Saturday, December 02, 2006

Magic Snow?

From November through January I am scheduled to present an educational school assembly program called Arctic Express over 75 times. We already have 22 shows on the books for winter of 2007.

Part of the reason the program is so popular is that in addition to being a reading program, it also addresses and teaches about the many diverse ways that people around the world celebrate holidays during the winter months. From Thanksgiving, Diwali, Ramadan, and Hanukkah to New Years and of course, Christmas.

It is based on the story of a boy who had dreams and goals as a child that seemed impossible, but through determination and a constant belief in himself he was finally able to achieve his goals. The show ends with a very powerful emotional send-off that leaves everyone (students AND teachers) inspired to live each day to the fullest.

But here’s the really strange part…

I debuted this program in the winter of 2004. I performed it all over Texas, from Houston all the way to the Rio Grande Valley at the southern tip of Texas. The story in the presentation is about a boy who wants to create snow in the parts of Texas where it is too hot to snow.

And then, on December 25, 2004 something happened that had never happened before:

It snowed on Christmas morning in southern Texas. Not just in isolated places either. It snowed from Dallas/Fort Worth all the way down to the Rio Grande Valley.

For those of you who live in colder states this might not seem so amazing, but in southern Texas, particularly down in Falfurrias, Victoria, and McAllen (just a few miles from Mexico) the very idea of snow is magic. And to have it happen on Christmas day is simply unbelievable.

I know what causes snow. I know that my program had nothing to do with the snow.

But if you’ve seen the Arctic Express program, you know that I sure like to believe that it did play a part.

--Julian Franklin

2 comments:

Brett Roberts said...

Snow is MAGIC! Last Thursday we had our Arctic Blast in this part of Texas and my nine year old son was THRILLED. He even tried to make a snowman out of the half inch of snow that fell to the ground. I think it's the same thing with magic tricks. It's novelty. Children get excited when they see something that they don't get to see very often.

Have fun,
Brett

Anonymous said...

I remembered when it snowed in the Rio Grande Valley. I came home from college in Huntsville to Harlingen and it was something I will definitely never forget! Looking forward to seeing the Wild West show in Huntsville next weekend. The Huntsville Item will publish an article on Jan. 6 to preview it.