STEVE KROFT: So what’s with the beard?
CONAN O’BRIEN: That first day that I woke up and was no longer the host of The Tonight Show, I remember the first thought I had is I am not shaving. And– that was my small victory, you know. OK so I lost the Tonight Show but I’ll show them, I’ll stop shaving.
STEVE KROFT: This has been– quite a year.
CONAN O’BRIEN: Yeah. That’s it. We’re done. This was a lot of fun this year has been is still incomprehensible to me. The amount of stuff that’s happened in my life in the last year is– it’s going to take me a long time to process it.
KROFT VO: AFTER LEAVING THE TONIGHT SHOW IN JANUARY AND HANGING OUT AT HIS HOME TRYING TO FIGURE OUT WHAT HE WAS GOING TO DO WITH THE REST OF HIS LIFE, HE DECIDED THE BEST THERAPY WOULD BE TO GET OUT OF THE HOUSE AND BACK TO WORK.
HE ASSEMBLED A LOT OF HIS OLD STAFF, OPENED A TWITTER ACCOUNT, [Conan: THAT’S THE TWEET!!] AND BEGAN PLANNING A NATIONWIDE COMEDY TOUR, SOMETHING that HE HAD NEVER DONE BEFORE, AND ONE OF THE FEW THINGS HE WAS ALLOWED TO DO CONTRACTUALLY. WE MET UP WITH HIM IN SEATTLE.
KROFT: You must have been miserable for the last couple of months?
CONAN O’BRIEN: I went through some stuff. And I got very depressed at times. It was like a marriage breaking up suddenly, violently, quickly. And I was just trying to figure out what happened. When we started putting this tour together, I started to feel better almost immediately. And then this there is this, there is almost no better antidote to what I”ve just been through than to do this every night.
CONAN ON STAGE: Doing this tour though, this is a huge milestone for me. This is the first time anyone has paid to see me… oh they’ve paid to make me go away [laughs]…
CONAN PARODY “On the Road Again…”
KROFT VO: THE “LEGALLY PROHIBITED FROM BEING FUNNY ON TELEVISION TOUR” HAS BOOSTED HIS CONFIDENCE, KEPT HIM RELEVANT AND PROVIDED AN OUTLET FOR HIM TO EXPLORE HIS ANGER, DISAPPOINTMENT, AND ANXIETY WITH MOSTLY SELF-DEPRECATING HUMOR. (MUSIC: ON THE ROAD PARODY)
CONAN PARODIES “ON THE ROAD AGAIN”: “My own show again!! I just can’t wait to have my own show again. I’d even take a primetime show that’s on at 10 anything to have my own show again.
KROFT VO: AFTER 40 PERFORMANCES IN 32 CITIES IN THE US AND CANADA, THE TOUR WILL WIND UP NEXT MONTH AT RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL IN NEW YORK, RIGHT NEXT DOOR TO NBC’S CORPORATE HEADQUARTERS WHERE THIS WHOLE LATE NIGHT FIASCO WAS COOKED UP.
(Leno’s last Tonight Show) JAY: I just want to say: I couldn’t be happier – you were the only choice – you were the perfect choice – you have been an absolute gentleman in private and in the press…
[Audience yells: “CONAN ROCKS!”]
JAY: I agree, Conan rocks. Good luck, next week, my friend [SHAKE HANDS]
CONAN: Jay, thank you for everything… [BOTH STAND]
KROFT VO: LESS THAN ONE YEAR AFTER JAY LENO HANDED THE TONIGHT SHOW OFF TO CONAN O’BRIEN… NBC DECIDED TO CANCEL LENO’S DISASTROUS PRIME SHOW AND MOVE HIM BACK INTO HIS OLD TIME PERIOD AT 11:35 EASTERN… CONAN’S TONIGHT SHOW, WHICH WAS LOSING BADLY IN THE RATINGS TO DAVID LETTERMAN, WAS TO BE BUMPED BACK TO 12:05 THE NEXT MORNING.
STEVE KROFT: Was [it] in the back of your mind that, look, if I don’t do that well, they can just pop Leno back in.
CONAN O’BRIEN: I’m a paranoid person. And I think– I’m the kind of person that can come up with lots of negative scenarios. but I remembered thinking that seemed like– that was a stretch even for me.
