The Star Wars Holiday Special is a 1978 American television special set in the Star Wars galaxy. It was one of the first official Star Wars
 spin-offs, and was directed by Steve Binder (and CO-written by Gay Icon, 
Bruce Vilanch). The show was broadcast in its entirety only once, in the
 United States and Canada, November 17, 1978 (34 Years ago), on the U.S.
 television network CBS. 
In the storyline that ties the special together, Chewbacca and Han Solo 
visit Kashyyyk, Chewbacca's home world, to celebrate Life Day. Along the
 way they are pursued by agents of the Galactic Empire, who are 
searching for members of the Rebel Alliance on the planet. The special 
introduces three members of Chewbacca's family: his father Itchy, his 
wife Malla, and his son Lumpy (Later retconned to Attichitcuk, 
Mallatobuck, and Lumpawarrump, respectively).
During the special, scenes also take place in outer space and in spacecraft including the Millennium Falcon
 and an Imperial Star Destroyer. The variety-show segments and cartoon 
introduce a few other locales, such as a cantina on the desert planet of
 Tatooine and a gooey, reddish ocean planet known as Panna.
The program also features many other Star Wars characters, 
including Luke Skywalker, C-3PO, R2-D2, Darth Vader, Han Solo and 
Princess Leia Organa (who sings the film's "theme song", set to the 
music of John Williams' Star Wars theme, near the end). The program includes stock footage from Star Wars, and also features a cartoon produced by Toronto-based Nelvana that officially introduces the bounty hunter Boba Fett.
The special is notorious for its negative reception. Anthony Daniels, in a documentary promoting the worldwide tour of Star Wars: In Concert, notes with a laugh that the Star Wars
 universe includes "The horrible Holiday Special that nobody talks 
about". George Lucas did not have significant involvement with the 
film's production, and was unhappy with the results. David Acomba, a 
classmate of Lucas' at USC film school, had been selected to direct the 
special, but he chose to leave the project, a decision supported by 
Lucas.
The Star Wars Holiday Special has never been re-telecast or officially
 released on home video. It has therefore become the stuff of cultural 
legend, due to the “underground” quality of its existence, originally 
being viewed and distributed in off-air recordings made from its 
original telecast by fans, which were later adapted to content-sharing 
websites via the Internet.
David Hofstede, author of What Were They Thinking?: The 100 Dumbest Events in Television History, ranked the holiday special at number one, calling it "the worst two hours of television ever." Well, at least we remember it. 
 
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