Commentary

NBC's 'Tonight Show' Problem Has Started All Over Again

Five years after NBC answered the question the first time, it's now coming up again:  Who will be the next "Tonight Show" host? 

Jay Leno starts perhaps another 18-year run. But he'll retire one day -- or be pushed out again. NBC told Leno five years ago: "You're on top now. But it won't last. We'll need to replace you." It lasted way longer than the geniuses at NBC figured it would.

Still, NBC is quietly -- with hopefully less egg on its face -- working up the nerve to ask the same question again. That's the weird thing about television. You can't dictate or guess with any specific accuracy when things will fail -- or succeed.

Of course, we can all be wrong. Maybe even NBC -- again. Maybe in another six months when Leno's ratings are tanking, NBC will start up a plan to install Jimmy Fallon in the chair in 2015 -- and give Leno a 9 p.m. five-day a week variety show.

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Running a TV network like a consumer products company makes no sense.  On-air talent are certainly brands -- but they are always in an amazing amount of flux. Swiffer and Crest are good stable brands because they don't talk back too often, get in hissy fits, or threaten to go to Fox if they don't get their way in a salary negotiation.

The question is whether Leno's next move will truly be his - like Johnny Carson in 1992, when he surprised a big upfront audience with the message that he was leaving the show -- with no one at NBC expecting any of it.

NBC still doesn't like surprises. Thus the attempted move to keep Letterman as a backup to Leno; thus the move to have O'Brien waiting in the wings for five years; thus the move to keep Leno, and O'Brien -- just in case O'Brien didn't work out.

At least they were right about O'Brien -- kind of.

What's the next move? Perhaps in five years, it won't come from either NBC or Leno, but from increasingly weary viewers who will scratch their heads, yawn, and say good night to "Tonight."

6 comments about "NBC's 'Tonight Show' Problem Has Started All Over Again".
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  1. Andrea Nolan from Reed Business Information, March 2, 2010 at 11:55 a.m.

    Maybe it's time to just let it go ... The Tonight Show is way past its prime so time for a new genre.

  2. Mike Einstein from the Brothers Einstein, March 2, 2010 at 12:04 p.m.

    The only reason the Tonight Show is a story at all is because it represents the last-gasp effort of a dying broadcast model. Leno, O'Brien, it matters not. By the time late night rolls around, the DVR is already full of other stuff we don't have - and won't make- the time to watch.

    On-demand only works in your favor when you have something worth demanding.

  3. Douglas Ferguson from College of Charleston, March 2, 2010 at 12:21 p.m.

    When, or if? Some of us are sanguine about Jay's return to prominence. Yes, the audience is shrinking, but his share will shrink more slowly than no-talent Letterman.

    If the Tonight Show is irrelevant, than i guess the Today Show is too. No, wait, it grew from 2 to 4 hours and shows no signs of fading.

  4. Paula Lynn from Who Else Unlimited, March 2, 2010 at 1:33 p.m.

    It's harder to regain audience than retain audience. A variation upon a theme, but it is true as ever. So it's harder to regain dignity than to retain it.

  5. Christina Ricucci from Millenia 3 Communications, March 2, 2010 at 2:42 p.m.

    The Tonight Show is so yesterday. Jack Paar, Steve Allen, Johnny Carson...they were kings of the genre IMHO. The idiots filling the time slot now should retire to the golf course...and please take Lorne Michaels and SNL with you.

    Maybe it's just my age showing...but I miss the days when late night TV was clever, entertaining, and genuinely funny.

  6. David Vawter from Doner, March 4, 2010 at 9 a.m.

    Like it or not, NBC is not the BBC. It's a commercial enterprise whose "relevance" is measured in ratings, not tweets. At some point they will need to make the kind of hard-nosed decision they made in 1992 when they gave the show to Leno instead of Letterman.

    Like it or not, Jay will repair the damage done by O'Brien and network's woeful attempt to court the hipster audience that wasn't there.

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