KROFT VO: WHAT FOLLOWED WERE SOME UNPLEASANT DISCUSSIONS WITH NBC’S WEST COAST BRASS.
CONAN O’BRIEN: It just felt like the tone went very quickly from, “Take your time, we understand this is a tough decision,” to– (SNAPS HIS FINGERS) you know, “Let’s go.” and that probably helped me a little bit feel like, “You know what? This environment doesn’t feel right and I’ve been with these people a long time. And I don’t like– I really don’t like the way this is going. And when it started to get toxic and I started to feel that I’m not sure these– people even really want me here. Let’s just– let’s just– I can’t do it.
STEVE KROFT: Do you think they wanted you to leave?
CONAN O’BRIEN: Uh, yeah, that’s crossed my mind. Again, I don’t know how thought out this whole thing was. But if they wanted me to leave, [thumb’s up!] it worked.
LIZA O’BRIEN: This was just really, really hard for him. It– it was watching someone’s heart get broken.
KROFT VO: LIZA O’BRIEN, CONAN’S WIFE, WAS ONE OF HIS MAIN CONFIDANTS AND CLOSEST ADVISORS DURING THE DEBACLE.
STEVE KROFT: Did you approve of everything that he did?
LIZA O’BRIEN: A hundred percent, yeah.
STEVE KROFT: You thought he should’ve left?
LIZA O’BRIEN: Absolutely.
STEVE KROFT: What do you think of the way he was treated by NBC?
LIZA O’BRIEN: From my perspective, it felt like they never really gave him the job. That they said, “We’re going to give you this job in five years,” and they kept him with the company, and they– they– you know, he said, “I won’t go anywhere else, and I’ll keep working for you, and I’m in it for the long haul.” And it felt like they– they lost their nerve to really make a change, and– and that– that was too bad. It was a shame, ’cause it– it would’ve been great to see what he could’ve done if he had had their full support, and had some more time.
STEVE KROFT: You’ve got this non-disparagement agreement.
CONAN O’BRIEN: Do you have a copy: ’cause I haven’t read it in awhile. I keep one in–
STEVE KROFT: I have a copy somewhere in my bag.
CONAN O’BRIEN: -I keep one in my wallet. (LAUGHS)
STEVE KROFT: Re– you do?
CONAN O’BRIEN: Anytime people come up to me, “Hey, so what’s the deal with– with Jay Leno?” Hold on a second. (LAUGHTER) He’s a fine and good man. There we go, put that away.
STEVE KROFT: Can I assume that this interview would take a different tenor if that agreement did not exist?
CONAN O’BRIEN: No, it– I don’t think it would. The biggest thing people come up and say to me in gas stations and restaurants, I have so many people say this to me ”Hey partner, you got screwed.” I don’t– and I always tell them, “No, I didn’t. I didn’t get screwed. I’m– I’m fine. It just– it didn’t work out.”
STEVE KROFT: Well, you did get screwed.
CONAN: You think I got screwed?
STEVE KROFT: Well, I think most people think you got screwed. I mean, Jay Leno thinks you got screwed. Jay Leno thinks he got screwed.
CONAN O’BRIEN: How did he get screwed again? (LAUGHTER) Explain that part to me. I’m sorry. Jay’s got The Tonight Show. I have a beard and an inflatable bat. And I’m touring city to city. Who can (LAUGHTER) say who won and who lost? I’m laughing ’cause crying would be sad.
STEVE KROFT: Has Jay reached out to you?
CONAN O’BRIEN: No.
STEVE KROFT: No calls?
CONAN O’BRIEN: No I do not think I will be hearing from him We should get him in here. Is he—
STEVE KROFT: We should.
CONAN O’BRIEN: Is he going to– is he going to be a surprise walk-on?
STEVE KROFT: No, no, no.
CONAN O’BRIEN: Okay.
STEVE KROFT: But he call– if we– if you know his number, we can– I’m sure he’d come over.
CONAN O’BRIEN: He may have Caller ID. He won’t pick up.
STEVE KROFT: I think he– Leno would say—“Look, I was riding high. I was number one and I was still number one when I left and Conan made this deal with NBC and NBC said, ‘Okay, Jay, we’re going to take you off the air in five years regardless of whether you’re number one or number two or what.’” I think he felt like he was forced out by NBC at a time when he was– a strong number one and was pushed out the door. That’s his argument.
