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That meme was really instructive . . . it seems that every ten years, the Lord leads me in a different direction. Which makes me look at where I am and where I'm going and wonder . . . what's next, Lord?
In no particular order, Angela Hunt is a novelist, a nana, teacher, mother, wife, mastiff owner, reader, musician, student, aspiring theologian, apprentice baker, and bubble gum connoisseur. The things that enter her life sooner or later find their way into her books, hence "a life in pages."
You Are Dasher |
You're an independent minded reindeer who never plays by the rules. Why You're Naughty: That little coup you tried to stage against Santa last year Why You're Nice: You secretly give naughty children presents. |
HALLMARK CHANNEL DELIVERS A RARE HAT TRICK THIS HOLIDAY SEASON WITH ORIGINAL HOLIDAY MOVIES RANKING #1 FOR
THREE CONSECUTIVE WEEKS
December 8 Premiere of “The Note” Scores a 3.4 HH Rating Boosting Network to Rank #7 in Prime Time for the Week of December 3
Hallmark Channel delivered a rare hat trick this holiday season as the network became home to the #1 Prime Time cable telecast of the day three weeks in a row. This success was generated by the premieres of its original holiday movies: “A Grandpa for Christmas,” (11/24/07) “All I Want for Christmas” (12/1/07) and “The Note” (12/8/07). This latest original holiday movie premiered to a 3.4 HH rating with over 2.8 million homes and over 5.2 million unduplicated viewers (P2+). This exemplary performance drove Hallmark Channel to become the #1 cable network in Prime Time for the day and #7 in Prime Time for the week of December 3-9.
“The Note,” starring Genie Francis and Ted McGinley, was the highest rated ad-supported cable telecast of the day, the second highest rated ad-supported cable movie of the week and the won the Saturday, 9-11 p.m. time period among HH, W25-54 (1.8) and P2+ (1.8) ratings as well as HH (2.8 million) and P2+ (3.9 million) deliveries. The original holiday movie also ranked in the top 10 in key demo ratings - #2 in A25-54 rating (1.3); #3 in W18-49 rating (1.2) and #7 in A18-49 rating (0.8) – as well as among key demo deliveries - #2 in W25-54 (870,000); #5 in A25-54 (1.2 million); W18-49 (606,000) and #9 in A18-49 (838,000).
“The Note” became the network’s third highest-rated and third most-watched original movie premiere in its history.
Source: Nielsen Media Research, 11/24-12/9/07
As a friend and I were busy checking in our usual horde of active, middle-school students, we were reflecting over our week as the mothers-of-teenagers. The conversation shifted to the recent tragedy of an Alaska Airlines crash, along with the rumor we’d heard about a woman attempting to share Christ with her fellow passengers as the plane went down. Alas, we decided, the rumor probably wasn’t true because the flight attendants would be busy giving emergency instructions.
“I know what I’d do if I were on a crashing plane,” I said, reflecting on the past week with my teens. “I’d write, ‘Dear Kids—I love you. All is forgiven. Mom.’”
We laughed—and what began as a wry bit of humor suddenly struck me as profound truth. What would I write if I had one moment to share my most profound thought with my loved ones?
And then it occurred to me—God has written mankind just such a note. Just like the fathers in this story, He loves, He cares, He mourns when His children leave Him out of their lives. He wants us to know He loves us and has forgiven our neglect of this all-important relationship.
And so the story was born. I wrote the first draft--the story of the reporter, the note, and the recipients--and sat on the edge of my bed and realized that a first draft of only 28,000 words wasn't going to cut it. I was missing something. I was missing a LOT. So I went back to the drawing board and began to explore Peyton's character. I delved into her past, into the secrets she had buried away, and realized there was a far more important story waiting to be told.
And that's how the story came to be.
Tomorrow: the research
~~Angie