Tuned In

Jay Leno, Martyr

In all the NBC late-night drama, I’ve made a point of not treating Jay Leno as the bad guy. I was not a fan of The Jay Leno Show nor of his Tonight Show, but a lot of other people were, and he did a good job making a show that they loved. He didn’t ask to get bumped off the Tonight Show, nor can I blame him for wanting it back.

That said, Jay’s monologue jokes about the situation since it exploded last week have been, if not tactless, at the very least weird:

In Jay’s defense, he seemed uncomfortable giving his monologue last night, as if, understandably, he’d rather be talking about anything else. And he probably knows that, over at CBS, Dave Letterman has been savaging him more viciously than ever over the whole fiasco. But that doesn’t explain Jay and his writers taking a comic approach that casts him as the victim.

For starters, there’s been his line from the beginning that NBC was “cancelling” The Jay Leno Show. Um, no, Jay.  NBC’s plan of record is to move The Jay Leno Show from 10 p.m. to 11:35 p.m. Rescheduling is not cancellation, especially when it involves returning you to the time slot you wanted to keep in the first place.

I get that you’re going for self-deprecating humor, Jay. But I hope you realize that most of your audience would love to get “fired” in a way that involved a promotion and an offer to do half the work for the same money.

Then there was his bizarre joke last night that “Harry Reid is apologizing more than the NBC affiliates.” Huh? Maybe we should give Jay the benefit of the doubt and assume that was a flubbed joke: maybe he meant to say “than NBC is apologizing to its affiliates.” Because surely Jay didn’t mean that the affiliates were apologizing for their local news ratings being devastated by The Jay Leno Show, and for asking NBC to fix it. Surely he didn’t mean that the affiliates should be apologizing to him.

Did he?

Jay Leno gets a lot of undeserved guff from TV critics. He does so because much of his success has come at the expense of performers we like better: David Letterman, and now, it seems, Conan O’Brien. That’s not fair. Nor is it Jay’s fault that he somehow manages to walk off unscathed—and rewarded—while a programming strategy that he was central to is bringing down his network in flaming chunks all around him.

But when everyone, including Jay’s own audience, knows that he is coming out on top in the whole fiasco—and that it’s looking like he will again be given the Tonight Show amid a colleague’s public backstabbing by his network—Jay should at least stop acting like he’s the one with the dagger between his shoulder blades.

You’re winning, Jay. Have the good humor to admit it.

Related Topics: conan o'brien, jay leno, NBC, Uncategorized
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  • charlieromeobravo

    I find it funny that Jay is uncomfortable about the whole situation but he was happy to make “sleeping with my staff” jokes when Letterman was in the spotlight for his indiscretions. Not so funny when you’re the goat is it Jay? :-)

  • http://cultural-learnings.com/2010/01/13/betrayal-at-nbc-colon-what-really-happened-with-my-late-night-show-question-mark-by-conan-obrien/ Betrayal at NBC, Colon, What REALLY happened with my Late Night Show, Question Mark, by Conan O’Brien « Cultural Learnings

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  • Tom Shaw

    “Surely he didn’t mean that the affiliates should be apologizing to him.”

    No, I don’t think it was flubbed. I think the full statement would be:
    “Harry Reid is apologizing more than the NBC affiliates to NBC/Comcast.”

    Because in Leno’s mind, it is the affiliates, by demanding* The Leno Show’s head immediately, when Leno was doing as well as most rational observers expected, that have caused the Jaypocalypse.

    (And to be honest, demanding it happen prior to Olympics promotion, rather than spending the months before the upfronts, to work this out has caused half the havoc.)

    So Leno’s “response” to this mess is a combination of wounded pride, anger at the affiliates, and desire not to be made the bad guy (hence PR mutterings that he is considering retiring rather than ruining his reputation). If you view this as a long con of his to get back 11:30, then yeah, he comes across terribly, but I honestly don’t think there was any effort on his part to get this conclusion.

    *Of course, Gaspin swears that the affiliates had nothing to do with the Leno move. Right.

  • Chaddogg

    I feel a bit sorry for Jay, in that the network is poisoning public opinion against him all by itself. I mean, Jay never asked to lose the Tonight Show, was willing to try the 10 pm slot (a huge risk for him as well as NBC), and understandably said yes when the network, NOT JAY, asked him to move to 11:35 pm. (Of course, I have no idea what he would have said if they asked him to move to 12:35, because they didn’t….)

    In fact, rumor out on the internet is that Jay himself is ALSO thinking of leaving NBC, he’s so disgusted by how the network handled this…..which, I think, he was always willing/planning to do BEFORE NBC backed up the truck and asked him to do 10 pm.

