Contracts
I believe that Jay has a two-year contract. If NBC cancels his show, he still gets a huge payout. Conan's contract allows them to show him the door for something in the neighborhood of $40M, which is why Jay was pushed into primetime.
Contracts can be broken, of course, but I doubt either will be headed anywhere soon.
Jay's ratings will stay consistent (consistently bad). He still runs neck-and-neck with ABC on most nights and costs about a quarter of what a scripted program costs. His ratings will spike every so often, crater periodically, and rebound. It's not a program that expects a 4.0 demo rating.
Once Comcast buys 51% of NBC, NBC will have even more cable channels and that is the future. Broadcasting is dead. Nichecasting is the future. Oxygen, Bravo, MSNBC, CNBC, Syfy, CI, Sleuth, WeatherChannel, and a few others will become the focus of the new Comcast.
NBC will have 4 hours "Today", four hours of "Tonight", extensive sports programming, and two hours of Prime Time.
NBC needs to fix 8-10PM before worrying about the other 22 hours a day.
ixnay said:Is NBC contractually committed to a full season of Leno? I mean, he did host Tonight for 17 years and is considered an "institution" at the Peacock (in Burbank if not at 30 Rock), no?
I believe that Jay has a two-year contract. If NBC cancels his show, he still gets a huge payout. Conan's contract allows them to show him the door for something in the neighborhood of $40M, which is why Jay was pushed into primetime.
Contracts can be broken, of course, but I doubt either will be headed anywhere soon.
Jay's ratings will stay consistent (consistently bad). He still runs neck-and-neck with ABC on most nights and costs about a quarter of what a scripted program costs. His ratings will spike every so often, crater periodically, and rebound. It's not a program that expects a 4.0 demo rating.
Once Comcast buys 51% of NBC, NBC will have even more cable channels and that is the future. Broadcasting is dead. Nichecasting is the future. Oxygen, Bravo, MSNBC, CNBC, Syfy, CI, Sleuth, WeatherChannel, and a few others will become the focus of the new Comcast.
NBC will have 4 hours "Today", four hours of "Tonight", extensive sports programming, and two hours of Prime Time.
NBC needs to fix 8-10PM before worrying about the other 22 hours a day.