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Late Night with Conan O'Brien

Late Night with Conan O'Brien is an American late-night talk show hosted by Conan O'Brien.[1] NBC aired 2,725 episodes from September 13, 1993, to February 20, 2009. The show featured varied comedic material, celebrity interviews, and musical and comedy performances. Late Night aired weeknights at 12:37 am Eastern/11:37 pm Central and 12:37 am Mountain in the United States. From 1993 until 2000, Andy Richter served as O'Brien's sidekick; following his departure, O'Brien was the show's sole featured performer. The show's house musical act was The Max Weinberg 7 and led by E Street Band drummer Max Weinberg.

Late Night with Conan O'Brien
Also known asLate Night (franchise brand)
Genre
Created by
Developed byLorne Michaels
Presented byConan O'Brien
Starring
Narrated byJoel Godard
Composers
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons16
No. of episodes2,725 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
Production locationsStudio 6A, NBC Studios, New York, New York
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time42–43 minutes
Production companies
Release
Original networkNBC
Original releaseSeptember 13, 1993 (1993-09-13) –
February 20, 2009 (2009-02-20)
Related

The second incarnation of NBC's Late Night franchise, O'Brien's program debuted in 1993 after David Letterman (who hosted the first incarnation of Late Night) moved to CBS to host Late Show opposite The Tonight Show. In 2004, as part of a deal to secure a new contract, NBC announced that O'Brien would leave Late Night in 2009 to succeed Jay Leno as the host of The Tonight Show.[2][3] Jimmy Fallon began hosting his version of Late Night on March 2, 2009.[4]

History edit

Replacing David Letterman edit

Upon Johnny Carson's retirement from The Tonight Show in 1992, executives at NBC announced that Carson's frequent guest-host Jay Leno would be Carson's replacement, and not David Letterman. NBC later said that Letterman's high ratings for Late Night were the reason they kept him where he was. Letterman was bitterly disappointed and angry at not having been given The Tonight Show job; and, at Carson's advice, he left NBC after eleven years on Late Night. CBS signed Letterman to host his own show opposite The Tonight Show. Letterman moved his show to CBS virtually unchanged, taking most of the staff, skits, and comedy formats with him. However, NBC owned the rights to the Late Night name, forcing Letterman to rename his show Late Show with David Letterman.

NBC was not prepared to replace both Letterman and Late Night. Aside from the name, it needed to build a new show.[5] Both Dana Carvey and Garry Shandling declined to host it.[6] Saturday Night Live producer Lorne Michaels was brought in to develop the new show,[5] and comedians Jon Stewart, Drew Carey, and Paul Provenza auditioned to host.[6] Michaels suggested to Conan O'Brien, an unknown writer for The Simpsons and former writer for Saturday Night Live, that he should audition for the job. Despite having "about 40 seconds"[7] of television-performance experience as an occasional extra on Saturday Night Live sketches, O'Brien auditioned for the show on April 13, 1993. His guests were Jason Alexander and Mimi Rogers, and the audition took place on the set of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.[6] NBC offered the show to O'Brien on April 26, and O'Brien made his first meaningful television appearance later that day when Leno introduced him on Tonight.[7] On the final episode of his 16-year run, O'Brien stated that he "owed his career to Lorne Michaels."

Debut edit

O'Brien's Late Night debuted on September 13, 1993, with Andy Richter chosen as O'Brien's sidekick. The premiere episode featured John Goodman, who received a "First Guest" medal for his appearance, Drew Barrymore, and Tony Randall with cameos from George Wendt and Bob Costas. The episode featured a cold open of O'Brien's walk to the studio with constant reminders that he was expected to live up to Letterman; meanwhile, Tom Brokaw makes a cameo. After seeming to be unaffected by the comments, O'Brien arrives at his dressing room and cheerfully prepares to hang himself. However, a warning that the show is about to start causes him to abandon his plans.[5][8]

The show's first musical guest was English rock band Radiohead, who performed during the second episode. American singer-songwriter Jonathan Richman was the show's second musical guest.[9]

