UPDATES NBC ON HOT SEAT: Will It Be Jay AND Conan In Late Night?
BREAKING NEWS! 3RD UPDATE: NBC Universal Entertainment chief Jeff Gaspin got right down to it because that’s what the TV critics and reporters wanted: his first public statement on NBC’s late night debacle orchestrated by NBCU boss Jeff Zucker. Of course, Zucker was MIA, leaving Gaspin to clean up the mess and face the press at the Television Critics Association confab this morning.
Afterwards, Gaspin was mobbed onstage by the media, who were surprised to hear him claim that he made the decision to pull the plug on The Jay Leno Show in primetime and then move it to 11:35 PM and in the process shakeup the network’s late night — not Jeff Zucker. (Talk about a failure of leadership at NBC Universal!) “I called Jeff and said, but this was not news to him, ’It’s time we make the call.’ He said, I don’t remember the exact words, but he understood and he didn’t disagree. And don’t get me wrong, he challenged me every step of the way. All the things you are throwing at me, he threw out every possibility (including having Leno on only a few nights a week instead of five). And in the end, after the answers I was able to give and the conversations we had, we realized this was a best choice and perhaps our only choice.”
NBC programming chief Angela Bronstad gamely held court at Gaspin’s side with a few stragglers who were actually interested in NBC’s primetime scripted shows. (Imagine that, since the audiences aren’t!). But it was Gaspin on the hot seat for NBC to explain to the gaggle of critics and reporters (including Diane Haithman who is covering the TCA conference for Deadline Hollywood), what happened internally between NBC and its angry affiliates and its upset TV hosts:
Jeff Gaspin led off the session with this statement: “Anyway, let me just get right to it. Let’s talk about The Jay Leno Show. I can confirm what many of you have been reporting: starting February The Jay Leno Show will no longer air at 10 PM. While it was performing at acceptable levels for the network, it did not meet our affiliates’ needs and we realized we had to make a change.
“My goal right now is to keep Jay, Conan and Jimmy as part of our late night lineup. I’ve spoken to all of them and proposed that The Jay Leno Show move to 11:35 PM, The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien move to 12:05 AM and Late Night with Jimmy Fallon would then start at 1:05 AM. As much as I would like to tell you we have a done deal, we know that’s not true. The talks are still ongoing.”
He told the media that, while he doesn’t know the exact date this late night quagmire will get squared away, he’s confident it will be before NBC starts airing the Vancouver Winter Olympics on February 12th. Gaspin refused to discuss the specifics of the ongoing contract negotiations. (“We all have the weekend to think about it, and we’ll get back into conversations starting tomorrow.”)
Within hours of Gaspin’s TCA news conference, NBC released this statement from Michael Fiorile, Chairman of the NBC Affiliate Board, supporting the network’s primetime and late night moves: “This is a great move for the affiliates, the network and, most importantly, the viewers. Speaking on behalf of the board, I thank the network for keeping the lines of communication so open, and for being so responsive to the needs of the affiliates. We admire their willingness to innovate, and their willingness to change course when it didn’t work for us. We were delighted to collaborate on the launch of the 10:00 PM show, and we look forward to continuing to work with Jeff Zucker and the entire network leadership team as we set a new direction, build on our long history together, and contribute to the impressive legacy of NBC.”
But, earlier, Gaspin shed the first light of what had transpired between NBC and its angry affiliates. He said they forced his hand, causing him to act before the affiliates yanked The Jay Leno Show themselves because its lead-in was hurting the stations’ local newscast (which is their cash cow). “I would have liked nothing more than to give it a 52-week try,” Gaspin said. First, the affiliates gave NBC until November. “Then they said, ‘You know, this is not getting much better for us.’” (Gaspin later estimated about a third of the affiliates were really hurt by it. “In some cases, they just lost more of a [ratings] percentage than they thought they would. So we said, ‘Let’s look at December.’” But, Gaspin noted, when smaller affiliates started getting their ratings books in November, ”the drumbeat started getting louder and louder. Towards the middle of December, they made it very clear they were going to start to be more vocal about their displeasure. Then they started talking about preemption. It was then that I realized that this was not going to go well if we kept things in place. And since they are our partners, even though it was doing OK for us, and it truly was, I just made a tough call.”
Gaspin said network advertising revenue was never an issue in the decision to yank Leno in primetime. ”This was not an issue for the network, it was an issue for our affiliates.” Later, he went on to explain, ”it becomes more of a public relations issue than a contractual issue. You don’t want to have your partners, your affiliates, constantly saying, ‘This is killing me.’ It was going to damage Jay, and it was going to damage NBC. So regardless of what the legal situation was, this was going to continue to be a PR nightmare. Obviously, the ones that were hurt the most were the loudest.”
