the fruit cake doesn’t work on SpongeBob, he’s just too wholesome and pure, but Plankton gets over that hurdle by unleashing a SpongeBob robot on the town that basically wrecks everything it encounters. SpongeBob has to save the day and does it through song. Corny? Of course, but “Don’t Be a Jerk – It’s Christmas” is one of the best, modern, Christmas songs around. It’s so unbelievably catchy and fun that I remain surprised it never really broke free from this special to enter regular rotation with other Christmas songs. And despite my love of Christmas specials, I’m actually not that big on Christmas music so me praising a Christmas song is actually pretty high praise. A SpongeBob Christmas is just the rare Christmas special that when I watched it for the first time I left convinced I had just witnessed a new classic and it deserves this ranking.

11 – South Park – Mr. Hankey the Christmas Poo

This one could have kept it clean, up until now that is.

We round out today’s entry with one more subversive and downright disgusting Christmas special, but it’s one that mostly plays things straight. That’s the beauty of the first South Park Christmas episode. It’s actually a pretty wholesome Christmas special about a Jewish kid who feels left out at Christmas. I’m not Jewish, but I have to believe that’s not an uncommon sentiment among Jews around Christmas time. It’s basically the genesis for the Adam Sandler Hannukah song. This is South Park though, so in order for Kyle to bridge the gap with his Christmas-loving peers he needs to turn to a literal magic piece of crap. Mr. Hankey is shockingly hilarious the first time he shows up. A talking poop in a Santa hat? He carries himself in an oblivious manner as if he doesn’t understand how gross he is. Others certainly notice though and they basically just see Kyle manhandling a piece of his own excrement and rightly have him committed. The show does take some liberties with Mr. Hankey in going out of its way to play up the gross factor. He didn’t need to end up in Mr. Mackey’s coffee, and we certainly didn’t need that fake commercial where live-action actors select their best Mr. Hankey to play with, but it wouldn’t be South Park if it didn’t push the boundaries of good taste. Still, there’s a strangely heart-warming resolution to this episode and I find Kyle’s song about being a lonely Jew on Christmas legitimately sad. The combination of all of those elements basically make this the perfect subversive Christmas special. It hits all of the Christmas special bullet points, but gets there in a very non-traditional and downright disgusting way. That’s why I still think it’s the best Christmas special from South Park. And if I have one regret with my body of work it’s that I didn’t cover what is probably the second best, “A Very Crappy Christmas,” but we can’t do them all can we?

That concludes this installment of the Christmas special countdown. Tomorrow, we do the top 10 and the all-time best Christmas specials. There probably aren’t too many surprises ahead, but as I look at the top 10 I do like that it feels like “me.” We’ll talk more about that tomorrow, but for now, Merry Christmas Eve and enjoy all of the merriment, drive safe if you’re traveling, and don’t forget to leave out milk and cookies for the big guy tonight!

Can’t wait until tomorrow for more Christmas? Check out what we had to say on this day last year and beyond:

Dec. 24 – Ice Age: A Mammoth Christmas

When Pixar released Toy Story in 1995 it proved to the world that audiences would accept films created entirely within a computer. Prior to that, 3D animation was thought of as a gimmick, something for commercials and video games, but not something that could carry an entire feature length film. It’s similar to the prejudices…

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Dec. 9 – Hey Arnold! – “Arnold’s Christmas”

Original air date December 11, 1996.

Come 1996 the Nicktoons were an established brand. Launched in 1991, Nickelodeon had tremendous success with the likes of Rugrats and The Ren & Stimpy Show and soon more shows followed. Nickelodeon seemed to be a bit stingy with their in-house shows when it came to renewals as when a network looks to renew a successful show, it often has to pay more per episode to bring everyone back. That may have been why there seemed to always be new shows in the pipeline. The original block of 3 shows soon became 4 when Rocko’s Modern Life was added, and then gradually more shows were added and some would be dropped from the Sunday morning timeslot.

