
THURSDAY 4TH UPDATE: Leno Writes Own Monologue Again! WGA Denies NBC Claims That Jay Had Union OK & Guild Would “Look The Other Way”
THURSDAY 3RD UPDATE: LENO/WGA: WHAT’S THE REAL STORY? NBC Claims Jay Asked For & Received WGA Permission To Write Monologue At Secret Monday Meeting With Guild President Verrone
THURSDAY 2ND UPDATE: NBC Claims “Leno Can Write Own Monologue”; WGA Says He Can’t But Doesn’t Want War
THURSDAY UPDATE: I had a feeling this controversy not only isn’t going away but will probably deepen over the next days — and it has. The Writers Guild Of America just confirmed that “a discussion took place today between [its member] Jay Leno and the Writers Guild to clarify to him that writing for The Tonight Show constitutes a violation of the Guilds’ strike rules.” Leno admitted last night on the air during his first show back from strike hiatus that he wrote his own monologue. That’s a huge problem because it violates the strike rules of one of his unions, the WGA, which is currently on strike and picketing NBC and Leno’s Tonight Show. Meanwhile, early ratings for late night TV’s return show that Jay scored a 5.3 rating and 12 audience share in the nation’s 55 largest markets for his best ratings in two years, according to Nielsen Media Research. Leno’s ratings were up 47% over what he achieved before the strike. Meanwhile, David Letterman’s Late Show had a 4.3 rating and 10 share, or 39% better than his pre-strike average. I don’t find this surprising, since Leno had been consistently beating Letterman for years and TV viewing habits don’t change overnight. Plus, there was the “car wreck” phenomenon at work and audiences may have wanted to watch how The Tonight Show would fare without writers. I can’t help but think that Leno knows full well he could lose viewers if he stops his topical monologue altogether (which is what Conan O’Brien appeared to do last night). So will Jay keep writing his signature stand-up opening? Stay tuned.
WEDNESDAY PM: Leno did deliver what was a funny monologue. So the big question was who wrote it: WGA members or scabs (i.e. the usual contingent of joke writers who hang out around Jay’s kitchen table)? Leno addressed that very issue during the monologue: “You know what I’m doing? I’m doing what I did the day I started. I write jokes and wake my wife up in the middle of the night and say, ‘Honey, is this funny?’ So if this monologue doesn’t work it’s my wife’s fault,” he explained. “We are not using outside guys. We are following the guild thing… We can write for ourselves…”
Earth To Leno: That’s not the way the WGA interprets its strike rules as spelled out here: “The Strike Rules, among other provisions, prohibit Guild members from performing any writing services during a strike for any and all struck companies. This prohibition includes all writing by any Guild member that would be performed on-air by that member (including monologues, characters, and featured appearances) if any portion of that written material is customarily written by striking writers.” (See my previous: WGA Reminds Returning Jay And Conan: No Monologues.)
Now the question is what will the WGA do about it? The irony is that Leno last night sounded so proud of the jokes he claimed to have written for his monologue. Jay’s in a tough spot, to be sure: after years of beating Dave week after week, Leno could fall to No. 2 now that he’s doing The Tonight Show without his writing team because NBC won’t bargain with the striking writers. Whereas Letterman’s production company Worldwide Pants owns The Late Show (not CBS) and negotiated an interim waiver from the WGA allowing Dave to return on air with his writing team intact. Sure Leno’s ratings may stay the same or even go up as audiences anticipate a potential on-air train wreck. But can they stay there? Will America’s late night viewing habits change? And will NBC suffer?
What makes the situation even trickier is that Leno has been very supportive of his own picketing writers and the entire WGA since the strike began two months ago (see photo above) by delivering food and drinks to the scribes walking the line. So the WGA, which has made it clear it’s picketing NBC and not Leno, may not want to make an example of a high-profile member like Jay for breaking its strike rules.
- Lots Of On-Air WGA Support: A Sneak Peek At Late Night TV’s Official Return
- Huckabee Slammed By WGA Pickets; Hillary Gets Cameo On Letterman
- WGA Reminds Returning Jay And Conan: No Monologues
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.


