Jay Leno

The Larry Sanders Show

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

With all of the talk about the late night talk show wars during the past few months, one name has been left out of the discussion.

Larry Sanders.

From 1992 to 1998,
The Larry Sanders Show aired on HBO. It was a look at a fictional late night talk show hosted by Larry Sanders, played by Garry Shandling.

Occasionally, episodes featured scenes from the actual talk show hosted by Sanders in front of a television audience.

Stars played themselves.

Dana Delany. Sharon Stone. Dana Carvey.

For advice about navigating the shark-infested waters of the entertainment industry and his own staff, Larry frequently turned to veteran producer Artie for advice. Rip Torn played Artie while Jeffrey Tambor played sidekick announcer Hank Kingsley.

Jeremy Piven played Jerry, a young writer on Larry’s staff. Years later, a mini-reunion occurred when Jeffrey Tambor played himself on an episode of
Entourage while Piven played his agent, Ari Gold.

The Larry Sanders Show debuted in the firestorm of the early 1990’s when Johhny Carson left The Tonight Show, David Letterman started a late night franchise at CBS, and the audience split its loyalties between Jay Leno and David Letterman.

The area was ripe for exploration as the public became more aware of the business side of show business.

But
The Larry Sanders Show explored another side beyond advertisers, demographics, and ratings. This side features topics familiar to every industry -- insecurity, office politics, and the high pressure of job performance in an increasingly competitive atmosphere.

Year in Review

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

As 2009 turns into 2010, we take a look back at the year in television.

We saw Ziva David leave her role as a Mossad liaison in
NCIS and return to the Mossad full-time under the reign of her father, Mossad Chief Eli David.

After she got captured during a mission in North Africa, the NCIS crew rescued her.

And Ziva returned to NCIS as a full-fledged member of the team, thereby abandoning any remaining and confusing loyalties to her father.

We met the team’s Los Angeles counterparts in a crossover appearance that set the stage for the spinoff
NCIS: Los Angeles.

We saw Sarah Palin confront David Letterman in the media because of a joke about her daughter’s pregnancy.

And we saw David Letterman in another media controversy rooted in his extracurricular relationships with female staff members.

We saw Jay Leno move to 10:00 pm with the slogan
It’s About Time. We saw Conan O’Brien move into The Tonight Show host position with a new studio at NBC Universal.

We saw Jimmy Fallon take over Conan’s old job as the host of
Late Night.

We saw Julianna Marguiles return to network prime time as the scorned spouse of an adulterous Chicago politician in
The Good Wife. Her character returns to the practice of law after a 15-year absence so she can support her children.

We saw a story line span all three
CSI shows during the November sweeps period.

On
Entourage, we saw Ari Gold merge his agency, Miller Gold, with the agency of his mentor and nemesis, Terrence McQuewick.

We saw Johnny Chase get his big break with a network holding deal for a television series to be centered on him.

We saw Eric fold up his small talent management company to take a job with a legendary talent management company.

We saw Turtle and Jamie-Lynn Sigler break up.

And we saw Eric and Sloane get engaged.

On cable news channels, we saw a balloon that looked like a huge Jiffy Pop container travel across Colorado and we feared that a six-year-old boy was inside the balloon.

We soon learned that no one was inside. It was a hoax so the parents could get media attention and pitch themselves for a reality show.

We saw Jon and Kate split up.

We saw
Southland get cancelled before its second season even aired one episode because its content is suited for a 10:00 pm broadcast time slot, but NBC does not have that time slot available. TNT picked up the show.

We saw the return of sitcom favorites.

Courtney Cox in
Cougar Town.

Ed O’Neill in
Modern Family.

Kelsey Grammer in
Hank.

Patricia Heaton in
The Middle.

Ray Romano in
Men of a Certain Age.

We saw Jim and Pam get married on
The Office.

We saw the end of
King of the Hill and the launch of its replacement -- Family Guy spinoff The Cleveland Show.

We saw
The Simpsons begin its 20th season.

We saw the debut of Amy Poehler’s comedy,
Parks and Recreation.

We saw Chevy Chase finally ready for prime time as part of the ensemble cast of NBC’s rookie comedy,
Community.

And we saw America’s favorite high school football coach, Eric Taylor, begin the next chapter of his career in
Friday Night Lights. Same town -- Dillon, Texas. Different high school -- East Dillon High.

We saw unknown Taylor Schilling capture our hearts as the lead character in
Mercy, Veronica Callahan, a nurse at the fictional Mercy Hospital in Jersey City, New Jersey.