I kept up with Nicktoons for the first several years, but I started to drift away as I entered my teens. The last Nicktoon I remember being excited about was Aaaah! Real Monsters which launched in 1994 and I probably only followed the first batch of episodes from that show. I was moving towards the edgier stuff and sleeping in on Sundays so Nicktoons were no longer appointment viewing for me. One show I really only experienced through osmosis was Hey Arnold! Hey Arnold! premiered in 1996 and was a far more grounded show than the Nicktoons that had preceded it. Doug was the only direct comparable as that too centered on just some kid of middle school age trying to navigate adolescence. Only Doug was interested in tooning things up as the character Porkchop was a true cartoon dog in that he possessed unreasonable intelligence and communication skills. Plus Doug was always dipping into his imagination which allowed the show to go places a typical school setting couldn’t provide. With Arnold, we really don’t get any of that. Arnold is just a kid who lives with his grandparents who run a small apartment building in the city. He has friends, kids he’s not on good terms with, and mostly the show could be described as a slice of life piece.

Where Arnold distinguishes himself is via his good nature. He is a very empathic individual without a mean bone in his body. He can get angry with others, but he’s not retaliatory or mean-spirited. He’s comfortable voicing his concerns and mostly he seems to just want to make the world a better place in any way that he can. The character is a creation of Craig Bartlett and he actually originated in a pretty foreign place compared to this show: Pee-Wee’s Playhouse. Bartlett created the character for that show which may explain his unusual design featuring the football-shaped head. He liked Arnold enough to retain control of the character and centered a show around him, which Nickelodeon picked up. The show itself seeks to portray a modern, urban, setting and how kids in the city behave and interact with each other. There are certainly some more “wacky” premises to certain episodes, but my overall impression of the show always came back to that it’s very grounded compared to its contemporaries.

The real question is: did Arnold make that snowman, or Helga?

I say I experienced Hey Arnold! largely through osmosis because it was never a show I sought out. My sister liked it and if I was using our family computer it meant she had control of the television in the same room so that’s how I saw a lot of this period of Nickelodeon. I don’t know how much of the show I saw. I certainly saw enough to know who Arnold was and who his best friend was. I knew Helga was the school bully with a bad homelife who harbored a secret crush for little football head. I knew Arnold didn’t have parents, but I don’t know if it was ever explained why. And I knew the show had a Christmas episode in its first season. It’s one of the few episodes I can recall with any specificity as it was surprising in how moving it was. I say surprising, but for anyone who watched the show regularly, I don’t think it was. For me coming at it as just another Nicktoon, I wasn’t expecting to be moved to tears by its resolution. Because it wasn’t a favorite show of mine, I kind of lost track of it resulting in “Arnold’s Christmas” being something close to a one and done for me as opposed to an annual viewing. When I compiled my updated list of the 25 best Christmas specials, it was one I considered, but ultimately declined to include. Consider this entry a re-appraisal of “Arnold’s Christmas” as I know many people younger than me absolutely consider it among the best of the best and likely the best Christmas special produced by Nickelodeon.

Helga is about to drop some Christmas wisdom on poor Phoebe.

Like many Christmas episodes, this one foregoes the usual opening title for a more festive one. We see many scenes of kids playing in the snow and some of the tenants of the apartment building are skating over frozen streets. There’s an Arnold-shaped snowman and the whole sequence is set to an original instrumental by series composer Jim Lang that sounds vaguely “Christmas” without actually sourcing some public domain music. As the music fades out, we see the kids running in the street and the camera soon finds Helga (Francesca Marie Smith) walking on a sidewalk with her only friend, Phoebe (Anndi McAfee). Phoebe is delighted by the presence of Christmas all around them, but when she asks Helga what she likes best about this time of year she gets the very Helga response of “Presents, dummy!” Well, not exactly, but that’s her tone as she details her feelings on the holiday which can be distilled to getting as much stuff as possible before it’s all over.

Nancy Spumoni is like some sort of living Barbie?

Soon, Helga’s gaze finds a store display advertising Nancy Spumoni snow boots.This is apparently her version of the Red Ryder BB gun as she details all of the features of the boots as she circles the display practically drooling over them. Another kid, Rhonda (Olivia Hack), chimes in to remind Helga that this is the hot item basically all of the girls their age wants this year and they’re hard to come by. Helga dismisses her take as she’s feeling confident she’ll get what she wants this year. And if she doesn’t, it sounds like she intends to make sure her parents pay somehow. Possibly physically.