I’m “just” a viewer, squarely on the side of the WGA and it’s clear to me Jay Leno, whom I happen to like, did the WGA a gross disservice last night. Either his monologue was pre-written (and he admitted it was) which was a clear violation of WGA rules or he winged it, in which case he proved writers aren’t needed. Either way, he hurt the WGA last night.
What next?
“I couldn’t let 16 people put 190 out of work.” That’s why Leno has my support!
To those of you who say, “To hell with unions,”: because of unions, you have a 5 day work week, vacation benefits, eight hour work days, over time pay, holiday pay, our children aren’t working in sweat shops…I could go on and on. NO COMPANY EVER GAVE WORKERS ANYTHING OUT OF THE KINDNESS OF THEIR HEARTS. It was the UNIONS that made this possible for you.
What promised to be a strike for a very fair reason is turning nasty. I hope the producers and the union end this fast because public and professional sympathy is waning. But here it is not the union that should be considered unfair – the producers are in fact the ones who need to negotiate fairly.
Good for Letterman for striking an interim deal and taking the high road, but also good for Jay for putting money back into the hands of all the other employees being affected by this.
Producers, please wake up. Union be careful, you are becoming a bit surly.
Going after him would be a bad move. Most people don’t care that Letterman came back with writers and Leno didn’t. They are just happy their favorite is back on. (99% of the people I know aren’t changing their viewing habits. They hate one and love another to the point that it won’t change.)
If the WGA goes after Leno and kicks him out, they’re leaving a man on the air who has been a big supporter free to do and say whatever he likes. Considering he’s run by NBC who’d love anything to stick it to the writers right about now, he’d have free reign to do and say anything. I don’t think hiring non-WGA writers would be too much of an issue; there’s always someone who’d want to work and I think working out a deal straight with Leno or NBC would probably be more lucrative (remember sticking it to the WGA). And remember, he’s leaving in a year anyways — standup comedians doesn’t need permission from the WGA.
Any hey, Leno without writers is funnier then Letterman with writers and if they go after him, they’d be admitting their own mistake about any of their late-night decisions.
Although it was never stated in the article, I’m assuming Jay is a member of the WGA. If so, then he obviously did violate the WGA’s strike rules. However, I agree with MutualDisdain that getting too tough with Leno would be an unwise move by the WGA. Jay is well liked by a lot of America and a lot of people know that his return to work has allowed many other people to resume their jobs. They should allow him to continue to perform his monologues, but just don’t mention anything about how they are created.
Wake up, people. Leave Jay alone. Jay was a stand-up guy last night. Being in an impossible situation and without the resources Letterman has at his disposal, he did the only thing he could that would not wreck the lives of 160 other, non-guild people. He went to work. He explained to the public very well why he was there, how he still supported the strike, and why he would continue to support the strike.
Attacking your most visible link to the viewing public is not just stupid, it borders on the suicidal. He can do more for your cause from his platform than any picket line simply because he can reach so many people and explain to them in terms they can understand just why they can’t see their favorite shows. He can ridicule the powerful producers who make obscene gain off your hard work.
Stop the Jay bashing. It doesn’t make him look bad and it reflects badly on you. Just how do you think the public views you – as heroic laborers against the machines of industry or a bunch of spoiled illiterate hacks who’ve been shoveling their sorry idea of dialogue and plot so long that they can’t understand why they’re losing our support? Think about it. You’d be surprised by just how fast you can lose our support.
Oh, and for the record – Jay was funnier than Letterman last night.
Good for Jay!
The writing’s on the wall. The WGA will fold by February because of their eroding support. The AMPTP knew this would happen and it seems to be right on schedule.
correct me if I’m wrong, but isn’t the union’s beef about DVD and Internet revenue, and wasn’t it the union that basically gave away those revenues because they looked at “money now” rather than “money later”?
Why is it that the union feels their members (such as Leno) must adhere to their union contract (agreement) but the union strikes because they don’t want to stick to the deal they made in regards to DVD and internet?
But I guess in a town where people drive a Prius to the airfield to board a private jet, hypocrisy is a way of life.
Of course he wrote his monologue- what was he suppossed to do? Play a Creed CD??????????? This is stupid. How can he be on the air with no words coming out of his mouth?
this why granting letterman an interim agreement was a dopey move. here come the ramifications. either we are on strike or we’re not. look for a major split in the guild beginning any day now. moguls win. game over.
