On Mon, Jul 27, 2009 at 7:48 PM, televisiongirl<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> But if Leno moves back to 11:35, that means the Conan experiment failed.
>  There may not be a big buyout for Conan if Letterman becomes the top guy in
> late night.  And he would leave NBC as damaged goods - the guy who took the
> #1 show in late night and dropped it to third place.

The deal was signed before Conan started the Tonight Show. Let's say
NBC demands, to the point of being a deal breaker, that there be some
mechanism in writing that allows them to replace him. I will note that
if Conan is physically unable to continue hosting, there will be an
insurance policy to cover costs and lost revenue. Now, as Conan's
agent, you are going to tell the network that if they want to hold the
right to terminate the contract, they sure as hell are going to pay
through the nose to exercise that right. After all, the contract being
discussed is one to keep Conan at NBC for the long term and both sides
have to leave the room feeling that the contract accomplishes that.

As for ratings, Conan took over the show in the summer, the
traditional doldrums of the ratings year. That gives him 3 months to
flail and eventually find his footing while people are at the beach.
NBC can't afford to panic because they can't afford a Plan B.

Tom

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