Gerald and Marge Simpson could probably share stories on hats.

We then cut to Arnold (Toran Caudell) walking with his best friend Gerald (Jamil Walker Smith). Gerald is carrying a shopping bag which makes it look like they just got done with some Christmas shopping. Arnold is asking Gerald what he got each member of his family and Gerald responds that he got a tie for each one, including his four-year-old sister. Arnold tells him he can’t just get ties for everyone on his list and shares his philosophy on gift-giving which is that each gift you give should mean something and come from the heart. Gerald appears to be moved by this and decides he can give the tie he got for his sister to his grandfather and find her a toy or something. He then takes off and when Arnold asks where he’s going he tells him to the store to return the present he got for Arnold. Arnold just smiles, and as he walks off we see Helga had been eavesdropping on the conversation. As Arnold walks off, she goes into her usual routine of listing off the things about Arnold she despises before a switch seems to flip in her head and she does a 180 and lists off all of the things she adores about him. She vows to get him the perfect gift for Christmas, something that will cause him to pine for her the way she does him, and as she wraps an arm around a lamppost a delivery truck passes by splashing mud all over her.

This guy Oskar is kind of a dick.

We shift to the apartment building Arnold resides in and get a peek at Mr. Hyunh (Baoan Coleman) ascending the stoop to enter the building. He pauses and looks over his shoulder just before he enters and the wind appears to whisper something. He enters and walks into a festive setting. Arnold’s grandmother, Gertrude (Tress MacNeille), appears to be finishing up decorating the tree and shouts “Happy Thanksgiving!” to all of the tenants present in the common area. I don’t know if it’s a joke that she says Happy Thanksgiving or if it actually is Thanksgiving. The events that follow don’t appear to last a month, but I suppose there could be a big time-jump that’s not explained. Arnold’s grandpa, Phil (Dan Castellaneta), announces they can now draw names for their annual secret Santa. Oskar (Steve Viksten) passes around a bowl and everyone pulls a name, only they’re all Oskar. They call him on his bullshit and he just laughs it off before they pass out the real names. From what little I remember of this show, I do recall Oskar being a selfish d-bag who mostly gets away with it due to his cheerful disposition. Phil requests Gertrude play some Christmas music as they start over and she starts playing “Yankee Doodle” on the piano which is a lowkey funny joke as no one reacts to it. I’m starting to think grandma is just a wee-bit senile. They all take a name, including Arnold, who gets Mr. Hyunh. He looks at the older fellow with a look of disappointment, but one that clearly stems from him being at a loss as to what he could get him for Christmas.

Mr. Hyunh has no shortage of sweaters.

We find Arnold and Gerald in the middle of a snowball fight. Arnold has told Gerald about his problem, but Gerald doesn’t see it as any big deal and tells him to just get Mr. Hyunh a tie. Arnold reminds him how he feels about gift giving, so Gerald makes the logical suggestion: go talk to him. Arnold brightens up immediately at the suggestion and doesn’t even seem to mind the snowball that smashes into his head. We cut to Arnold seated on Mr. Hyunh’s couch as a somewhat uncomfortable Mr. Hyunh sits across from him and asks Arnold what he wanted to ask him. The apartment seems rather sparse and has bananas on the wall paper, which I wonder if that was Mr. Hyunh’s doing or Arnold’s grandparents? Arnold says he just wanted to check-in with him, and at this point it must be obvious to Hyunh that Arnold is his secret Santa for why else would he be so inquisitive all of a sudden? They make some small talk where Arnold learns that Mr. Hyunh dislikes candy and has a whole bunch of sweaters. He has so many that even offers one to Arnold who declines and Mr. Hyunh almost looks hurt by the rejection.

Crushing.