CONAN O’BRIEN: It’s hard for me to get inside his head and argue his side of this whole thing. I– I– here’s what I can say. I’m happy with my decision. I sleep well at night. And– I, you know– hope he’s happy with his decision.
STEVE KROFT: Do you think that Jay lobbied for this?
CONAN O’BRIEN: I don’t know. But– what I know is what happened which is that he– went and took that show back.
STEVE KROFT: Do you believe he acted honorably during all of this?
CONAN O’BRIEN: [EXHALES] I don’t think I can answer that. I don’t think– I can just tell you maybe how I would have handled it. And I would do it differently.
STEVE KROFT: You wouldn’t have come back on The Tonight Show.
CONAN O’BRIEN: If I had surrendered The Tonight Show and handed it over to somebody publicly and wished them well– and then– I don’t– would not have come back six months later. But that’s me, you know. Everyone’s got their own, you know, way of doing things.
STEVE KROFT: What would you have done?
CONAN O’BRIEN: Done something else, go someplace else. I mean, that’s just me.
KROFT VO: HE IS EQUALLY DISSAPOINTED WITH NBC, THE COMPANY WHERE HE WORKED MOST OF HIS ADULT LIFE, AND WITH NBC UNIVERSAL CHIEF JEFF ZUCKER WHO HE HAS KNOWN SINCE THEY WERE CLASSMATES AT HARVARD.
STEVE KROFT:Has Zucker called you?
CONAN O’BRIEN: No.
STEVE KROFT: You haven’t talked to Zucker since this offer was made to you?
CONAN O’BRIEN: That’s right. You know at some point I’m sure I’m going to bump into these people. And, you know, I’m not sure we’re going to be– have our arms around each other and drinking beer and singing old Irish fight songs. ‘Cause I don’t think they know any. But– (LAUGHTER) but– you know, I– I wish– this is going to sound crazy. I do wish these people well.
STEVE KROFT: Jeff Zucker was quoted as saying, “At the end of the day, the viewers voted.” And they didn’t like Conan as the host of The Tonight Show.
CONAN O’BRIEN: Can I take back what I just said?
STEVE KROFT: You take issue with that.
CONAN O’BRIEN: In my opinion, I don’t think that’s fair or accurate. But he’s entitled to his opinion. I think for anyone to say that the results were in after six months– that doesn’t ring true to me.
STEVE KROFT: They said that the– for the first time in history, The Tonight Show was losing money.
CONAN O’BRIEN: I don’t see how that’s, I honestly don’t see how that’s possible. It’s really not possible. It isn’t possible.
STEVE KROFT: Did you expect NBC to give you more of a chance?
CONAN O’BRIEN: Absolutely. (LAUGHTER) I– yes.
STEVE KROFT: Do you feel like it was a failure?
CONAN O’BRIEN: My Tonight Show? No. Absolutely not.
KROFT VO: CONAN DOES AGREE WITH NBC’S COMMENTS THAT IT WAS A BUSINESS DECISION MOTIVATED BY MONEY AND HE ACKNOWLEDGES THAT LENO HAD THE MORE EXPENSIVE CONTRACT AND WOULD HAVE BEEN EVEN HARDER TO LET GO.
STEVE KROFT: Some people have reported that NBC would have had to pay him 150 million dollars.
CONAN: Uh huh, yeah. So if you look at it that way and you’re working at say I don’t know General Electric and you tell them, “Uh you know there’s this to make that guy go away or there’s this, uh that decision’s probably pretty clear. And uh I think in my gut I honestly believe everybody knows, that’s what happened they did what they had to do and OK I get it. And the only thing I take exception to is subsequently people saying well you know Conan was losing money and you know actually he was murdering cats…What, you know, whatever
KROFT VO: LAST MONTH, CONAN FINALLY PULLED THE TRIGGER ON HIS FUTURE, RAISING SOME EYEBROWS BY SIGNING ON TO DO AN ELEVEN O’CLOCK SHOW FOR THE CABLE CHANNEL TBS AND NOT WITH A BROADCAST NETWORK.
CONAN O’BRIEN: I do not look down my nose at cable. And I think anyone who does isn’t paying attention to television these days. ‘Cause it is– this world is changing very quickly.