We saw
Saturday Night Live begin its 35th season.

We saw a remake of
The Prisoner, the revolutionary late 1960’s drama.

And we saw a
Seinfeld reunion of sorts on Curb Your Enthusiasm.

We said hello to Royal Pains, White Collar, and Castle.

We said goodbye to
Monk, The Unusuals, and Life on Mars.

We also said goodbye to icons of the 60’s, 70’s, and 80’s.

Soupy Sales, who entertained children of the 1960’s as an unofficial precursor to Pee Wee Herman.

Farrah Fawcett, who inspired women in the late 1970’s to wear their hair long and feathered.

And Michael Jackson, who helped launch MTV in the 1980’s with videos that told stories.

2010 is just around the corner. If it’s anything like 2009, it should take us on quite an odyssey in the world of television.

Thursday Nights at 10pm

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Now that
The Jay Leno Show is in the 10 pm time slot on NBC, a look back at Thursday nights at 10 on the Peacock Network reveals an amazing consistency of quality for nearly thirty years.

Hill Street Blues debuted in 1981 and changed the production of television drama.

Story lines became story arcs and lasted several episodes.

Moving cameras shifted seamlessly from one set of characters having a conversation to another set of characters. Gone were standard cuts.

And sometimes the good guys lost.

Hill Street Blues focused on the gritty, tough, and somewhat chaotic life in an unnamed metropolitan precinct, specifically, an area known as ‘The Hill.’ However, early visual evidence indicates Chicago and early dialogue indicates New York City.

Created by Steven Bochco and Michael Kozoll,
Hill Street Blues ended its run in 1987.

Just a year prior,
L.A. Law premiered in the Friday at 10 pm time slot following Miami Vice. Steven Bochco teamed with Terry Louise Fisher to create this show about yuppie lawyers in Los Angeles.

When
Hill Street Blues ended, L.A. Law took its Thursday at 10 pm time slot and enjoyed a successful tenure until its end in 1994. Eight years of serious legal issues, comical legal issues, and everyday legal issues.

ER continued the tradition of quality drama. It captivated the audience immediately upon its debut in September 1994. And it secured the NBC Must See TV Thursday night programming block.

Revived from an old movie script by Michael Crichton, the
ER pilot showed life in a Chicago emergency room on Saint Patrick’s Day.

Casts changed. Characters died. Quality continued.

For fifteen years.

An astounding record for a television show.

Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law, and ER won several Emmy awards, broke ground in the issues they covered and how they covered them, and captured our hearts.

For twenty-eight years, from 1981 to 2009

From Captain Frank Furillo’s leadership to Sergeant Phil Esterhaus’ avuncular delivery at Roll Call.

From Arnie Becker’s sleazy tactics as McKenzie Brackman’s family law attorney to Arnie Becker’s heart of gold in acting like a big brother at times to mentally retarded office worker Benny.

From Mark Greene’s quiet determination to practice emergency medicine in the face of massive bureaucracy, office politics, and budget concerns to John Carter’s slow emergence from clueless intern to confident ER chief.

And hey, one more thing -- Let’s be careful out there.

Mid-Year Review

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

And so 2009 is officially half-finished.

What kind of half-year has it been?

A half-year of transition.

We saw a transition of power from a republican president to a democratic president -- the first-ever minority to be elected to the highest office in the land.

We saw a transition of power in the coveted
Tonight Show host job from Jay Leno to Conan O'Brien.

O'Brien passed the torch at
Late Night to Jimmy Fallon.

And we saw a transition of power in the technological sense from antenna television to digital television.

A half-year of controversy.

Controversy was in abundant supply during the first half of '09.

Because of a joke during a monologue about Sarah Palin's daughter getting pregnant by New York Yankee Alex Rodriguez during the Palin's visit to New York City, David Letterman went from television star to hot-button topic.

Although he meant Bristol Palin, the daughter who got pregnant by her then boyfriend Levi Johnston last year, 14-year-old Willow Palin was the daughter accompanying her mom at the Yankee game.

The Palins took action and belittled Letterman.

A clarification of sorts took place a few days later with Letterman showing self-deprecation, humor, and a literal wink at the audience that the controversy was nonsense.

The Palins took action and again belittled Letterman.

But after a weekend of thought, deliberation, and analysis, David Letterman gave a sincere apology the following Monday night.

The Palins accepted Letterman's apology.

We saw Miss California lose her crown because of an honest answer to a politically-charged question.

A half-year of television shows that deserved a longer chance to find an audience.