Aw, c’mon, NBC couldn’t have thought Leno at 10 PM was working out. ”It was working at acceptable levels financially, so we were actually making money at 10 o’clock. To that extent it was working.” Gaspin later admitted that “I think that the initial decision to put Jay at 10 is because they wanted to keep Jay at the network. The fact that there was a financial story and a financial benefit that could go along with that I think became the story. But it was not the reason we made the initial move. We made the initial move to keep Jay.”
He agreed with the theory that, if NBC had a stronger primetime, Jay’s show wouldn’t have struggled quite so hard. ”Probably. If we had a stronger 8 PM-10 PM. When Biggest Loser was his lead-in, he did well. We came in second every Tuesday.” Looking back, Gaspin acknowledged, “We wanted an alternative at 10. We still think it’s a tough time period. And while I would have liked to see it do a little better than it was doing, over time I think we would have seen it grow for the network. It was not yet a wrong decision.” Gaspin acknowledged, “I would have preferred to wait until September. I would have preferred to see the summer ratings.” But later, he told media gathered around him, ”I had to signal to the affiliates that we were willing to make a change.”
Gaspin analyzed the negative reaction to Jay’s show. “I don’t think that people didn’t watch Jay Leno at 10 o’clock because of the quality of the show. I think people just have a lot of choices at 10. There were just so many choices that people thought were better, and I heard that anecdotally, over and over again.”
Before making his proposal to the late night hosts and their people, Gaspin said, “we did a lot of [network and affiliate audience] research, both qualitative and quantitative, and both sets of research indicated that this had a really good shot at working, and the affiliates signed on with us. They were our partners, and they are just as disappointed as we are that this isn’t working. They just have a financial situation that forces their hand more than we do.”
How did the hosts react when Gaspin went to him with his late night proposal? “Both Jay and Conan and Jimmy were incredibly gracious and professional, and they all said they understood the difficult situation I was in. Beyond that, it was a private conversation. When this settles, you are more than welcome to go and ask them what their feelings were,” Gaspin challenged the critics and reporters.
But Gaspin was asked what is O’Brien’s incentive for agreeing to these changes? ”I think Conan’s motivation in this will be more clear as time goes on. But what is important to me is that I gave Conan something that was very important to him, which was The Tonight Show. And so when I asked him to move to 12:05 AM, I made it very clear that The Tonight Show was moving with him.”
And Leno? ”What was important to Jay was telling jokes at 11:35 PM. I obviously couldn’t satisfy either completely, but that’s why I came up with this compromise.”
But how does NBC fight the perecption that Jay and Conan are now damaged goods? ”I think time, just time. I think when they tell jokes about this, it sort of winks to the audience that they are not doing this in the dark. But I think time is the best answer to your question.”
But it’s unclear how either host, and especially Conan, can trust NBC not to move their time slots again, or worse, fire them. Gaspin answered by noting that what happened was “such a unique set of circumstances – the move to 10 oclock, the move back. I think we are in a safer zone having all of our late night folks actually in late night. So I don’t expect another upheaval like we had in the past year.”
And what about Carson Daly? Is he odd man out? Assured Gaspin: ”Carson Daly is going to be part of our schedule, regardless of what happens.” (Sure, as if talent can believe anything NBC tells them these days!)
Gaspin admitted the network is starting from Ground Zero all over again after the Leno debacle. “For us right now, going back to basics is probably the smartest play. We lost about 30% of our rating at 10, about nine-tenths of a ratings point. So here’s nine-tenths of a ratings point that I’m handing over to CBS and ABC.” But the NBC exec also noted that the other networks also have lost ratings points at 10. “Tell me there is not a problem in broadcast TV at 10 p.m. That’s rhetorical…” As for when he predicts celler-dwelling NBC will recover from this debacle, he said, “I almost don’t care how quickly it happens as long as it happens. I want to see improvement in our schedule and progress with our ratings, As long as I see an hour going up instead of sideways or down, I’ll be happy.”
Added the exec: “I don’t know if it’s wrong to take chances. I think you have to take chances, but maybe we were a little too early on this one… I still think you have to play a little bit with your schedule. And I think you are going to see us, maybe not as much in the next three months because I don’t have as much to work with, but I think by the fall you will see us try some interesting stuff with the schedule.”