STEVE KROFT: You have $30 million that you didn’t have before. You’ve got– a very lucrative new– gig on TBS, which has– an audience that-
CONAN O’BRIEN: Very young audience.
STEVE KROFT: Custom-made for you.
CONAN O’BRIEN: Uh-huh (AFFIRM).
STEVE KROFT: It wasn’t all bad.
CONAN O’BRIEN: That’s the point I keep making. It’s crucial to me that anyone seeing this take– they take anything away from this it’s I’m fine. I’m doing great. I hope people still find me – comedically absurd and ridiculous. And– I– and I don’t regret anything. I do believe, and this might be my Catholic upbringing or Irish magical thinking, but I think things happen for a reason. I really do.
STEVE KROFT: I thought the Lutherans believed that.
CONAN O’BRIEN: Oh, my God. It is Lutherans. (LAUGHTER) Okay. I believe that if I experience any joy in life, I’ll go to hell. That’s what I believe. And — but you get my point.
CONAN PARODIES “I WILL SURVIVE”: “They threw me out… it happened fast, they said please don’t let the door hit your freckled, Irish ass… I hung around the house eating frosting from a jar, I got really into Gossip Girl and sleeping in my car… yes, I’ll survive… yes, I’ll survive …yeah, they kind of tried to kill me, but I made it out alive. I’ve got all my life to live… I have so many shows to give! Yeah I’ll survive… I will survive… I will survive!!!
######
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.






Wow. One post that says “stop whining” and suddenly 5 or 6 post come out to attack the poster. The reason for these sites is for people to post ther OPINIONS. Get it over guys, not everyone jumped on the bandwagon of COCO is a victim, COCO is a class act, LENO is not, COCO is so great.
Wakeup. He walked away with $40 Million dollars!!!! Stop saying “Leno done him dirty”, “big-jawed Jay”, and “anyone who says different is just putting forth sour grapes”. You people are so pathetic always having to take a side and criminalize someone with a differing opinion.
Leno DID walk away ONCE already, I’m curious as to why everyone expects him to do it twice? NBC changed their mind about COCO when he wasnt flexbile to their needs and somehow people blame LENO. NBC PAYS coco, coco doesnt pay NBC. The tonight show is owned by NBC, coco does not own The Tonight Show. If NBC wants to move The Tonight Show up or down a mere 30mins, they have the right to do so BECAUSE THEY OWN IT. Coco was brilliant. He played the game to gain attention, sympathy, a wider audience, $40 Million, a new show on TBS, a 6-month vacation, jeez guys…what didnt he get?
It’s hilarious how people will make excuses to justify someone’s actions just b/c they like them. The Tonight Show is bigger than any one host. Conan should have set aside his ego and allowed NBC to move the timeslot. Its kind of counter-intuitive for coco to claim ” I held to my convictions b.c I felt the tonight show and it’s heritage would be damaged if I were to allow NBC to change it’s time slot and I care too much about the tonight show to allow that to happen” while deciding to leave the show abruptly (no he was not forced to leave, he was asked/begged/pleaded to stay and simlpy move the time-slot, Putting NBC in a position to show re-runs for the next 6 months while they prepare to bring back Leno, allow Leno to return (which according to everyone on this site is a terrible decision b.c Leno sucks and Coco is the best almighty) and not to mention, another fiasco of negative media attention to “damage” the reputation of The Tonight Show.
Conan has played all of you idiots like a grand piano.
“The Tonight Show is bigger than any one host.” I agree with that point 100%. The rest of your statement, I don’t.
Why?
Because you said the following statement afterwards:
“Conan should have set aside his ego and allowed NBC to move the timeslot.”
Okay, so, Conan has an ego because he didn’t want to move The Tonight Show to fit in a show that you admitted was bigger than any one host. But wouldn’t the placement of The Jay Leno Show, a show that failed in prime-time, put that show OVER The Tonight Show? Wouldn’t that just be satisfying Jay Leno’s own ego? The fact is NBC never gave Conan a chance.
Six months compounded by a death of a major celebrity, a competitor’s feud with a political superstar, a revelation of a competitor’s sex scandal, and a health care debate that climaxed around Christmas time is hardly “a chance.”
