ABOUT allDAY

allDAY is the official TODAY blog, your virtual window to Studio 1A and the people who make America's favorite morning show come alive. Whether it's exchanging views with the anchors and contributors or going behind the scenes with the producers, editors, camera people and more, we'll bring you the buzz here at 30 Rock, and we hope you will make this a regular part of your online routine. We want this to be a conversation, so please respond with your comments and questions directly to the blog, and we'll do our best to post what you have to say.



Al's Favorite Christmas Memories

Posted: Wednesday, December 19, 2007 7:00 AM by Dan Fleschner
Filed Under:

With Christmas approaching, I asked some of our TODAY personalities for their favorite holiday memories and traditions.

Here's the third entry in the series, from Al Roker:

Al: I think it was in fifth grade, the big deal was, you graduated to adulthood when you got to stay up and got to go to Midnight Mass. And then open your presents after Midnight Mass, with all the adults. Because the kids -- "babies" -- waited until the morning for Santa to deliver.

The adult gifts were already under the tree. So it was fifth grade or sixth grade, and it was like, "Yes! I'm going to Midnight Mass! But if we're up, when will Santa come?"

So that was a big deal. I remember that vividly, that Midnight Mass. The long service, the incense, the songs, the dozing off during the homily. It was late. St. Catherine of Siena was a long Mass -- the choir, the songs -- it went a long time.

Got home around 2 a.m., and people came over. My mother had a ham going, food. I kept thinking, "How come I never heard any of this?"

DF: You must have been a heavy sleeper.

Al: Yeah, I mean, did she put something in the egg nog? There was a party going on, and I'm thinking, "How did I miss this?"

We don't do that now. We get up in the morning, open the presents and then go to church. I'm just too old.  Plus now, when Santa drops off the presents that have to be assembled...here's my thing, and I'm begging. It's a lovely company, and it's great. But any parents whose child gets a K'Nex gift -- either the Tyrannosaur or the Roller Coaster -- you find that person and you beat the crap out of them.

It's a lovely gift and it's wonderful, but you are going to spend the next 12 hours putting this thing together. And at about three hours, your child loses interest, and your child wanders away.

And now you, because you're going to finish this thing, you're going to build it.

DF: You become like Richard Dreyfuss in Close Encounters of the Third Kind.

Al: Close Encounters, right. You're throwing things out the window. Your family leaves you, but you are going to finish this K'Nex Roller Coaster...even if it kills you. And it just might.

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

I love the outlook and humor of Al! He has a personality all his own!
Thanks for making me laugh every morning!
Al,

I feel your pain.  How about the PlayMobile airport (that was last year's gift for my son) which had 613 pieces.  After a bottle of wine and 6 solid "Friends" re-runs on TBS, we finished at 3:14am.  Merry Christmas to all!
me and my two brothers loved christmas songs,my mom and dad had a stack of classic albums,nate king cole,bing crosby,etc...! our tradition was after thanksgiving dinner we could start playing the albums,not before! my mom even kept those albums seperate from other music and hid them in her bedroom closet!soon as dinner was over me or one of my brothers would ask for permission and then run upstairs and grab those albums!! my mom would sing alaong while she cleaned up.....
I definitely feel your pain.  Our children are a little older and have bigger interests now other than toys.  a little less than two years ago we were surprised with a new blessing....here we go again!  :)
Hi Al,
the memories I have, I can think back all of us pile in the car and headed down to Flordia for Christmas, to spend Christmas with my grandmother,it seem as tho I can still smell the citrus smell of oranges and the sweet sound of the temptation christmas music.
I remember staying up late helping my dad put together presents for my sisters.  We'd all come back from our grandparents house and my dad may have had a little too much eggnog.  "I think one wheel goes on the front and two on back dad."
Ah, I'm reading all this stuff and feeling real nostalgic.  My husband and I are the parents of an adorable 2-yr old girl and we are trying to instill similar types of traditions for our little one to grow up with - I am getting ideas ! ;-)  Thanks and Happy Holidays to All
Al's message reminds me of Christmas's gone by, family and love from the symbolic birth of Christ were important, in the 21st century we now have video, voice, and other distractions that cloud this day.  A simple wish would be that after the glitz is over, reflect on the love Christmas.  Most importantly practice this love each day of the year.  If this is done, next year at this time you will be provided with a new gift  which is not tangible, but priceless.  Love.
Hated Midnight Mass. Was in the Catholic School choir and had to sing that night. Could'nt stay awake less sing. The good part about it was that the"Spudnut Donut Shop" across from the church stayed open until 2am. My folks bought about 3 dozen donuts after mass,  then we all went home and had hot chocolate and donuts. Great memories. Merry Christmas everyone.
I remember going to midnight mass also.  It was all about  the passage into adulthood. In elementary school I was allowed to attend midnight mass at St. Pancras in Glendale, NY.  The "young people" went to the mass in the auditorium of the school.  It was wonderful. Once I was in high school I was able to meet friends and go to mass in their parishes. We would usually go out for dinner and then onto mass.  My favorite had to be going to mass at St. Gregory the Great in Bellerose, NY. Later on, I was the grownup watching the "young people" sing. I agree with Al, it is too hard to stay up late anymore.
My favorite Christmas memories are also of going to Midnight Mass; even as a very little girl. We would open one small present before Mass though, and leave the rest for the morning.
Hey Al!
OMG, I had no clue you were a weatherman here in Cleveland.  It doesn't surprise me, I think you're one of the best on tv today as far as weather, comedian, and just an all around great person.  I can tell in your delivery and your wit.  Thanks for being you and keep up that great outgoing, positive, attitude. I'm sure I'm not alone in my opinion!  My favorite Christmas memory was going to my grandparents in Chagrin Falls, back in the day when it was all farms and no highway.  All of us kids, cousins, would have a blast all day into the darkness, building snowmen, snowball fights and then warming up with hot cocoa and nibbling on leftovers from our feast earlier in the day. There was ALWAYS snow on Christmas, and boy was it deep.  Those snowy winters, the hot cocoa and my grandparent or just a wonderful memory.
  HAVE A WONDERFUL NEW YEAR!


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

Syndicate This Site

Add allDAY to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google