WGA over played its hand and made a strategic blunder by cutting a side deal with Letterman–leaving Leno and the other late nighters no choice but to go back to work (or lose their audiences). This is the crack in the dike that the networks needed. The networks will not budge now–even if we have a full season of reality shows. Face it writers, you can be replaced and you will be if WGA does not back off and make a reasonable compromise.
Thank goodness someone is willing to work in Hollywood.
Unions ruin America? The depth of your ignorance is astounding… you forget the years of struggle for workers rights, safety, living wages, job security, etc… for the American Worker. The only people that do not like Unions are the greedy employers that would forsake all that was fought for over a few pennies.
Thank god for Unions, and the millions that struggled for the rights gained. Open an American history book. My goodness… would you rather they were chained to their desks for 14 hours a day making pennies? Move to China, they would love you there…
So it was OK when Letterman and Johnny Carson scabbed during the 1988 strike? And that Carson used scabs to write his monologue? Short memories…
To Ed, Mike whomever…
What Jay did WAS against the strike rules and the sooner he’s forced to go fi core (leave the Guild) the better. I’ve walked NBC and after a week of striking, Jay disappeared and we haven’t seen him since.
Hopefully, no reputable SAG member will cross the line, forcing Jay and his kitchen full of writers to make up 60 minutes of “priceless material” as he entertains America with interviews of people no one wants to see.
I was shocked to hear he had 19 writers! What a crock. How does it take 19 people to create 7 minutes of humor that all comes from the day’s news? Rarely is there anything organic. The network has probably realized they do not need more than three, bring back Rob, Salley and Buddy!
Jay actually DID NOT break the rules by writing his own material. The writers guild indicate that the opening of the Tonight Show Jay performs a “monologue”, Jay can call it his “opening act” and therefore is not in violation of the contract. I know it’s splitting hairs, but this type of thing goes on everyday in our court rooms. Sorry writers guild union, next time you better be ultra specific in your contract rules.
It would also be funny if all the non union writers got together, along with the national public and sued the writers guild union for ruining there lives because all there are on TV lately are re-runs. Don’t be to surprized if sometyhing like this does happen. I’m sure there are several capable law firms out their right now who would love the opportunity to start a class action suit against the writers guild union on behalf of the American public.
Jay just proved again that he is the funniest man in the USA. Keep up the good work, Jay!!
Im shocked at the uninformed yahoos posting on here. The writers on strike aren’t making the problem, the studios are. It’s not the writers who created this situation.
Unions are not the pimple on the ass of free market economy. But minds like yours are, lowest common denominators who file in line and believe they make a change by watching commercials. Listen, capitalism was built on the sweat of those who could not defend themselves, at wages that were ridiculous, slave wages, until Unions stepped in to defend the common man, just because you aren’t represented by a union doesn’t mean they’re work has not benefitted you.
It was the studios that last left the bargaining table, and the writers seek a return to negotiations. People, educate yourselves.
And also, calling Jay Leno a comedian is like calling an onion an orange.
I think it is rather insane that people fault unions for protecting their people. Unions helped to change the child labor laws in the US when corporations where exploiting kids.
Corporations have shown themselves to often do what they do best, make money at the expense of others. There needs to be a counter balance to their actions. Unions fill that role. Sure, they go overboard, sometimes, but so do the corporations. Stop drinking the Drudge, Limbaugh, Hannity Kool-aid and adopt a balance thought process people.
Please.
Look at these comments! AMPTP was up late last night!
Dave’s writers are being used as scabs.
Since when do the writers own Jay Leno? How idiotic to tell your star (the reason you have a job in the first place) that he can’t create his own stuff! What about the other people who depend on the success of Jay Leno to put food on their families’ tables? Is there life supposed to be crippled by this leach of a union?
I can see that the AMPTP shills are out in force, trying to pretend the whole country isn’t behind the WGA and the striking writers.
Do you actually believe what you’re saying? Or is this just a better paycheck than Jack in the Box?
Jay can’t pretend to support the writers and then turn around and cut their legs out from under them by scabbing for NBC. He came back as a host… HE IS STILL ON STRIKE AS A WRITER!!!
Or is he?