Conan won’t do ‘Tonight Show’ following Leno

Deadly Sushi

Formerly The Giant Mojito
Hmmm....


LOS ANGELES - Conan O'Brien has refused to play along with NBC's plan to move "The Tonight Show" and return Jay Leno to late-night, abruptly derailing the network's effort to resolve its scheduling mess.

O'Brien said in a statement Tuesday that shifting "Tonight" will "seriously damage what I consider to be the greatest franchise in the history of broadcasting," and he expressed disappointment that NBC had given him less than a year to establish himself as host at 11:35 p.m. EST.
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He doesn't have an offer in hand from another network, O'Brien said. Fox, which lacks a network late-night show, has expressed its appreciation for him but said this week that no negotiations have been held.

In his statement, wryly addressed to "People of Earth," the comic knocked his network's prime-time ratings woes, which stem in part from the poor performance of Leno's new prime-time show. "The Jay Leno Show" debuted in the fall after Leno surrendered his 17-year stake in the "Tonight" last spring to O'Brien.

"It was my mistaken belief that, like my predecessor, I would have the benefit of some time and, just as important, some degree of ratings support from the prime-time schedule. Building a lasting audience at 11:30 is impossible without both," O'Brien said.

"But sadly, we were never given that chance. After only seven months, with my 'Tonight Show' in its infancy, NBC has decided to react to their terrible difficulties in prime-time by making a change in their long-established late night schedule.

Growing up watching "Tonight" host Johnny Carson and getting the chance to "one day sit in that chair has meant everything to me," and was an opportunity he worked long and hard to obtain, O'Brien said.

Show has rich history
"Tonight" has long been the dominant late-night program on television, with O'Brien following in a line of hosts that included Steve Allen, Jack Paar, Johnny Carson and Leno. For many of those years, an appearance on "Tonight," particularly for comics, could make or break a career.
NBC wants to move Leno out of prime-time and to the 11:35 p.m. slot with a half-hour show, bumping "Tonight" to 12:05 a.m. — the latest it's ever regularly aired. The network was under pressure to make a change from its affiliate stations, who found Leno's show an inadequate ratings lead-in for their lucrative local newscasts.
Online, many took to O'Brien's defense and applauded the host's stand against NBC. "Team Conan" was one of the most popular Twitter topics Tuesday afternoon, as young viewers pledged their allegiance to O'Brien.

An O'Brien portrait also circulated as a badge of support. Referring to the "Tonight" show host's playful nickname, it read, "I'm with Coco," and featured a black-and-white picture of a regal-looking O'Brien standing in front of an American flag. The only color: his shock of orange hair.


It doesn't make sense for NBC to try and hold him to a contract, said John Rash, a media analyst for the Chicago advertising firm Campbell & Mithun.
"An unhappy comedian is not a good premise for a program," Rash said.

The late-night shuffle has played out amid speculation that O'Brien might bolt for Fox. And the network's top entertainment executive, Kevin Reilly, said on Monday, "I love Conan personally and professionally."

Fox has had trouble launching late-night shows in the past, with Chevy Chase and Joan Rivers as notable failures. O'Brien offers the advantage of being a proven performer with a team experienced in putting on a show.

"Certainly Conan has a loyal audience and he's been able to effectively position himself as a victim of NBC's schedule shuffle," said Rash, who added that the tone of O'Brien's show seems to fit Fox's brand better than it does NBC's.

ABC's top entertainment executive, Stephen McPherson, said his network had no interest in O'Brien. ABC would have sought Leno if he hit the open market, but its executives believe that O'Brien's show is so close in tone to Letterman's that it wouldn't be good competition.

Fox declined comment Tuesday on O'Brien's statement, but it is taking action that would indicate the network is seriously considering bringing O'Brien to late-night, a period now largely filled by a variety of syndicated fare that includes network reruns.

Fox is asking some of its stations to study and report back on how much money is made with current late-night programming, according to a person familiar with the request. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to publicly discuss the request.

The syndication agreements that are in place are a costly sticking point if Fox wants to put in a late-night show across the network, the person said.

It might not be easy for affiliate stations to break profitable syndication agreements, said analyst Rash.

NBC didn't count on Leno staying atop ratings
NBC announced the "Tonight Show" succession plan in 2004, well before Leno's departure, to try to avoid the Leno-David Letterman battle that ensued when Carson retired. But it didn't count on Leno remaining atop the late-night ratings when he was pushed out of "Tonight."

