The Fireplace Channel

There are more things that I like about the winter in the prairies than I can ever remember before the winter arrives. The rush of warmth that comes over me when I walk inside a building, talking with people at the bus stop about the weather, the smiles I get from local business owners when I need to step inside and warm up. How incredible the really cheap hot chocolate from 7-11 tastes when you’re going for a winter walk.

But my favourite thing is that on December 1st my phone starts ringing.

“IT’S HERE!! IT’S ON!!”

“What?”

“THE FIREPLACE CHANNEL IS BACK!!!”

Stop the fucking presses. The best show on TV is finally on!!

I guess that every city has its own variation of this – around the holidays some local cable channel decides that the most compelling TV it can offer is a fireplace on an endless loop. They have no idea how right they are. I wish that in the winter the fireplace was on from November to April, and then it changed over to a bonfire from April until Fall. I am uncontrollably drawn to my TV Fireplace. There is nothing I can do to avoid it.

And there are variations! The basic cable version seems vaguely 1970’s in quality, the colour of plaid is faded when the disembodied arm stirs the fire and it runs on a pretty short 12 minute loop. I timed it. The HD version is beautiful – clearly much more recently filmed in a fireplace that has been cleaned much more recently, and it runs on a longer loop. And then there’s another less secular interpretation where a Christmas tree stands in front of an arena that has been washed in changing lights, while Christmas carols play in the background.

Every Christmas, one of my good friends comes over and we bask in the glow of the pretend fireplace while we catch up. We mark the time by how often the fire is stirred (“THERE HE IS!!!” as the arm comes into frame) and wonder how old the fire stirrer’s are now. If they think about the one time they sat in a quiet room and, after 12 minutes, stirred a fire.

This winter, I’m PVRing it so I can watch it whenever I like. The winter feels much more bearable in front of a pretend fire, don’t you think?