O'Brien's inexperience was apparent, and the show was generally considered mediocre by critics in terms of hosting. The Chicago Sun-Times' Lon Grankhe called O'Brien "nervous, unprepared and generally geeky",[10] and Tom Shales wrote "As for O'Brien, the young man is a living collage of annoying nervous habits. He giggles and titters, jiggles about and fiddles with his cuffs. He has dark, beady little eyes like a rabbit. He's one of the whitest white men ever."[11] (O'Brien wrote for The New York Times a satirical review of the first episode the day it aired titled "O'Brien Flops!", in which he told readers "Frankly, I was not impressed".[12]) The originality and quality of the comedy, however, led by original head writer Robert Smigel, was widely praised. Although O'Brien benefited by comparison from the quick critical and commercial failure of the fellow new late-night The Chevy Chase Show,[5] NBC only offered short-term contracts, 13 weeks at a time[6] and once for six weeks, as widely reported by the press at the time.[5] O'Brien was reportedly almost fired at least once in this period, but NBC had no one to replace him. According to Smigel, "We were basically canceled at Conan, and then they changed their minds in August of '94, gave us a reprieve."[13]

One NBC affiliate, KPRC-TV in Houston, dropped Late Night with Conan O'Brien in September 1994 due to low ratings and was replaced with first-run episodes of The Jenny Jones Show. KPRC reinstated O'Brien's Late Night in the fall of 1996, but scheduled it to air as late as 2:40 a.m. while the station, in addition to The Jenny Jones Show, had aired Extra, Access Hollywood, Ricki Lake, Montel Williams, Inside Edition and a rebroadcast of its 10:00 p.m. newscast between Leno and O'Brien. Houston became the subject of a skit (via classic remote piece) in which O'Brien made impromptu stops at Houston's central bus terminal and the Astrodome to watch an episode of his own show with Houstonians in 1997. KPRC began airing Late Night with Conan O'Brien directly following The Tonight Show with Jay Leno in 2004.[14][15]

O'Brien: When I first got this job, I came here to 30 Rock

Letterman: How did you get this job? Was it a theme-writing contest?

O'Brien: Yeah. It was "what would I do with a talk show…" And I was fourth.

— Letterman visits Late Night with Conan O'Brien, March 1, 1994[16]

According to O'Brien, NBC network executive Warren Littlefield told him, with regard to Andy Richter, he'd "never succeed until I 'got rid of that big fat dildo.' That was the tone of the conversations between us and the network." It was widely expected that the host of Talk Soup, Greg Kinnear would take over the role, but Kinnear turned down the opportunity. (Kinnear would instead become host of Late Night's then-lead-out program, Later, in February 1994, remaining there for two years before deciding to pursue an acting career.)[17] Stars like Tom Hanks agreed to appear on Late Night, which boosted audience awareness. Even Letterman, who admired O'Brien's comic sensibility, appeared as a guest to register his support. O'Brien's performance style improved through experience, and he began to receive more favorable reviews and ratings the following year.[18] With the ratings gradually improving over the course of two years, Late Night reached a new level of critical and commercial success in 1996. Tom Shales officially recanted his previous critical review with the headline "I was wrong", and O'Brien received his first Emmy nomination for writing, which he received every year until 2011.

1996–2000 edit

 
Andy Richter served as sidekick from 1993 to 2000. He eventually returned as announcer/sidekick for The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien and later Conan.

In 2000, Richter left Late Night on good terms, to pursue his acting career, a move that emotionally affected O'Brien, as evidenced by Richter's last show. The show's comedy bits and banter had usually depended on O'Brien's interaction with Richter. O'Brien's wacky non-sequitur comedy became more pronounced as he played all of his comedy and commentary directly to the audience and Max Weinberg instead of towards Richter.

2001–2009 edit

 
Conan O'Brien in the music video for The White Stripes' "The Denial Twist" (2005).
 
The Max Weinberg 7 during a taping of Late Night with Conan O'Brien in Chicago in 2006.
 
O'Brien in 2006

In 2002, when time came to renew his contract, O'Brien had notable offers from other networks to defect;[19] Fox was reported to have made particularly strong overtures, pitching him an 11:00 p.m. show.[20] O'Brien decided to re-sign with NBC, however, joking that he initially wanted to make a 13-week deal (a nod to his first contract). He ultimately signed through 2005, indicating that it was symbolic of surpassing Letterman's run with 12 years of hosting.[19]

In 2003, O'Brien's own production company, Conaco, was added as a producer of Late Night. The show celebrated its 10th anniversary, another milestone that O'Brien said he wanted to achieve with his 2002 contract. During the anniversary show, Mr. T handed O'Brien a chain with a large gold "7" on it.

