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Networks pin hopes on country Christmas shows

It was just a couple of weeks ago that NBC put its chips on Blake Shelton’s Not-So-Family Christmas special, and with his other NBC show, The Voice, lighting up ratings charts left and right, the bet paid off.
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The Tenors Ñ Fraser Walters, left, Victor Micallef, Clifton Murray of Port McNeill and Remigio Pereira Ñ perform tonight on CBCÕs Christmas special Home for the Holidays.
It was just a couple of weeks ago that NBC put its chips on Blake Shelton’s Not-So-Family Christmas special, and with his other NBC show, The Voice, lighting up ratings charts left and right, the bet paid off.

Thanks to an episode of The Voice as its lead-in, Blake Shelton’s special drew 8.8 million U.S. viewers — almost as many as watched NBC’s Revolution the previous Monday.

Not bad for a guy who once judged Clash of the Choirs alongside Michael Bolton.

Tonight, ABC and, on the icier side of the border, CBC hope to score big with their country music-themed holiday specials.

The alphabet network is going with the proven: its CMA Country Christmas, hosted for the third year running by Jennifer Nettles, a new mom and lead singer of Sugarland, the band for those with a sweet tooth.

The two-hour show — sure to boast enough Christmas lights to power a small country — features songs and fireside chats with acts including Dierks Bentley, Lady Antebellum, Martina McBride, Scotty McCreery, The Band Perry and Keith Urban.

CMA Country Christmas is the gift that keeps on giving for ABC. Last year, the broadcast took in nine million U.S. viewers, a 23 per cent boost from the previous year.

CBC, meanwhile, decks its halls with Home for the Holidays, a joint effort of the Canadian Country Music Association, CMT and CBC Music.

It’s a holiday music special that’s just about as Canadian as a beaver wearing a toque while playing hockey with a Mountie.

According to the CCMA website, most of the performances were taped during rehearsals at the CCMA Awards, which were broadcast from Saskatoon in September.

Among those making appearances are Alberta’s Paul Brandt, Gord Bamford and Terri Clark, Nova Scotia’s Jimmy Rankin, Ontario’s Johnny Reid, British Columbia’s The Tenors and Dean Brody — the latter a top winner at the CCMA Awards.

Token international acts include Irish singer Beverly Mahood and the U.S.-bred The Band Perry, Lady Antebellum and Billy Ray Cyrus, he of those famous achy, breaky cardiac muscles.

CMA Country Christmas, 9 p.m., ABC

Home for the Holidays, 9 p.m., CBC

Three to see:

n Glee is pre-empted for the season finale of The X Factor, in which someone will take home a $5 million recording contract with Syco/Sony. It’ll take two hours to announce one name, but don’t worry — the overly dramatic music will make it seem like only an hour and a half.

8 p.m., Fox, CTV

n sa¹ú¼Ê´«Ã½â€™s No. 1 comedy, The Big Bang Theory, airs a repeat episode tonight, as if there weren’t already enough Big Bang repeats on the air. In The Decoupling Fluctuation, the second episode of this season, Penny ponders leaving Leonard — again — throwing Sheldon into a tizzy.

8 p.m., CBS

n If you’re more in the mood for a feel-good holiday movie, Baby’s First Christmas re-airs tonight. Starring Casper Van Dien (Monk) and Rachel Wilson (Total Drama Island), it follows former co-workers who reunite in New York on Christmas Eve.

8 p.m., CTV2