justpassingthough said:To add to the story, "Tonight" is allegedly headed back to New York and 30 Rock, where it began, according to NBC executives who are working towards a deal for Jimmy Fallon:
http://tv.yahoo.com/news/report-jimmy-fallon-replace-jay-leno-tonight-show-200700696.html
Not included in this information is any expansion beyond the current hour-long format currently in place.
Personally, I think its a big mistake to move this institution back to New York, because they will lose some of the edge they have in booking Hollywood-centric guests on the show, and Jimmy may need all the big names he can get when/if he takes over for Jay. Conan doesn't seem to have lost any steam with doing his show from Los Angeles, but at least he doesn't have to deal with the East Coast winters (I'm speaking here as a lifelong Angeleno, so I'm biased)
justpassingthough said:To add to the story, "Tonight" is allegedly headed back to New York and 30 Rock, where it began, according to NBC executives who are working towards a deal for Jimmy Fallon:
http://tv.yahoo.com/news/report-jimmy-fallon-replace-jay-leno-tonight-show-200700696.html
Not included in this information is any expansion beyond the current hour-long format currently in place.
Personally, I think its a big mistake to move this institution back to New York, because they will lose some of the edge they have in booking Hollywood-centric guests on the show, and Jimmy may need all the big names he can get when/if he takes over for Jay. Conan doesn't seem to have lost any steam with doing his show from Los Angeles, but at least he doesn't have to deal with the East Coast winters (I'm speaking here as a lifelong Angeleno, so I'm biased)
bpatrick said:While I sometimes wonder why ABC, CBS, and NBC haven't
followed Fox's lead and given 10 PM (ET) back to the affiliates,
I don't know if it's necessary if the Tonight Show goes back to
90 minutes. After all, NBC doesn't give back 10 PM on Saturday
nights; "Saturday Night Live" starts at (actually) 11:29 PM and
runs until 1:02 AM. So why couldn't the Tonight Show run from
11:35-1:05, and NBC could still give 1:05-7 AM back to the affiliates
(of course that raises the question of what happens to "Early Today")?
F.M.Hertz said:Conan O'Brien wanted to stay in New York when he got the "Tonight Show," but NBC insisted that he would do it from L.A. I think that Conan would have been successful in some part to broadcasting from New York.
F.M.Hertz said:Bad arguments. Letterman has done well in New York for over 30 years. Besides, when stars are promoting movies and TV shows, almost all of their publicity tours have a stop in New York.
Conan O'Brien wanted to stay in New York when he got the "Tonight Show," but NBC insisted that he would do it from L.A. I think that Conan would have been successful in some part to broadcasting from New York.
I think that this is a good move, and might help NBC's ratings fortunes in Late Night. Although Leno is still #1 his numbers aren't that same as they were before he left the first time. Plus, NBC is looking at Jimmy Kimmel's rising numbers at 11:35 and are looking to stop the bleeding.
F.M.Hertz commented: said:"We all know nobody with accent is going to get 11:35." Well, explain David Frost who did a show for Westinghouse back in the day.
Joseph_Gallant said:F.M.Hertz commented: said:"We all know nobody with accent is going to get 11:35." Well, explain David Frost who did a show for Westinghouse back in the day.
I don't think any station that carried Group W/Westinghouse's syndicated "David Frost Show" (1969-72) ever aired it at 11:30 at night (ET/PT).
I do know the then-WNEW-5 New York (and probably the other Metromedia independents) aired it in prime-time, but in most cities, it was shown in daytime (usually late afternoon as a lead-in to early-evening local newscasts).
Group W's WBZ-4 Boston aired Frost from 4:30 to 6 P.M. Merv Griffin (who had ended his Group W syndicated show to jump to CBS in mid-1969) had been in the same timeslot on WBZ for the previous three years.
In fact, Frost was Griffin's replacement in the Group W production/syndication lineup, and also replaced Griffin on many of the stations that carried him.
Frost's show ended when Griffin left CBS to return to syndication; many stations that had aired Frost elected to go with Griffin instead. Group W saw the market for Frost dry-up, so Frost was cancelled.