To keep Leno from becoming a late-night competitor to O'Brien at another network, NBC offered him the daily 10 p.m. EST prime-time series. The network also saw it as an opportunity for cost-cutting, with a talk show considerably cheaper to produce than the scripted dramas that typically fill the final hour of prime-time.

O'Brien said he hoped that he and NBC could resolve the issue quickly so he could do a show of which he and his crew could be proud — "for a company that values our work" — raising the possibility he might go to another network.

NBC declined comment Tuesday, adding that O'Brien was scheduled to do his show Tuesday night.

For O'Brien, it was a stark contrast to early in his career, when he was an unknown replacing David Letterman in the 12:30 a.m. slot. He suffered brutal reviews, tough ratings and was working on a week-to-week contract. But NBC's management then stuck with him, and he blossomed into a proven performer.

The network had been counting on O'Brien's cooperation, and wanted an answer quickly, so it could get the revamped schedule ready to begin airing after NBC broadcasts the Winter Olympics, which will dominate NBC's schedule from Feb. 12-28.

O'Brien noted in his statement that he'd received sympathy calls and added that no one should feel sorry for him because he's been "absurdly lucky" to do what he loves most in a world with real problems.

He ended the statement with a punch line: "Have a great day and, for the record, I am truly sorry about my hair; it's always been that way."
© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34827830/ns/entertainment-television/


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Sass Muffin

Coffee Queen ☕
Gold Site Supporter
He'll take the Fox gig.. just watch..

PS-- It's about time you use the avatar I found for you! haha!
 

CharlieD

New member
NBC definitely mada a mistake with the move. Conan is no match for Leno. He should have never been allowed to take that spot.
 
K

Kimchee

Guest
I read that Conan stands to make up to 30 MILLION by not taking the change...
Sounds like a smart man to me!!!!
 

Wart

Banned
It's not just Conan and Leno and whoever that is that follows Conan.

When NBC put Leno in their 10 pm timeslot 5 times a week they saw 5 hours of cheap programming, and to put leno in at 10 they had to reshuffle the entire weeks schedule. WTF is L&O doing being shown on Friday nights?

What really pissed me off was the cancellation of Southland and the way the stroyline was left hanging. Apparently more than just myself felt this way. Thank you TNT.

So, for me, it isn't the Leno-Conan-Whats His Name thing that I see as the big screw up, I see what they did to their entire weeks prime time line up to make room for Leno.
 

Doc

Administrator
Staff member
Gold Site Supporter
They hired Conan for the Tonight show. That was the deal. Agreed NBC messed up their prime time lineup to add Leno 5 nights a week. 3 night a week could have worked but 5 is way to much. So Leno got the ratings NBC expected but the affiliates who counted on better ratings for the local news (following a higher rated show) so local news affiliates lost as much as 30% viewership.
So NBC can's Leno. It happens all the time. Why they then offer him an 11:30 slot again after they've hired Conan to do the Tonight show is madness. Can Leno and move on. Instead they tried to keep both guys tied up under contract and it appears that is not going to fly.
I can't blame Conan if he turns down the 1/2 hour slip to 12:05.
I prefer Leno, but lots of folks prefer Conan. Both have their followers. I think NBC screwed up big time with this one, just as they did with the Leno Letterman fiasco back in the early 90's when Johnny Carson retired.
 

joec

New member
Gold Site Supporter
To be honest I don't watch late night TV at all. Now I've seen bits and pieces of Leno, Conan and Letterman but haven't really watched since Johnny Carson retired. These types of shows as most network TV leaves me pretty much cold. Other than NCIS there isn't anything on the regular networks I watch regularly especially the sitcoms. I never cared for canned laugh tracks. I would much rather watch something on one of the science channels or history stuff than most of this stuff. Even a good movie or one of the HBO shows which I do follow such as True Blood and hopefully Deadwood. I'm also looking forward to the new Spartacus to start on Starz around the 22nd of this month.
 

Doc

Administrator
Staff member
Gold Site Supporter
If it wasn't for my DVR (aka Tivo) I would not see any of the late night talk shows. As it is I'll record them for the 1st 15 to 20 mins of stand up. Good filler. :D
 
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