Mr. Hyunh then reveals that this time of year is always hard for him as it causes him to think about his long lost daughter Mai. Arnold asks about her and we’re shown a flashback. Mr. Hyunh apparently hails from Vietnam, though the show never says this. He describes his former home as being a place torn apart by war. He had a baby daughter there, and when things were getting rough he was able to flee his home and is shown amongst a bunch of other citizens at what appears to be the US embassy trying to get to safety. The helicopter though is full, but Hyunh makes the hard decision to hold his small daughter up in the soldier’s face who accepts the child. As the helicopter takes off, he shouts out the name of the city where his daughter will be taken so that Hyunh can hopefully find her. Unfortunately, this all took place 20 years ago. Hyunh only somewhat recently was able to get out of Vietnam and to the US and he’s so far been unable to track down his daughter. It’s a heartbreaking story, and one that certainly has parallels to real world events. Relations between the US and Vietnam were rather frought for understandable reasons and they didn’t normalize until 1995 so it tracks that Mr. Hyunh would not have been able to arrive where he is until relatively recently. For the viewer, that real world connection is mostly irrelevant as the show gives enough information on its own to understand the situation Mr. Hyunh finds himself in and certainly enough to feel empathy for him, but it sure does underscore the pain for those who understand the inspiration here.

I can’t decide if Arnold’s optimism is infectious or frustrating.

Following that tale, Arnold is able to walk away from the encounter knowing what Mr. Hyunh wants for Christmas most. The only problem is, how does one go about finding a proverbial needle in a haystack? He must have shared this desire with Gerald, because we cut to the two of them walking through the streets with Gerald calling Arnold crazy. He even refers to Mr. Hyunh as the “monkey man guy” so apparently his unique wallpaper is well known. Arnold doesn’t think he’s crazy though and knows Mr. Hyunh is just a guy who wants to be reunited with his daughter and if there’s anything Arnold can do to help make that happen he’s going to try. Gerald then reminds him of the impossibility of the situation and we also find out that it’s already Christmas Eve! He tells Arnold that the only way he can hope to find Mai is via a miracle, but this doesn’t get Arnold down as he points out that Christmas is the most likely time of year for a miracle to occur. Touché, Arnold.

There’s a lot of Christmas Eve shopping going on today.

We then smash cut to Helga angrily digging through a bunch of toys in a department store. She’s still looking for a gift for Arnold and is frustrated by her lack of ideas. She wants something big and flashy. A train catches her fancy, but she dismisses it as too juvenile. She cries out “What would Arnold want for Christmas?” and we hard cut to Arnold saying “Here it is!” Only he isn’t eyeballing some shiny toy, but standing outside of a government building with Gerald. Arnold tells Gerald he called a bunch of government offices today and they all pointed him here, which is some office of records or something. He’s convinced that the information they need is in this building, they just need to find it.

Well they’re certainly having a good time.

The two enter and find it sparsely populated upfront. That’s because it’s Christmas Eve and there’s an office party taking place. There’s no visible alcohol, but it’s pretty clear that the attendees are enjoying some spirits as one is wearing a trash bucket on his head and laughing. Recognizing this as a lost cause, the two head further into the building and find one, middle-aged, man working on his own in a darkened room. He is Mr Bailey (Vincent Schiavelli), the department supervisor, and he’s a busy man who doesn’t want to be bothered. Arnold explains the situation to him, and Gerald chimes in as well, though the whole time Bailey doesn’t break his concentration and continues typing away. Once they’ve finished their pitch, Mr. Bailey tells them he’s touched by their story (which reads as sarcasm, on his part), but informs them that what they’re asking would take hours and resources he doesn’t have right now. He basically tells them to beat it, and even suggests checking out the party down the hall, and the two boys look defeated as they head for the door.

Mr. Bailey: the rough around the edges bureaucrat with a heart of gold.

As they walk out, Bailey gets a phone call. It’s his wife, and when he informs her that he hasn’t done the Christmas shopping yet Arnold perks up. They listen in on the phone call, and when he’s through Arnold has a proposition for Mr. Bailey: he’ll do his Christmas shopping for him in exchange for Bailey’s help in tracking down Mai. Bailey seems understandably reluctant to entrust his money (300 bucks) and shopping to two kids he’s never met, but concedes he really doesn’t have time to do the shopping so he agrees to Arnold’s proposal, but on one condition: Arnold has to get everything on the list by closing time, or no deal. Arnold happily agrees and he and Gerald take a wad of money and Bailey’s shopping list and set out to accomplish this fairly tall order. It’s Christmas Eve, and not particularly early in the day, so they have their work cut out for them. Unsurprisingly, Arnold is not dismayed at all, but quite the opposite. He’s certain they’ll fill the list and Mr. Bailey will find Mai and Mr. Hyunh will have a merry Christmas!