Here’s what will reassure Hollywood’s TV community: Gaspin said, with the loss of Leno at 10, “My guess is this will net at least two more hours of scripted somewhere on the schedule, and another reality hour.”
But the single funniest “inside Hollywood” joke made by Gaspin came during this exchange with journalists asking about Ari Emanuel, who with partner Rick Rosen is one of Conan’s WME agents, as well as the inspiration for Jeremy Piven’s infamously excitable (and foul-mouthed) Ari Gold on Entourage:
Q. You said that both of the comics were cordial in the room. How was Ari?
JG: You know, based on reputation, not nearly as bad as I thought it would be. I have talked to Ari. I have talked to Rick Rosen on a fairly consistent basis.
Q: How much more is it going to cost to shift everything?
JG: It’s going to cost more.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.







Let me guess, after this debacle Zucker gets another promotion?
No way does Conan stay with NBC. And Fallon is irrelevant. Conan didn’t put in all that time and effort to take a step back and be dissed in public. He’ll go to Fox for sure. NBC looks really, really bad. This will not play out well for them. But I’m THRILLED that now the possibility exists for five new nights of scripted dramatic programming to come back and put more people to work.
Oh My!
This is going to be fun.
Jay, it’s me Johnny. I wanted Dave but when they pushed me out early, I did the right thing and bowed out. When you stepped in, you hurt a friend, and when you stepped out, you said you didn’t want to repeat history with another friend. Jay, do the right thing, bow out with class. In the end, all you have is your reputation.
“it did not meet our affiliates needs”
That’s as good an excuse as any. Nevermind the audience and the advertisers. Conan and the people who made the trek from New York with him must be ready to strangle the NBC execs.
It’s a sad mess.
Uhhhhh, how on earth did Jeff Zucker rise up to be the head NBCU? Fire Jay Leno and air good dramas in the 10:00PM slot. How does he think CBS became the #1 network? Not by having a late night show lead in to a late night show… I bet NBC wishes they had held on to Southland instead of ditching it for Leno… The only reason people watched Leno was because he was on when they were going to bed and he’s funnier than Letterman. He’s not doing Conan or NBC any favors by staying on TV and throwing his weight around to get what he wants. He should have retired when he was the number one late night host.
I doubt Conan’s giving up 11:30, so I’d bet on Leno taking a long break and coming back to ABC or Fox after all of this nonsense has died down. Regardless, I think that NBC has forever ruined their late-night block, let another screw-up that the real bad-guy in all of this, Jeff Zucker, will never pay for.
NBC made a very smart decision. I am now convinced the end is near.
1st.
Jay, welcome to FOX! House, 24, Family Guy and Leno all under one roof!
When you try to please everyone, no one really wins. If I were programming, I’d give Leno back his Tonight Show hour. Then I’d keep Fallon on as now scheduled.
As for Conan, I like the guy but he’s too edgy for Tonight. However, he’d be a good fit for a weekly hour-long show on Thursdays at 10pm to finish-out NBC quirky comedy night. I might also try to reinvest in Saturdays by airing him live at 10pm, a great lead-in to the SNL audience.
Well…Duh! Jay’s the best at what he does (tell jokes) but he’s also become an incredibly good listener and personable interviewer, traits he didn’t have when he took over from Mr. C. Thank God Jay dumped the sofa!!!
With all due respect to Conan, he doesn’t have the depth of Jay’s comedy personality… because he’s not a comic… wasn’t out there on stage risking it all for years with little or no pay. Comics seem to derive their ‘edge’ from adversity, a compromised childhood, horrific incidents, ad infinitum. Letterman did stand-up well; obviously, Jay did. Carson was a comedy machine with a huge writing history and an ability to combine genres, take and mimic stuff from Steve and Fred Allen, Red Skelton and almost everyone who preceded.
I wish Jay and Conan well… it’s going to be interesting to see ‘how’ the executive decisions of the usually short-sighted network paradigm play out.
Idiots
Mabye Fox will present it as the facts and then let us decide…
Zuck it, Jeff!
Forget Jay and Conan and Jimmy, Jeff Zucker has managed to taint one of America’s most cherished television institutions, “The Tonight Show”.
How about getting rid of Zucker, and giving someone who is brilliant at programming a chance? That alone would make ratings, moral and advertising go up substantially. Nikki, leave the good people at NBC alone, there are a whole bunch of good union people there, so when you slam NBC as a whole, instead of the few who ran it into the ground, you hurt them too. Remember Karma, it is painful, and payback always happens. Go after the dumb and dumber, not the collective whole, please.
