The holiday season is in full swing, which heralds gorging oneself on too much food, being inundated with Christmas songs in every department store, and watching heartwarming specials on TV and at the movie theater. To get in the spirit—and to tip our hats to the new movie The Grinch—we thought we would give away a holiday cartoon that brings a bit of Whoville to you.

That’s right: We’re giving away How the Grinch Stole Christmas! cartoon movie on DVD to one lucky winner!

 

The Grinch, celebrating Christmas

The cartoon is filled with life lessons a’plenty, chiefly that Christmas doesn’t come from a store, but the love and togetherness you share with your friends and family. For a chance to win, simply head to FreakSugar’s Facebook and Twitter pages, find this link, and tell us who would win in a knife fight, the Grinch or Scrooge McDuck. You read correctly.

The details: Only one entry per social media platform, so you can enter once on Twitter and once on Facebook–meaning, if you have accounts on both, that’s two chances to win! The contest ends on Monday, December 10th, at 11:59 PM Eastern time.

Good luck!

About The Author

Managing Editor

Jed W. Keith is managing editor for FreakSugar and has been a writer with the site since its start in 2014. He’s a pop culture writer, social media coordinator, PR writer, and technical and educational writer for a variety of companies and organizations. Currently, Jed writes for FreakSugar, coordinates social media for Rocketship Entertainment and GT Races, and writes press copy and pop culture articles for a variety of companies and outlets. His work can also be seen in press releases for the Master Musicians Festival, a Kentucky event that drawn acts such as Willie Nelson, the Counting Crows, Steve Earle, and Wynona Judd. His work was featured in the 2018 San Diego Comic-Con convention book for his interview with comic creator Mike Mignola about the 25th anniversary of the first appearance of Hellboy. Jed also does his best to educate the next generation of pop culture enthusiasts, teaching social studies classes--including History Through Film--to high school students.