This is actually a great analysis of Hallmark Channel's Christmas movies, and why their plots frequently center on 30-something year old women who abandon their successful big city lives to move back to their home towns and marry the handsome "boy next door." It seems to be a very popular fantasy among the network's primary audience, conservative women aged 50+ (70% of the channel's viewers.)

  • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
    ·
    9 months ago

    This is an amazing article, thank you for sharing. As someone who fled red-state rural America for blue-state urban living I can't put it better than this article. Everything was like reading from my own history.

    I went to college to become more skilled in the labor force. I realized quickly that would give me the ability to move anywhere in the country and get a job.

    The most welcoming place I've lived is my very blue state urban city. People here don't care who I am, what I'm into (as long as it doesn't hurt other people), what religion I am, or what my profession is. It's by far a lot nicer than "nice" rural small towns

  • Nakoichi [he/him]
    ·
    9 months ago

    Citations needed did an amazing analysis of the Hallmark Christmas phenomenon that touches on this and a lot of other stuff

    https://citationsneeded.libsyn.com/ep-152-hallmark-christmas-movies-and-the-cozy-conservative-nostalgia-machine

    And a follow-up here about the anti-labor tropes of Hallmark movies

    https://citationsneeded.libsyn.com/a-very-special-news-brief-hallmarks-anti-labor-churn-a-follow-up-conversation