The lifestyle magazine for modern outdoorsmen
Don’t get left behind—get our latest issue while you still can!
Music

Mariah Carey's Christmas, Beyonce and 'That Guy From Wham!'  

Mariah Carey's Christmas, Beyonce and 'That Guy From Wham!'  

Has Mariah Carey ruined Christmas, or has she led a revolution of festive songs that save us from therapy?

By Matt Meltzer
Published Oct. 18, 2024
Updated May 8, 2026

In case you haven’t been grocery shopping since October, Mariah Carey has been let out of her cave and it is Christmas song season.

We used to just call it Christmas, but since 2003 the official start of the holidays is when you hear “All I Want For Christmas” somewhere completely un-Christmasy, like during your annual prostate exam or when you are Trick-or-Treating with the family. 

Nobody’s quite sure how the songstress took over Jesus’ birthday party like a 4-year-old with divorced parents. Some like to point to a scene in the movie Love Actually, where a little girl sings the song to her grade school crush, who wisely returns her affection by picking his nose.

Though the smart money says it has something to do with ex-husband Tommy Mottola’s “business associates.” (You never heard this from us!) 

Hook & Barrel gives the rundown on Mariah et al, and what Christmas songs will have you singing along as you knock back a festive beer, or crying into your mocktail.

READ MORE: Christmas Eve Tradition: Feast of the Seven Fishes

That Guy from Wham!

Mariah Carey Pop-up store

Mariah’s rise to the Queen of Christmas isn’t all that unexpected, though. After all, pop stars have been taking over the Christmas music game for years. Wham! is now an irreplaceable part of the holiday season, probably because they’re the only band that ends with an exclamation point.

Also, because “Last Christmas” has given us another great holiday tradition - sitting around the table after dinner, trying to name the other guy in Wham!

Bruce Springsteen got in on the Christmas music craze with his version of “Santa Claus is Coming to Town.” It might have reached Mariah's status, too, if only the song didn’t sound like a drunk mall Santa trying to do an impression of Bruce Springsteen during Tuesday night karaoke at Applebee’s. 

Mariah, Bruce, George, and that other guy’s success now have everybody rushing to cash in on Christmas songs. In Norway, bands whose songs usually include at least four lines proclaiming, “Hail Satan, King of Darkness” are recording Scandinavian metal versions of “Oh Come, All Ye Faithful.”

READ MORE: 12 Gifts Of Christmas: A Holiday Song For Hunting Gear

The Snowman and Therapy

Wham! Last Christmas

When Beyonce heard that dreidels were made of clay, she immediately planned an album of Hanukkah songs. Not because she’s Jewish, but because she wanted to smash a bunch of dreidels in a music video, leading most women under 30 to believe Hanukkah is actually about Jay-Z cheating at P. Diddy’s “Freak Off” parties. 

Maybe celebrity Christmas music is taking over because the old-timey Christmas songs just don’t hold up. Take “Here We Come A-Wassailing.” There has not been one documented case of wassailing since 1896, and the last person who could explain what wassailing meant died in the 1970s. 

“Jingle Bells” isn’t any less dated. We see all kinds of ridiculous things on the road during the holidays, but there is a severe lack of one-horse open sleighs. Broken down Lexus? Sure. But try rhyming that with anything in “Jingle Bells” without a hefty fine from the FCC. 

Even the Christmas songs that aren’t dated are like Hans Christian Andersen's stories with a catchier hook. Imagine you told your 10-year-old that he’d make a new friend this Christmas, and then one day he’d walk outside to play with that friend and find he’d been reduced to a top hat, a corncob pipe, and a button. The only thing on his Christmas list for the next 25 years would be therapy.

READ MORE: 3 Deer Rifles For Christmas

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Outcast

Gene Autry Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer

Same thing with “Rudolph,” a song that teaches us that being different is OK, as long as you’re willing to work overtime on Christmas. Otherwise, the boss will look the other way while the other reindeer take turns giving you a swirlie. 

Let’s not even get into “Baby, It’s Cold Outside,” alternately known as “Christmas at Bill Cosby’s.” 

Maybe the rise of Mariah Carey is just a sign of the times, and rather than meltable friends, mutant reindeer, and overly aggressive party hosts, all we really want for Christmas is someone to love. And, to finally remember the name of that other guy in Wham!  

It's Andrew Ridgely.

READ MORE: Bad Santa's Christmas List: Flamethrowers, Airguns & More

Join Us