    So, remember — NBC are the morons here.

  • rosseau

    In the historically tactless and horribly unfunny dept, an actual Leno joke from last night (me paraphrasing): “A Civil War historian has said that Lincoln was not gay. You know how these rumors get started: you go to the theatre once and…” Cue rimshot. That was my cue to involuntary say out loud,”Oh, my God.” I don’t want to list Leno’s unfunny stuff, but I haven’t watched the show in a while–only tuned in to see what he would say about the situation–and I found his monologue that terrible. It wasn’t hit or miss; it was actively awful. I don’t know how he has writers. Please, Jay, give up your old slot to a much funnier guy. I implore you.

  • http://twitter.com/poniewozik James Poniewozik

    I have heard that rumor. It sounds very un-Jay to me. But who knows? Regardless, I agree with your main point: Jay did not ask for this whole situation.

  • http://logopolis.typepad.com LogopolisMike

    Before Conan’s statement, Salon had an article taking NBC to task for messing up the situation saying “nobody likes hating Jay Leno”; his actions as of late has made that less true for quite a few people I think, though it hasn’t changed my opinion.

    My friends and I sat in The Tonight Show audience back when Jay Leno was hosting it because a friend of ours used to be an NBC page. After the audience warm-up, which involved a tight-tee shirt wearing girl selected from the audience (who was seemingly brought up to shake her breasts (to win, ironically, another t-shirt), all hosted by an unfunny comdian who seemed to be selected so as to not make the main show seem too funny, Mr. Leno himself came out to tell us all, with his hangdog “love me love me love me” expression and without a hint of irony told us that as the audience it was our job to laugh and if we didn’t laugh it’d be a bad show and it’d be all our fault.

    So though such desperation makes me want to feel mostly pity, I believe he has enough cars to cancel that out. I, for one, actually do enjoy hating Jay Leno and have for quite some time.

  • shara says

    I’ve never liked Leno, and its hard for me NOT to see him as a bad guy here. The poor-me act is just absurd. But I keep reading people talking about how he never wanted to leave the Tonight Show and whatnot, but wasn’t that all arranged, like, years ago? It was my impression that Leno planned to retire, and then when it came down to it he decided he didn’t want to leave the limelight, so he got the 10pm gig. Maybe I’m misremembering, but it seems insane that Jay is acting like he was forced out of the Tonight Show in any way. Is my memory really that far off base?

  • http://twitter.com/poniewozik James Poniewozik

    It was arranged for him, not by him. Zucker promised Conan the Tonight show in 2004. One of the reasons, ironically, being not wanting him to leave to a competitor. Basically NBC has tried for years to find a way to have both Jay and Conan and it finally became untenable.

  • rosseau

    @shara: thanks for asking a question I was too afraid to ask–and thanks, JP, for answering it. I didn’t know who instigated this whole mess: Leno who decided to retire and then changed his mind, or NBC execs who forced him to go and gave him the 10 pm slot as a consolation prize. So it was definitely NBC who dragged an unwilling Leno away from the Tonight Show? That makes him a bit of a victim here and the piling on by the others a bit unfair (though very funny).

  • rosseau

    Well, not only a consolation prize but a cost saving measure that epically failed.

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  • http://tvtattle.com/2010/01/13/4830/ — TV Tattle

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  • nightowltoo

    I don’t know if NBC executives would have come up with their “solution” if Jay himself had not publicly stated in the B&C interview that he would be willing to go back to 11:35 if asked. At the time , the comment seemed odd and out of the blue. No one thought the Leno show would be canceled until fall at the earliest. In hindsight, it looks like Jay knew what was coming and set himself up for a soft landing at Conan’s expense.

  • nbierma

    Agreed about Jay. But as much as I like Conan, isn’t his “Guess I’ll go work at Starbucks” act a little disingenuous, when a fat Fox contract is a phone call away? Besides, in 5-10 years Dave and Jay will be in nursing homes and he’ll be at the top of the mountain anyway.

  • http://tunedin.blogs.time.com/2010/01/14/conanundrum-shaming-the-shameless/ Conanundrum: Shaming the Shameless – Tuned In – TIME.com

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  • turney333

    For me, what makes Leno less of a victim in this is his decision to go along with the “retirement” plan in the first place. If he truly didn’t want to retire, he should have had the balls to refuse the deal 5 years ago, instead of putting NBC in a position to hamstring Conan. Sure he may have been pressured to “retire” to make way for Conan, but I don’t think that absolves him of negotiating a deal that put Conan in a no win situation.

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