The early rise of holiday streaming
Streaming platforms report that holiday-music listening begins as early as November 1 and can last into January. hmc.chartmetric.com+2ads.spotify.com+2
For families with kids, this means the “holiday season” of media consumption extends beyond just December. Video streaming of holiday-themed content (movies, shows, specials) also follows this pattern, meaning kids are exposed for longer periods of time.
How kids change the streaming equation
Children’s playlists, animated holiday specials, and kid-friendly holiday movies are now key parts of streaming platforms’ strategies. Because kids tend to return year after year to favourites, this creates repeat-listening/viewing loops.
For example, the Spotify article “’Tis the (streaming) season” mentions how holiday music has become integral to the listening habits of families worldwide. ads.spotify.com
And the Chartmetric article notes how seasonal tracks dominate for extended periods. hmc.chartmetric.com
What this means for families and kids
- For parents: curating kid-appropriate holiday playlists or video lists becomes not just fun but meaningful — helping regulate mood, create rituals, and reduce screen-time chaos.
- For kids: holiday music and video become cues for “this is special time”, signalling difference from ordinary months.
- For both: shared streaming sessions (music while decorating, video after dinner) build bonding.
Tips to make streaming count (not just consume)
- Create a family holiday playlist of 10-15 songs your kids help pick — include classics and some new ones.
- Schedule a holiday movie night earlier than December 25, so the streaming becomes part of the build-up, not just the crash.
- Use audio-only moments (e.g., “quiet hour” with holiday music while wrapping gifts) to reduce screen overload yet keep the festive vibe.
- Discuss what you listen/watch: “Why do you like this song?”, “What part of the movie felt like Christmas for you?” — layering learning and reflection.
Limitations and things to watch
Streaming algorithms heavily push holiday content in the season, which can mean kids see/hear a lot of the same tracks or shows. It’s good to mix classics with fresh content so kids don’t get bored. Also, cultural/linguistic differences matter: many streaming insights come from English-speaking markets and may not map exactly in all regions.
In Romania (or Eastern Europe) for example, local holiday songs or shows might not get the same algorithmic boost — so families may want to supplement with local content.
Sources:
https://hmc.chartmetric.com/christmas-music-streaming-trends-mariah-carey-holiday-season/
https://ads.spotify.com/en-CA/news-and-insights/tis-the-streaming-season/
https://www.bridgeratings.com/blog/2024/11/14/the-rise-of-early-holiday-music-streaming-a-trend-analysis






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