Look at this kid! You’re supposed to walk in the aisles, Stinky!

The first stop on the shopping spree is a store called Budnick’s. Is this a reference to another Nickelodeon show? Maybe, or maybe it’s a coincidence, but I’m going to go with “yes” because it makes me happy. Before we can get a glimpse at this list though, we first need to check-in with Helga. She’s contemplating a skateboard for Arnold and talking up the gift to herself to the point where it seems like she’s found the perfect gift. Then another kid pops up, Stinky (Christopher Walberg), to tell Helga that it is a great gift. How does he know? Because Arnold has one just like it! The kid’s a bit odd as he’s tall and gangly and actually steps over the display of skateboards to enthusiastically tell Helga all about it. A dismayed Helga returns the skateboard to the rack and slinks off, but hey, at least she didn’t get Arnold something he already had!

Mr. Bailey’s list, in case you were curious. I’m not seeing a typewriter.

We then get a glimpse of Arnold and Gerald shopping nearby. They’re grabbing some clothes off the rack, Arnold selects a watch, and they take all of their stuff to gift wrapping. Once done, we see them running back out onto the city streets where they head for another store: Tildales. Inside, they purchase what looks like a Walkman before running off to another store to get a typewriter (these bags they’re carrying just got a whole lot heavier). They race out of there and actually take a breather by sitting on a bench. There they can take stock of what they have left to buy and it turns out they’re down to one last item: Official Nancy Spumoni Snow boots. It’s clear judging by Arnold’s optimism that he has no idea how sought after these silly boots are, and if Gerald is aware, he has no immediate reaction.

Gerald is about to lay some reality on Helga.

We cut back to Helga who has, once again, found the perfect gift for her beloved Arnold. It’s some video game called The Frozen Tundra Death Warrior 7000! It doesn’t sound like the sort of thing Arnold would like, but what do I know? Helga disagrees as she thinks it’s flashy and something Arnold will be delighted to find underneath his Christmas tree. As she convinces herself of the gift’s majesty, she vocalizes her desires and wishes which include an admission of love for Arnold and the hope that this gift will inspire him to feel the same way about her as she does him. She even declares that this must be the truest meaning of Christmas. Worth noting, the price tag on this game is 100 bucks so Helga is really throwing some coin around to impress Arnold. As she clutches the game to her chest, she’s startled when she turns around to spy Arnold and Gerald on their mission for those fancy snow boots. She quickly hides the game behind her back. She addresses the pair in her usual bully fashion, referring to Arnold as football head and Gerald as tall hair boy (she’s very creative). She pokes fun at them for their last minute shopping, but when Arnold asks what she’s shopping for she’s happy to whip out the video game. She boasts how anyone receiving that for a gift would be really impressed, but Gerald takes a look at it and corrects her by noting it’s expensive and flashy, but not exactly personal. Apparently he really did take Arnold’s message to heart when it came to gift giving. Helga basically has a defeated look on her face as Gerald hands the game back with a “No offense,” that likely doesn’t help salve her wounds.

I’d call them jerks, but since they’re working retail at Christmas this is probably the only chance at laughter they’ve had since Thanksgiving.

Arnold reminds Gerald that they have to get going, but takes the time to wish Helga a, “Merry Christmas,” before departing. After he leaves, Helga fumes and slams the game into a shopping cart that just rolled up out of no where behind her. She then notices that Arnold dropped something. It’s the list that Mr. Bailey gave him and Helga picks it up and sees the Nancy Spumoni snow boots written on it and her face begins to glow. She then follows the pair as Arnold asks a clerk (Maurice LaMarche) if they have any of the boots in stock and the guy calls over his co-workers and makes Arnold ask again so they can all laugh at his expense. He tells Arnold how sought after they are and offers a waiting list that may pay dividends by the fourth of July, but that won’t work for Arnold. As Arnold leaves the store, Helga looks on with curiosity.