We’re a few weeks ahead of what would have been Conan’s one-year anniversary of hosting The Tonight Show, but he’s going around the country on tour while Jay Leno is back hosting the show he didn’t have to leave in the first place (see, one minute detail you forgot to mention is that all of this could have been avoided in 2004 if Jay Leno just said “No” to NBC’s request to leave or just walked to ABC instead of badgering NBC to keep him on in any capacity) and has a closer ratings battle with Letterman than anyone expected.
“The reason for these sites is for people to post ther OPINIONS.”
Hmmmm . . . Appears to me that in your “opinion,” only those posters who defend Leno and think O’Brien is “whining” are allowed to “post ‘ther’ OPINIONS.” If someone has an opinion that disagrees with those premises, they are “so pathetic always having to take a side and criminalize someone with a differing opinion.” And exactly what are YOU doing with YOUR post? Oh, and to straighten out a few facts, Conan did not walk away with $40 mil. Most media accounts put the figure at $30 mil, of which he gave half to his staff, who also were screwed after having uprooted their lives to move from NY to LA when he took over the show. And no, NBC DIDN’T have the “right” to move the show to whatever time slot they felt like. Did you ever here of contracts? They had a contractual agreement with Conan to air the show in the 11:30 time slot, and that’s why they needed his approval to move it. He could have been a dick about it and refused and they would have had to either keep airing him until his contract ran out, or taken the show off the air completely until his contract ran out and keep paying his multimillion $ salary. He did the more honorable thing by allowing them to buy him out and securing a $15 mil “buyout” for his loyal staff, who really would have been screwed had NBC chosen to take the show off and simply keep paying only Conan for the rest of his contract term.
And aren’t YOU “mak[ing] excuses to justify someone’s (Leno’s) actions just b/c [you] like [him]?”
You obviously prefer Leno. You are entitled to your opinion. I, along with most of the other posters here, as well as the producers of this 60 Minutes segment, and a sizeable chunk of America, disagree with you. Certainly, Leno is doing okay in the ratings for now, so obviously, a sizeable chunk also agrees with you, and that’s good for him. I will do what I’ve done all along, which is to watch Letterman and if Conan is on at the same time, flip back and forth between the two, and if Conan is on later, watch his show if I happen to still be up. I wish them (and all the other late-night hosts–Kimmel, Ferguson, Fallon) all the luck & happiness in the world. I couldn’t care less about what happens to Leno (or Carson Daly–I guess I have to take “ALL the other” back).
The guy is truly one of a kind, the interview shows him just as he is. He has the right to say he’s been done wrong but beyond the contract still classy enough to take a higher road.
Conan is a winner and deserved the tonight show spot.
I came away from watching the interview that Conan is one great guy (but I already knew that). It’s telling to me that not once did it come up now or before (I don’t think anyway) that there was a plan for Conan to remove Jimmy Fallon from his berth at the Late Show. To me, that tells just the kind of person Conan is and when he says he would never do what Jay did (take back ‘his’ show) he means it because he could have done it and didn’t.
Compare Conan’s “60 Minutes” turn with Leno’s Oprah interview, and it’s pretty clear who the winner is.
When Conan observed that NBC didn’t give his “Tonight Show” much of a chance, especially considering how NBC napalmed his lead-ins, he could have pointed out that Leno’s “Tonight Show” six months into his tenure was getting soundly beaten by Letterman, and there was serious talk of firing Jay over poor ratings. But Conan didn’t. He could also have pointed out that Jay is now doing no better in the demo than Conan, despite having healthy 1000pm programming on his side again. But Conan didn’t. He could also have pointed out that Leno at the WH Correspondents Dinner was about as funny as gastrointestinal distress, but he didn’t.
Conan = class act. Leno = over.
Sorry. Not true. CONAN’s late-night show was actually losing ground to CRAIG FERGUSON at 12:30 long before “Big Red” ever stepped in for Jay.
Conan had a funny, inspired, occasionally brilliant show at 12:30 — but it wasn’t a mainstream hit and never could be. Likewise, he was never, EVER — in this world or the next — going to go over big with “Mr. & Mrs. North America” at 11:30. His humor is too Harvard, too conceptual, too weird.
