Tag Archive for: tracking Santa

Santa’s Replay

Tracking Santa is a timeless tradition of Christmas. We’ve been doing it for more than a quarter century!

In this special episode of the Merry Little Podcast we recap the breaking news from the North Pole from last Christmas Eve. It showcases in a small way just what the epic 50-hour Christmas Eve broadcast from Kringle Radio is like.

Kringle Radio is our sister site, a year round stream of commercial free Christmas that gets taken over by elves on Christmas Eve. From the moment Christmas Eve dawns in the South Pacific until Santa returns to the North Pole on Christmas morning the elves track Santa with music, good humor and timely reports.

This episode of the Merry Little Podcast, in fact, is hijacked by one of those elves. His name is Elf Crash Murphy and he has a special assignment on Christmas Eve. He reports on Santa from a sleigh following him around the world.

So you’ll hear his voice a lot on the podcast and in the news from last Christmas.

Tracking Santa Highlights

Merry Podcast
Merry Podcast of MyMerryChristmas.com
Tracking Santa Highlights
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How do you track Santa? We do it the old fashioned way — with the news and the data of tracking Santa coming straight from the North Pole. This episode features highlights of Santa’s wild Christmas ride of last Christmas Eve as broadcast on Kringle Radio.

Over the course of 50 hours the North Pole streams the greatest of Christmas music for Santa via Kringle Radio and the world gets to listen in — especially as news breaks every 15 minutes or so giving the world Santa’s position and tells the stories that make up “Operation Merry Christmas”.

The story unfolds on our sister site, SantaUpdate.com, a merry little effort founded more than 25 years ago. All year long this festive, commercial-free site tells kids the story of Santa, elves, reindeer and life at the North Pole.

Each day from Thanksgiving to Christmas Eve a new update is posted and it all culminates with the radio broadcast on Christmas Eve long before Santa ever launches from the North Pole.

Why does it take more than 50 hours to broadcast? That’s because Christmas Eve dawns in the far corners of the world when it is still December 23rd for the rest of us. We want to tell the story to them as much as anybody.

In this episode you’ll hear snippets of the news in sequence with the story line. You will hear news broadcasts, interviews with eyewitnesses who saw Santa in flight or in their homes, and you will hear discussions between elves as they analyze Santa’s flight and how it was going. It’s great fun and entirely unique.