Helga should consider a career as a ninja.

A montage follows that shows Arnold and Gerald dashing to the subway and to various stores around the city. Each one just contains more clerks and more laughter from them when Arnold asks if they have any snow boots in stock. When the montage is over it’s nearly 6 o’clock and Gerald reminds him they need to get back for closing time. They’re just going to have to tell Mr. Bailey that there just aren’t any boots out there. Arnold, in a defeated voice, just voices disbelief that there isn’t one pair of the boots out there in the city. They return to Mr. Bailey lacking the snow boots, but not exactly empty-handed since they did get everything else on his exhaustive list. If you thought Mr. Bailey would be an understanding guy well then you’re as naive as Arnold. No snow boots, no deal, is what they get from Bailey who seems more angry than appreciative of what the boys did for him. Arnold and Gerald are forced to leave and they sulk on a bench outside. Helga is lurking behind a tree as she has apparently been following them this whole time. Arnold conveniently summarizes the plot of this episode for Helga to hear as she now knows that Arnold is after those boots just so some guy will help him locate a missing person. Arnold thanks Gerald for sticking with him through all of this and notes that he needed a miracle to pull this off, but just came up short. Gerald tries to cheer him up by letting him know that what he did is more than anyone would do to help someone and even tosses in a “That’s what Christmas is all about, Arnold.” Arnold is still pretty downtrodden by the whole thing, though he seems almost too tired to be truly sad or angry. As the two walk off, the camera lingers on Helga as she now knows the whole story.

The Pataki family having a good old time without their 9-year-old daughter who they apparently don’t keep track of.

At the Pataki house, Helga’s family is belting out their own drunken rendition of “Jingle Bells.” The thing with Helga’s mom (Kath Soucie) is she’s always shown drinking something in the show, usually coffee, but her mannerisms imply she’s basically drunk. And here, she seems to be drinking eggnog. Actually, it’s quickly confirmed to be eggnog. Basically, she’s an alcoholic, but the show must not have been allowed to spell it out so plainly so they have to tiptoe around it. Her father, Bob (LaMarche), is just a boisterous asshole who pays no attention to Helga and both parents are far more invested in Helga’s older sister, Olga, who they view as the golden child. Helga comes into the house with her shoulders slumped as she heads into the living room and collapses on the couch. Her mom comes over and asks where she’s been all day and Helga replies curtly, “Out, Miriam.” She always addresses her parents by name as she seems to think they aren’t worthy of being called mom and dad. Miriam does note that her daughter looks depressed, but doesn’t actually ask her anything or attempt to investigate why. Instead, she just hands over a Christmas present. Helga opens the box and finds one of the things she had been longing for: Official Nancy Spumoni Signature Snow Boots! She immediately brightens up while her mom tries to tell her how long she had to wait in line just to get them.

I could have gone with a sad Helga picture, but let’s have a look at happy Helga since she doesn’t experience much pure joy in this episode.

After giving her mom a quick hug, Helga throws them on and races outside to bask in the afterglow of the perfect Christmas present. As she spins her way through the snowy streets, a realization hits her. Arnold’s list has fallen out of her pocket and is staring up at her. Her shoulders immediately slump once more as she regards it as she whines out loud, “Not another moral dilemma!” She then goes over her emotions, how she’s happy because she got what she wanted which typically would be enough for her; more than enough, really! Then she notes how Arnold is not happy because he won’t be getting what he wanted this Christmas, which involves these silly snow boots. She finally knows what it will take to get Arnold the perfect Christmas present, the other thing she’s been longing for. It also means giving up what she refers to as really boss snow boots, which will end up with her getting nothing. One could interpret this scene as the show talking down to its audience by so explicitly laying out the stakes for Helga and Arnold, but I think it’s a worthwhile exercise so we stop and think about how this is all going through Helga’s head in the moment. She was on the wrong end of Christmas at the episode’s start, so in order for her to undertake the selfless act we all know is coming, we really need to see her internal dilemma before us so that it’s believable. And the fact that the scene ends with Helga once more slumping her shoulders and then dropping to her knees really helps to sell it. She’s arriving at the right conclusion, but she’s not happy about it, and she even admits out loud that she’s going to end up with nothing. No boss snow boots. No affection from Arnold. Nothing.