Not that the dust has cleared, Jay Leno is getting trashed left, right, and center and I am goddamned if I know why. All Leno did was step aside when his show was #1 to make room for a younger upstart who could not cut the mustard, then return to said show when failed upstart was asked to leave.
How the hell is that out of line?
At the end of the day, the interview just kind of bummed me out – it seems like conan has cracked a bit – i came off feeling really sad for him… not sad like he is a victim, more sad like he is a nutcase… i hope he puts this behind him and moves on. and i am glad that i didnt catch the tour – it looked really depressing.
At this point the only thing left to do is for President Obama to declare a national day of mourning so the entire country can finally express its grief and find closure over the fact that Conan’s boyhood dream of hosting the Tonight Show ended earlier than he wanted because he couldn’t beat Nightline in the ratings. NBC should devote the entire day to raising money through a national telethon to supplement the millions of dollars Conan and his manager, Gavin Polone, received in compensation. We as a nation owe it to the two of them for failing to find the show funny.
I thought he seemed sad and angry. He looked down a lot. Sincere, of course, which is nice. I’m on Conan’s side, but just wish he had been funnier in this interview. I’m not sure why he gave it. What good does it do him? He’s not whining, exactly, but he’s airing his dirty laundry on national TV and seeming “heart-broken” as his wife said. We just had plenty of his dirty laundry dumped on us a couple months back! It almost felt like he Poviched himself by doing this interview. “Conan, in the case of the Tonight Show…you are…NOT the son…” I hope the TBS thing kicks ass, though.
He was supposed to HOST 60 Minutes, but they jerked it away from him!
Somewhere along the way Conan will realize leaving the Tonight Show was his decision and in the long run he will end up as the winner with a new show at TBS, more creative freedom and a younger audience.
You can stop whining anytime now Conan. NBC has a long history of treating people crappy. Ask Letterman. Ask Leno what’s it like to get pulled out of a show that he made #1 for over a decade. Who does that to a #1 show? NBC does. Take your free millions Conan and go to your little cable show where TBS will be happy with your niche audience 1.0 ratings, and you have freedom to do whatever you want to do. You’re a hard guy to feel sorry for.
does anyone else share my opinion that everyone came out dirtier after all of this? all these hosts are extremely wealthy egomaniacs and it’s pretty hard to feel any empathy for their respective “plights”. both jay and conan are marginally funny, and i’m sure zucker and the nbc brass are the corporate suit douchebags that “30 rock” portrays them as.
yawn. late night talk shows are just as passe as network television anyway.
Re: all the talk about Conan getting millions to “go away” and stay off of TV for a while…I believe he would give every penny back if he could remain the host of The Tonight Show at it’s 11:35 time slot.
Now that I’ve watched the interview and read these comments here, I think the big problem is that the Conan-vs-Jay story is now old news. Interviewers are too screwed to do much research these days, so Conan has to be the one to push them to move on to something new.
If Conan sticks to a 2-sentence, lawyer-written statement about the Tonight Show war, and he comes up with a better elevator speech about the new TBS show, then he’ll get more mileage out of TV interviews.
What a goofball!
Conan is my role model. Way to go, Guy!
1. Conan took the Tonight Show away from Jay Leno five years earler.
2. The original power push included permanently dumping Broadway Video as a producing partner.
3. In doing so he dumped Lorne Michaels. Lorne Michaels. Would anyone here know what Conan O’Brien looks like without what Lorne Michaels did for him? Giving him that unbelievable shot with no experience whatsoever? Such ungrateful maneuvering is why Carson froze out Joan Rivers permanently. Letterman’s loyalty to Carson paid off. Letterman would never have maneuvered so ungraciously and undermined a Carson-like mentor like Lorne. Conan and his people ruthlessly pursued the Tonight Show as some kind of Harvard birthright, as a putsch on Lorne (don’t tell me that S.N.L. wasn’t in the back of Gavin’s, Jeff Ross’, Conan’s production company’s minds;) Conan and his people blew it and they’re playing the sanctimonious victims.
4. Has anyone received more time to work out their mojo on the air, to accumulate experience in the face of such painful and obvious inexperience, than NBC and Lorne did when “Coco’s” (like the clown from Ringling Bros; grow up, man) show first started?
5. Coco. Your instincts for material were excellent but you were a creepy show-off interviewer (and not particularly funny as an ad libber; Steve Allen you weren’t) more interested in showcasing yourself than your guests.