Leno is becoming the NBC version of Dan Rather. These guys were great, but they are trying too hard to hang on to their glory days. This whole drama is beginning to resemble “Sunset Boulevard.” The long and short of it is that Leno is no longer on top of his game and is undermining Conan’s efforts. Leno needs to take his show to HDNet to air just after Dan Rather’s news program.
This is so insulting to Conan. It’s also incredibly shortsighted, but then, so was The Jay Leno Show.
It’ll be very interesting to see what Leno and O’Brien choose to do. It’s very obvious from their recent monologues that they know they’re both getting manhandled.
Wow, what a turnaround. What will it take for them to can Zucker? I’m sure Comcast is thrilled with the situation they’re inheriting.
So when will the person that caused this mess (Jeff Zucker) be fired?
It’s “The Late Shift” all over again. If Letterman retires in 2012, watch Conan move over to his spot at CBS. Hell, the way NBC is treating Conan, he should leave.
I agree with you; it’s amazing how during the first Late Shift, that Letterman had one of Hollywood’s most powerful persons on his side; Michael Ovitz, who got him the CBS Late Show. Now Conan has this generations most powerful agent in the business, Ari Emanuel. History is absolutely about to repeat itself, and NBC is to incompetent to realize it. It wouldn’t shock me in the least if Conan and Letterman have already made a secret pact for him to take over the Late Show once Dave retires. It would make the most sense; shifting Nightline and Jimmy Kimmel around over at ABC is just a complicated and messy as this whole NBC fiasco. FOX is completely untrustworthy; Conan wouldn’t last a week if ratings weren’t double what Leno and Letterman combined, and FOX doesn’t have the stomach for a mid-rated late night talk show. What’s left but CBS? There’s no way Craig Ferguson will get The Late Show come Dave’s retirement. Unless Conan wants to move to cable, I could see Comedy Central as a possible candidate, following The Daily Show and Colbert. But as Bill Goldman says, “Nobody knows anything.” I just hope the best for Conan, and his entire staff.
Good call. If Conan and Letterman made that sort of plan..it would kill NBC.
I heard many years ago that Letterman wanted Conan to be his successor which is why NBC made the deal with Conan 6 years ago to take over Tonight and thus prevent him from taking over Letterman. Now its being said that Jon Stewart is the definite successor to Letterman – Craig Ferguson even stated in an interview recently that he thinks Jon deserves the job. I think Conan should have stayed in NY. To me hes not an LA person. Conans style is def more similar to Letterman then to Leno. Fallon is more Leno type though much less funny – and talk show Jay is pretty unfunny as it is. Leno and Fallon are real bland to me while Letterman and Conan are far more alternative/zanier/edgier. Leno may appeal to more people but to me hes bland and not very funny.
Completely agreed. Jay’s monologue is good, but he is not funny. His interviews are so dry. David Letterman’s are much better.
Jon Stewart recently noted that he does not see himself moving from the DAILY SHOW to a talk show.
Stewart is satisfied doing the occasional four-minute puff interview with a celebrity but doesn’t want to “go down” into the late night pit. He stands “above it all,” getting headlines for genuine commentary.
One would think that opens the “successor to Letterman” slot for Conan. But Letterman just signed for another few years – and NBC would want to lock up Conan to prevent that from happening.
I don’t see NBC making it easy for Conan to leave the network unless he does it now and sits on his ass until September. And Letterman is experiencing enough of a “revival” that CBS wants to keep things copacetic through 2011.
Either way, Conan is the one who got majorly fucked.
Thanks for your thoughts, Ed, but much more likely is that Craig Fergusson will take over the late show, who is actually pretty good.
Letterman may then tap comedian Ray Romano, comedian Patton Oswald,
or another CBS friend–to take over what was Fergusson’s show. Or
he may bring back Arsenio Hall or another black comedian. Let’s wait and see!
I think NBC is missing the picture here.
It wasn’t Jay’s time slot, it was his ‘new’ show. The ‘new’ set, the ‘new’ living room atmosphere and the ‘new’ un-coiffed Jay.
Why not keep the show as it was before the move and remain at the 10PM slot?
Same show, different time.
Easy.
Will Conan be able to make jokes about Fox ?
Hasn’t Jay Leno screwed over enough late night hosts and acted like he had nothing to do with it?
Will anybody realize Jeff Zucker was only good at The TODAY (which is an unspoken insult in and of itself)
Will the Baby Boomers please leave the line up and retire?
Corporations. Do we really need the money ?
Conan should bolt for Fox. Leno should exit for ABC.
Don’t do it, Conan!