Honestly, if I’m in Bailey’s shoes I’m not sure I care about some random kid’s belief in miracles.

In Arnold’s room, we find the little guy laying in bed just staring at the ceiling. He imagines what it must have been like for Mr. Hyunh to watch his daughter fly out of his life as he just lays there. We then cut to the government building and Mr. Bailey is shown locking up. Helga comes running up and tosses the wrapped snow boots into his arms and orders him to get back in there because they have a missing person to find! If you thought Bailey would be delighted to get the sought after boots he needed, well you were once again mistaken. He tells Helga to go home and hands her back the box. It’s Christmas Eve and he wants to get out of there. Helga tries pleading with him, but he just keeps heading for his cab and reiterates to her that he just wants to go home. Helga then makes one final plea, “For pity’s sake, are you really that cold? Look in your heart. We’ve got a choice here, either you and I work all night to find a certain lost daughter, or you can leave now. But if you leave now, that little football-headed kid will never believe in miracles again.” Mr. Bailey says nothing, but he turns away from his cab and he has a frozen, almost emotionless, look on his face as the scene fades to black.

That’s not the usual, optimistic, Arnold we’re used to.

The next morning, Gerald shows up at the apartment house to wish Arnold a merry Christmas. Arnold still looks defeated as he’s seated in a chair while others seem to be basking in the merriment of the holiday. He returns Gerald’s gesture, but has the look of someone who didn’t sleep a wink last night. Across the room, the gift exchange is underway and Oskar opens his gift to find a bag of coal. He asks who could do such a thing, and Ernie (Dom Irrera) smiles and in an unconvincing manner states “Wasn’t me!” Grandpa Phil then announces that’s the last of the presents, but Ernie points out that Mr. Hyunh didn’t get one. Arnold’s shoulders slump further as his grandfather looks under the tree to make sure he didn’t miss any. Mr. Hyunh states it’s okay and he doesn’t need a present and would seem to prefer just staring into the fireplace. Arnold then drags himself off of his chair to go talk to him, but is interrupted by the doorbell. As Grandpa Phil angrily goes to see who would bother them on Christmas, Arnold seems to just stare at Mr. Hyunh who isn’t looking in his direction. Gerald comes to stand beside his friend as I’m assuming he expects Arnold to tell Mr. Hyunh what they attempted to do the prior day, but Arnold just can’t seem to bring himself to do so.

I don’t think the next few images require captions…

Without saying anything, Grandpa Phil comes back into the room with a big grin on his face and brings a young woman into the room with him. She’s smiling and is clearly of asian descent, but she just continues to smile in the direction of Mr. Hyunh and waits for him him to turn around. A whisper of “Mai” can be heard and I think the implication is that it’s Mr. Hyunh’s daughter’s name echoing in his head, as it did early in the episode when was climbing the stoop, but it also seems to get him to turn around. She continues to smile at him while Mr. Hyunh just looks on with a stunned expression on his face. The moment is allowed to linger for a beat, before Mai finally breaks the silence by asking “Father?” He returns her question with “Mai?” and the two quickly embrace as Mr. Hyunh declares “I can’t believe it!” Arnold looks on with shock while the others mostly smile. Ernie can be seen quietly crying in the background. Mr. Hyunh then introduces Mai as his daughter to everyone. Arnold offers up a “Merry Christmas, Mr. Hyunh,” while Phil attempts to put a bow on the whole thing by declaring that Mr. Hyunh got his present after all.

Arnold then confesses to Gerald that he basically can’t believe this happened and questions how it could have? Gerald just matter-of-factly declares it a miracle, the one Arnold had been counting on, and there’s really no explaining a miracle. He then suggests that maybe Arnold has a Christmas angel looking out for him, and Arnold almost seems receptive to the idea. We’re then shown through the window that Helga is standing in the street looking on. She’s in her socks too, so she apparently did end up surrendering those boots to Mr. Bailey, as expected. She looks happy though and nearly overcome with emotion as she whispers softly to herself, “Merry Christmas, Arnold.”

