Conan is not free.  He is not even inexpensive.
 http://twitter.com/ravenadal
http://theworldebon.blogspot.com




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From: Tracey de Morsella <tdli...@multiculturaladvantage.com>
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
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Anthony <beta...@yahoo.com>
Sent: Thu, January 21, 2010 11:10:14 PM
Subject: RE: [scifinoir2] Conan O'Brien: Free At Last!

 
I was reading some media analysis the other day and here is an
interesting perspective.  
 
1.        When Jonny Carson handed over the reins, he did not opt to
compete on ABC against the Tonight Show, as Leno was going to do.  
2.       When Jonny Carson handed over the reins, he did not opt to present
the same show, an hour before his old show
3.       Most of the audience that tunes into the tonight show is the
same audience that watched the news prior to the tonight show.  Most people
watch the news that comes on after the 10:00 pm show they are watching.  If
people turn off Leno, and then turn off the news, then Leno was chasing the
audience away from Conan.
4.       The made Conan tone down his humor once ratings dropped, but if
Leno had not chased away the audience from the news, who is to say what
audience Conan would have pulled
5.       Leno pulled some sleazy shenanigans with Letterman and now he is
doing the same with Coco. 
 
I hope the Tonight show tanks. 
 
From:scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com [mailto:scifino...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf 
Of Keith
Johnson
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 8:25 PM
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [scifinoir2] Conan O'Brien: Free At Last!
 



Wow,
thirty-plus mill to get *fired*? And his staff splits twelve mill, but Conan's
going to give them extra cash? That's cool. I've seen Zucker from NBC all over
the tube, everywhere from Charlie Rose to the financial channel, trying to
explain this debacle. Reminds one of why some people need to stay behind the
scenes. He comes off as defensive, surly, like a child who's caught doing
something wrong, but remains defiant. A lot of "we made what we thought
was a smart move, but it didn't work". Very little honest "we screwed
it up and screwed O'Brien to boot".

End of story: I still don't get who felt that Conan could be an exact
replacement for Leno, given the differences in their appeal, and the expected
differences in what demographics Conan would attract. I don't get who the hell
felt it was sufficient to say that o'Brien had failed after only seven months,
when it took Leno himself a year-and-a-half to hit his stride. And I really
don't get who in the world thought O'Brien had a chance to succeed when Leno
had a show on earlier than his, both sapping potential O'Brien viewers, and
subjecting the public to talk show overload, possibly chasing off viewers for
both shows.

NBC screwed this up royally, and made it worse when Ebersol (?) recently tried
to blame a lot of this on O'Brien's refusal to change the Tonight Show format.
I guess we can't blame Leno, who just wants to work, but I wish he'd have said
"no" to the 10 pm show, and really wish he'd say "no" to
taking the Tonight Show back. That would have taught NBC a lesson. 

Frankly I'm glad this all failed. I didn't relish a solid five hours of
primetime being replaced by a talkshow. We're losing enough original
programming on broadcast TV as it is.

***********************************************
http://www.tv.com/conan-obrien-free-at-last!/story/20919.html?tag=hotspot;gumball;1
Conan
O'Brien: Free At Last!
by Tim Surette TV.com Staff Writer 01/21/10 10:15 AM 
What's the going
rate for an unfair firing these days? About $45 million if you hosted a
late-night talk show on a major network. The Conan O'Brien vs. NBC saga is 
finally coming to an end, says The
Hollywood Reporter, as both sides have agreed to a deal that
frees O'Brien from his contract with NBC and includes a whole lotta 
stipulations. 
First, let's talk
money—since that's what the whole kerfuffle was about. The entire settlement is
reportedly worth between $45 million and $50 million, with Conan pocketing $32
million and his staff sharing $12 million. But don't feel too bad for Johnny
the Janitor; reports say O'Brien will be supplementing his employees' severance
packages out of his pocket. 
O'Brien's last
night behind the desk of The
Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien will be tomorrow (Friday,
January 22), with Conan repeats airing until the start of the Winter Olympics.
After that, Jay
Leno will return to The
Tonight Show with Jay Leno on March 1, global warming will
cease, world peace will rule, and the long war between cats and dogs shall end.
Or so NBC believes. 
The deal also
bars Conan from hosting another show until September, and all the characters
Conan created for his shows—including the lovable Pimpbot, the very relatable
Masturbating Bear, and Triumph the Insult Comic Dog—will *gulp* remain the
property of NBC, which will let them collect dust in their mausoleum of stolen
artifacts. Triumph is the cash cow here, and he should belong to Robert Smigel,
who does all of the delightfully distasteful dog's improv and masterful
puppeteering. 
The final tally?
Conan received the dream job he worked his entire life for for a total of seven
months. 
The big questions
now: What will Conan do next? What should Conan do next? And how will audiences 
respond to the return of Jay Leno? 
 



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