6. Your people continue to make mistake after mistake. You should have re-grouped; taken some time; figured out what you were doing wrong; considered getting rid of an overpaid “yes” man or two, and developed a more sophisticated product rather than go out and throw a party for college juniors and the seventies A.O.R./louche Lampoon crowd, rather than rush to be the late night lead-in on TBS – “Dinner and a Movie” anyone?
7. Your first night why don’t you tell Jack Paar’s “W.C.”/watercloset/fight with Standards and Practices joke that made him walk off the Tonight Show in a similar huff – in this way you can quit that night. Ideally. (Paar came back to late night TV at ABC some time later. He bombed.)
8. According to your terms (Coco) the Tonight Show wasn’t the Tonight Show unless it started at 11:35. Throughout its history it started at different times. In the Carson era it was 11:30. If one follows your rationalizations, your crybaby “logic,” you NEVER technically hosted the Tonight Show to begin with.
9. The only late night host who has a beat on young people (and I love Letterman) is Jimmy Fallon. Plus his monologues are not those self-congratulatory and uncomfortable shows that yours are and he is the appealing performer that you will never be.
10. America has voted : Multimillionaires with a “martyr complex” need not apply.
11. New York’s perspective on this whole affair is completely different than L.A.’s.
Oh Bentley, why are you so critical of Conan?
So, he went to NBC 5 years ago and told them to fire Jay and to give him, Conan, Jay’s job. But Jay didn’t have to act like a gentleman and pretend that he agrees to this robbery! He should have whined and complained like Conan and his supporters do!
And Lorne Michaels! So, he created Conan in the first place. So, he got Conan his Late Show. But did you expect to continue to own the Late Show?! That would have kept Conan from making more money.
Michaels and Leno stood in Conan’s way. So, Conan stabbed them. That is life!
But when NBC pushed Conan’s Tonight Show by 30 minutes – that’s another matter! That’s a crime! Why? Because
Michaels and Leno are old geezers. Old, talented geezers. In the case, of Michaels, old brilliant geezers. But geezers. And Conan is young. A young backstabber, who manipulated everybody into feeling sorry for him.
You’re an idiot. If you’ve seen anything conan has said, he has always said that he was home at NBC for years and he understood their decision and would “survive.” HE didn’t manipulate people into feeling sorry for him, he turned it into the best opportunity he could. He made (and still does)jokes at his own expense, as was always his style. Maybe you should actually know what you’re talking about before you spout your hate all over the internet. I feel sorry for you for being so full of hate.
I’m neutral on Conan but did anyone notice how he clapped his hands after every joke? It was an irritating habit that one hopes he’ll correct before his next show.
I never thought “it was time to go” for Leno in the first place. Whoever set up a 5 year deal with Conan having to take over was the real idiot here. They should have let Conan walk if that’s what he wanted.
Yes they should have let Conan walk if they weren’t going to have the backbone to stand behind their own decisions (but then, that in itself would be standing behind a decision, and so that is why they were so incapable of doing so).
By the way “Bentley”, you made some intelligent arguments and insights that I do not agree with. Luckily I am able to disregard your well thought out arguments because they were grouped in with your suggestion that Carson’s show airing at 11:00 rather than 11:35 is somehow comparable to Conan’s show airing after midnight, and therefore a completely different day.
I say that the true loser is The Tonight Show, which now must endure who knows how many more years of garbage. I’d like to say that show has the staying power to endure, but compounded with the negativity that now surrounds the show, I have my doubts.
Johnny Carson is perpetually rolling in his grave. And the other true loser is America; an America that will never again know the phenomenon that has been The Tonight Show. Carson knew before he died that his show would find it’s way into the hands of a worthy successor, and he called Conan personally to congratulate him. He died with one less thing to disturb his peace. Now look what they’ve done.
It’s like the wisdom of Solomon: threaten to cut the child in half and the true mother will forfiet her claim in the hopes that no harm will befall her child. Conan proved he is the true and rightful heir. If you don’t agree, you need to brush up on those Bible studies.
I truly believe that Conan’s true regret is having to watch with the rest of us as The Tonight Show becomes a pathetic shell of what it always has been. All he could do was ensure that he had as little to do with it as possible I guess.