In
Life on Mars, the series finale revealed that Sam Tyler was actually an astronaut on the first manned to Mars. The events he experienced in 1973 were triggered by a meteor shower wreaking havoc with virtual reality program. He was supposed to be a New York City cop in 2008, but the meteor incident caused the virtual reality glitch that sent him to 1973.

We saw
The Unusuals, another solid program with depth of characters, unique stories, and realistic relationships set in the fictional 2nd precinct of Manhattan. This show starring Adam Goldberg and Terry Kinney looks like it will not be renewed.

A half-year of veteran sitcoms and dramas setting up story lines that were months, sometimes years in the making.

We saw Michael Scott, inefficient manager extraordinaire, attempt to start a paper company with receptionist Pam and temp Ryan. He sought to compete with Dunder Mifflin, only to have Dunder Mifflin buy the company on
The Office.

We saw Barney and Robin reveal their feelings for each other on
How I Met Your Mother.

We saw Justin propose to Rebecca and we saw Rebecca say
Yes on Brothers and Sisters.

And we saw Michael J. Fox in an Emmy-worthy guest role on
Rescue Me as Dwight, the paraplegic, pill-popping boyfriend of Tommy Gavin figurative ex-wife Janet, played by Denis Leary and Andrea Roth respectively.

A half-year of goodbyes.

In the space of a few days, we lost three legends -- an angel, an icon, and a voice. Farrah Fawcett, Michael Jackson, and Ed McMahon.

If the second half of '09 is anything like the first half, then fasten your seat belts, it's going to be a bumpy ride.

Late Night

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

In the late 1980's and early 1990's, the late night television arena was a free-for-all.

With Johnny Carson leaning toward the exit, Jay Leno and David Letterman battled for the dream job of any comedian -- host of
The Tonight Show.

Bill Carter captures the behind-the-scenes action in his excellent book --
The Late Shift.

Arsenio Hall attracted younger viewers when he debuted the first-run syndicated
The Arsenio Hall Show in 1989.

With friends including Magic Johnson and Eddie Murphy, Arsenio redefined 'hip' in the era of Vanilla Ice, Milli Vanilli and the first George Bush.

As Jimmy Durante used to say,
Everybody wants to get into the act.

CBS attempted to bring a powerhouse game show host into its nighttime galaxy.

Wheel of Fortune host Pat Sajak got the 11:30 pm job on the Eye Network. He competed with Johnny Carson for a little more than a year from January 1989 to April 1990.

It was a standard talk show format.

Pat Sajak performed a monologue.

Dan Miller was the announcer.

Couch for guests on the left, desk for host on the right.

Miller and Sajak worked together on WSM-TV newscasts in Nashville back in the day.

Tom Scott was the band leader.

Scott was also the band leader for another short-lived offering --
The Chevy Chase Show. It debuted in the Fall of 1993 concurrently with Late Night with Conan O'Brien.

Radio DJ Rick Dees gave late night a try on ABC with
Into the Night. It debuted in 1990.

Like Sajak, Dees' tenure could be measured in months, Chase's in weeks.

The Arsenio Hall Show ended in 1994 after a five-year run.

During this era, television entered a transition phase with a passing of the baton to the future custodians of late night television.

Why didn't these shows work?

Perhaps Sajak was overexposed because of his daily air time on
Wheel of Fortune.

Perhaps Dees simply couldn't compete with Arsenio for the younger viewers.

Perhaps Arsenio Hall got too political during the aftermath of the Los Angeles riots in 1992.

And, of course, the Johnny factor.

America could always revert to Johnny for familiarity, which breeds comfort.

At least the decision makers tried to take on the late night Goliath. In the cases of Dees and Sajak, the networks jumped into the fray. For Arsenio Hall, the strength of a network was absent.

Now, late night is dominated by the next generation -- Conan O'Brien, Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel, Craig Ferguson, and the new eminence grise, David Letterman.

The Leno Legacy

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

In what might be the classiest act in television history, Jay Leno explained the legacy of his tenure at
The Tonight Show last night in the final moments of his last show.

He reminded us that the first
Tonight Show staff baby born during his reign as host occurred just weeks into his tenure in May 1992. Trombone player Matt Fenders and his wife Terry had a baby girl named Hannah. Leno brought the 17-year-old girl on stage and she gave him cookies. He revealed that she has baked him cookies since she was four years old.

Then, Leno recounted several marriages that occurred between staff members. And he proudly raised the curtain to show all the children born to those
Tonight Show marriages -- 68 children in total.