A sweet ending for a sweet story. It’s obvious that Mr. Bailey and Helga returned to his office after their encounter outside and were able to find Mai and somehow connect with her to orchestrate this meet-up. If she was escorted to Arnold’s house by Helga or not is unclear. What is a touch confusing about the final scene is we see Gerald arrives and it’s clearly daylight, probably late Christmas morning. When we cut to Helga the sun is much lower and it’s approaching dusk. I’m going to chalk it up to an artistic choice that the director just felt it would look better for Helga to be standing outside on a darkened street than a busy one in broad daylight, because hours definitely did not pass between when Gerald arrived and when we pan to Helga. No matter, as the impact of the moment is still felt. Mr. Hyunh’s reunion with his daughter is sweet and tear-jerking, and Helga’s almost silent offering to Arnold is just as tender. There’s a touch of sadness as well since Helga gave up a lot to orchestrate this, and not just snow boots, but her own Christmas with her family even if her home life isn’t ideal. She also likely will get in a lot of trouble for giving those boots away, but we also know she won’t tell anyone what happened to them. She’ll probably tell her mom they were stupid and she sold them. Or her mom won’t even notice, because they usually don’t pay much attention to her. And Arnold is likely never to know what Helga did for him this Christmas which adds a touch of tragedy to the scene, but in looking at Helga’s expression, it would appear she did not end up with nothing after all.

Ok, I’ll caption this one because I think it’s so cute that Ernie is moved to tears.

The story told through Mr. Hyunh is probably still the main takeaway. Even if Arnold and Helga are at the center of the show, it’s hard to argue that Hyunh’s story didn’t steal the episode. It’s pretty crushing, and frankly impossible, for me as a father to put myself in his shoes and the shoes of many real life people who had to make that terrible choice to give up their child in the hope that it would provide them a better life. Knowing there are many real life Mr. Hyunh’s out there who probably never found their child in the end is equally heartbreaking and for a show like Hey Arnold! to shine a light on the refugees of Vietnam is a noble cause. This isn’t something I ever saw touched upon by another show in this demographic and it’s that aspect of it that has really helped it to endure over the years since its premiere.

It’s a sweet image, but I have to point out that Helga was wearing her normal shoes when she confronted Mr. Bailey and probably should be wearing them, but the socks drive home that she did in fact swap her boots for his help.

One watch of this episode and it’s easy to see why so many people adore it and why it is worthy of being considered among the best. Am I ready to reorder my list from a few years back to include it? No, but if I should return to that list I’ll certainly consider it. As a Christmas special, it is a bit formulaic and predictable. On the surface, a bratty kid learning the true of meaning of Christmas via a selfless act is pretty by the numbers, but the show found a new and captivating way to approach it. It’s also handled expertly and I love how several scenes are allowed to just linger and breath for maximum effect. The reunion of father and daughter is a clear example of that, as is all of the monologuing conducted by Helga throughout to really illustrate what she’s thinking as her emotions are a bit more complex than they appear to be on the surface. I also really liked the score utilized throughout and felt the show did a great job of not spreading itself too thin. Hey Arnold! is a show with a vast assortment of supporting characters that the episode really could have been bogged down by, but the writers involved knew we didn’t need to see how every kid in Arnold’s class is spending Christmas this year and the episode benefits from that.

Merry Christmas, Helga.

If you would like to catch this episode of Hey Arnold! this holiday season then I would say you’re in luck as it’s a pretty available show. It’s presently streaming on both Paramount+ and Hulu and there’s always the possibility one of the Nickelodeon channels airs it this month. It’s also available to rent digitally if you don’t have a subscription to either service or cable and it’s been made available on DVD. If you’re like me and have a pretty substantial collection of physical media due to a love of Christmas specials, then this one is definitely worth owning.

Can’t wait until tomorrow for more Christmas? Check out what we had to say on this day last year and beyond:

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Dec. 9 – Space Goofs – “Holiday Heave Ho”

Come the late 90s I was definitely losing track of what was airing on Fox Kids. X-Men came to an end, as did Spider-Man and The Tick. They were replaced with Silver Surfer and a new Spider-Man cartoon that was pretty awful. There was also that live-action Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles show called The Next…

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