O'Brien: But Mr. T, we've been on the air for ten years!
Mr. T: I know that, fool! But you only been funny for seven![21]


O'Brien's last season on Late Night attracted an average of 1.98 million viewers, compared to 1.92 million viewers for The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson.[22]

US television ratings (late night talk shows) edit

Season Nielsen Rank Nielsen Rating[23]
1993–94 4 2.0
1994–95 3 2.2
1995–96 3 2.2
1996–97 4 2.5
1997–98 4 2.5
1998–99 4 2.5
1999–2000 4 2.5
2000–01 4 2.5
2001–02 3 (tied with Politically Incorrect) 2.5
2002–03 3 2.6
2003–04 3 2.6
2004–05 3 2.5
2005–06 3 2.5
2006–07 3 2.4
2007–08 3 2.0
2008–09 3 2.0

Format edit

Humor edit

The show was known for its wacky and absurd sophomoric comedic sensibility that is edgier than most other talk shows. Like his Late Night predecessor, David Letterman, the show's humor also had a streak of biting sarcasm and irony. According to Robert Smigel, who served as head writer in 1993, the show's comedic approach was to focus on being different from David Letterman:

I set down a lot of rules, some of which were crazy, but ultimately it forced us to come up with a lot of original stuff. We had the added bonus of being Letterman's replacement.

Typically O'Brien would play the 'straight man' role to the general absurdity of the comedy, treating the material or wacky nature of the sketches with sincerity. The show had an unusual quantity of comedy and original content rather than other talk shows such as Late Show with David Letterman or The Tonight Show with Jay Leno that relied heavily on recurring segments and 'found' humor. The show was particularly unique in the lack of 'found' humor to derive content from i.e. most content being scripted as opposed to Letterman's Small Town News or Jay Leno's headlines that used this "found humor". O'Brien would often playfully chide his audience for an underwhelming or overly enthusiastic response to his jokes.

Particularly in the early years, comedic sketches overtook all segments on the show, occasionally even interrupting guest interviews and O'Brien's monologue. Frequently sketches would randomly begin without introduction, such as during banter between Richter and O'Brien. A lot of the humor had a fantasy-like quality to it, where inanimate objects would talk or silly characters would disrupt the show. Sometimes a short story would emerge in these sketches with a resolution culminating in a song.

One recurring technique is to superimpose lips onto an existing image, as in the Syncro-Vox limited animation technique, resulting in the speaker saying things often quite out of character.

Although Late Night used political humor, it did so far less frequently than competing shows did. During the 1996 and 2000 presidential election seasons, Late Night was found to be the least politically-oriented late night program. It averaged 310 political jokes per election season, in contrast to the Leno-led Tonight Show with 1,275.[24]

(See List of Late Night with Conan O'Brien sketches for an extensive list)

The Max Weinberg 7 edit

The show's house band was The Max Weinberg 7, led by drummer Max Weinberg. The other six members were Mark Pender on trumpet, Richie "LaBamba" Rosenberg on trombone, Mike Merritt on bass, Jerry Vivino on saxophone and brother Jimmy Vivino on guitar, and Scott Healy on keyboards. Weinberg sometimes took extended leaves of absence to tour with Bruce Springsteen as the drummer for the E Street Band. During his absence, James Wormworth would typically fill in on drums, and the band was led by Vivino under the name Jimmy Vivino and the Max Weinberg 7.

With the departure of Andy Richter from Late Night in May 2000, Max Weinberg assumed a bigger role as an interlocutor for O'Brien's jokes. One common running gag was Max's awkwardness on camera and his apparent lack of chemistry with Conan. Weinberg was often used in sketches as well, which usually revolved around his purported sexual deviance (mostly a penchant for bedding barely legal groupies), although long-running sketches also spoofed Max's lack of knowledge of current affairs.

"LaBamba" was also used as the butt of many of Conan's jokes. These humorous sketches usually revolved around LaBamba's sizeable mustache, his poor acting skills, and his alleged inability to read written music. Mark Pender would often sing songs on the topic of a current event which ended with him screeching uncontrollably and climbing the risers into the audience. All members of the 7 have had successful side careers as studio musicians.

Theme song and other music edit

The show's opening theme was co-written by composer Howard Shore and John Lurie (of the band The Lounge Lizards). Lurie would later say that he was contracted by Shore to write the theme, and after he turned in the piece, Shore made minimal changes and claimed an unwarranted co-writing credit.[25][26] Lurie also claimed to have been a finalist for Late Night's band leader position, but said producers told him, "Conan thinks you’re funnier than him and that scares him."[25][26]

As is common in the talk show format, the Max Weinberg 7 performed the show's opening and closing themes, played bumpers into and out of commercial breaks (they actually played through the entire break for the studio audience), and a short piece during O'Brien's crossover to his desk after his monologue. The show's closing theme was called "Cornell Knowledge", and was lifted from Jerry and Jimmy Vivino's first album together. However, on Late Night, it was played at a much quicker tempo than the album version. The band also played a wide variety of songs as bumpers coming to and from commercial breaks and introducing guests—usually popular music from a variety of eras.