Leno proudly declared the marriages and children to be his legacy. He beamed as he said that when the kids ask how their parents met, the answer will be,
They met on the stage of The Tonight Show.

You can add grace, class, and integrity to Mr. Leno's legacy.

Heeere's Conan!

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Tonight is Jay Leno's last night as host of
The Tonight Show.

Leno enjoyed great success because of his immense dedication to the craft of comedy, a Must See TV lineup lead-in with powerhouses
Law & Order, Law & Order: SVU, Friends, Seinfeld, and ER, and a 1995 appearance by Hugh Grant after his arrest for soliciting a prostitute that turbocharged ratings.

But great success came with a cost. Leno's tenure at
The Tonight Show will be forever marked by intense competition with Late Show with David Letterman preceded by the confusion over which comedian would succeed Johnny Carson. Additionally, the furor created by Leno's manager Helen Kushnick when she was the initial Executive Producer of The Tonight Show triggered her dismissal only four months into the show. A seventeen-year relationship between the likable comedian and tough entertainment manager evaporated. This, after building Jay Leno's career, increasing his exposure, and taking him from small clubs to the most coveted job in comedy.

Leno will be gone from late night after tonight's broadcast, but not from NBC. In a few months, we will see him on prime time as the host of a Monday-Friday 10:00 pm show (9:00 pm in the Midwest).

Ironically, this is the same time slot that NBC offered to David Letterman after they gave
The Tonight Show to Jay Leno. Letterman refused and went to CBS.

A Jay Leno talk-variety show in prime time will be cheaper to produce with more original shows than a drama. But is NBC foregoing potential licensing dollars by not investing in a drama?

To put a spin on a well-known phrase, prime time will tell.

Conan O'Brien takes the baton of
The Tonight Show on Monday, June 1st.

John Stamos

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

John Stamos has a deep television resume indicative of an actor destined for television icon status enjoyed by the likes of Robert Urich and Tony Danza.

Starting in daytime television, Stamos earned his heartthrob stripes in the early 1980's as Blackie Parrish on
General Hospital.

In 1984, Stamos tackled prime time with Dreams, a short-lived CBS show about a rock and roll group trying to get its big break.

Later in the Reagan decade, Stamos partnered with veteran television actor Jack Klugman in
You Again?, an NBC sitcom about a teenager who moves into his father's home after a long estrangement.

You Again? lasted one season.

The third prime time's a charm.

Stamos struck gold with
Full House, an ABC sitcom that served as an anchor for the alphabet network's TGIF lineup.

The three father figures on
Full House present distinct personalities. Bob Saget plays Danny Tanner, the actual father of the three daughters on the show.

Danny is the practical one.

Dave Coulier plays Joey Gladstone.

Joey is the childlike one.

Stamos plays Uncle Jesse.

Jesse is the creative one. Following his musical background, Stamos infused his character with a musical bent.


Full House lasted eight years, from 1987 to 1995.

Stamos' post-
Full House television work includes the short-lived 2001 entry Thieves and Jake In Progress, a one hour drama with strong comedy elements that debuted in 2005.

Jake In Progress stars Stamos in the title role as a successful New York City publicist who reexamines his approach to women, that is to say, his womanizing.

Even a terrific supporting cast did not provide enough fuel to let Jake progress on his journey of finding his other half, his soulmate, his counterpart. Wendie Malick of
Just Shoot Me and Dream On plays Stamos' boss.

After a guest spot on
Friends in 2003, Stamos joined the cast of NBC's long-running drama ER as Tony Gates, Initially a recurring character, Gates became a fixture at Cook County General Hospital. Initially a paramedic, Gates became a doctor.

Stamos also appears in the 2007 HBO documentary
Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project. He joins a roster of legendary interviewees, including the Smothers Brothers, Robin Williams, Bob Newhart, Martin Scorsese, Regis Philbin, Jay Leno, Debbie Reynolds, Clint Eastwood, and Carl Reiner.

Stamos talks kindly about Rickles' impact on younger entertainers. He expands his comments to include others of Rickles' generation.

In a separate interview, Stamos'
Full House co-star Bob Saget also appears on the documentary. And the two separately square off with some choice comments about each other. In essence, Saget claims that Stamos simply kisses the ring of Rickles, to put the phrase euphemestically.

John Stamos has a resume that is synonymous with television. One major hit in the form of
Full House has not made him a one-hit wonder. Although his characters don't always know how to go about doing the right thing, they always want to do the right thing. They try. Which is just about all you can ask for.