Joel Godard edit

Joel Godard, a long-time announcer for NBC shows, was the program's announcer and a frequent comedy contributor. On the show's final episode, Conan noted that Godard was originally hired to simply announce the show's intro and claimed "nobody thought you'd ever see him", however he was gradually worked into the show's comedy pieces. These bits usually revolved around Godard's supposed homosexual fetishes, deviant sexual habits, substance abuse, and suicidal tendencies. The humor came in part from Godard's delivery. No matter how depressing or deviant the topic being discussed was, he always did so in an exaggeratedly cheerful voice and with a huge smile plastered on his face. Several sketches ended with Godard apparently committing suicide in his announcer's booth. When Andy Richter left the show in 2000, Joel Godard became more common among sketches.

Writing staff edit

In the first few seasons of the show, the writing staff consisted of several now-prolific comics including Robert Smigel as the head writer, Bob Odenkirk, Louis C.K., Tommy Blacha and Dino Stamatopoulos. Smigel left his position as head writer of the show in 1995 to pen several movies[13] but continued to appear on the show to do bits as Triumph the Insult Comic Dog and the 'Satellite Interviews'. Jonathan Groff took over his position until replaced by Mike Sweeney in 2001.

Members of the show's writing staff frequently appeared in sketches on the show. Among the most prolific were: Brian McCann (Preparation H Raymond, FedEx Pope, The Loser, Airsick Moth, Jerry Butters, Awesome Dave, Funhole Guy, Bulletproof Legs Guy, Adrian "Raisin" Foster, S&M Lincoln, etc.), Brian Stack (Hannigan the Traveling Salesman, Artie Kendall the Ghost Crooner, The Interrupter, Kilty McBagpipes, Fan-tastic Guy, Clive Clemmons, Frankenstein, Ira, Slipnut Brian, etc.), Jon Glaser (Segue Sam, Pubes, Awareness Del, Wrist Hulk, Ahole Ronald, Gorton's Fisherman, Jeremy, Slipnut Jon, etc.), Kevin Dorff (Coked-up Werewolf, Jesus Christ, Mansy the half-man/half-pansy, Joe's Bartender, Todd the Tiny Guy, etc.), and Andy Blitz (Awful Ballgame Chanter, Vin Diesel's brother Leonard Diesel, Slipnut Andy, Chuck Aloo aka the star of the 24 spin-off series 60). Blitz went so far as to travel to India for one bit in which he carried his computer through the streets of India to get technical support firsthand from the telephone representative at NBC's technical help center.

Several writing staff interns have gone on to become noted actors or writers including Vanessa Bayer,[27] John Krasinski,[28] Mindy Kaling,[29] Ellie Kemper[30] and Jack McBrayer.[31]

Sketch actors and cameo appearances edit

Late Night employed a number of sketch actors, many of whom were frequently reused in different roles in different episodes. Several years before joining the cast of Saturday Night Live, and before playing the role of Leslie Knope on another NBC TV show, Parks and Recreation, Amy Poehler often appeared as a regular in many sketches, though she was best remembered for playing the recurring role of Andy Richter's Conan-obsessed teenage sister, Stacy. Other notable comedians such as Jack McBrayer, Rob Riggle, Rob Corddry, H. Jon Benjamin, Ellie Kemper, Bobby Moynihan, Matt Besser, Ian Roberts, Matt Walsh and Andrew Daly also frequently appeared as sketch actors on the show for several years. Triumph the Insult Comic Dog (created and voiced by original head writer Robert Smigel) began as part of a sketch on Late Night. Celebrities such as Dr. Joyce Brothers, Nipsey Russell, Abe Vigoda, James Lipton, Bob Saget and William Preston as the character Carl 'Oldy' Olsen also made frequent cameo appearances in comedy sketches on the show at different periods. One of the show's graphic designers, Pierre Bernard, was featured in several sketches, such as "Pierre Bernard's Recliner of Rage" and "Nerding It Up For Pierre".

Celebrity guests of the night would also occasionally appear in sketches either during their interviews or during the earlier comedy segments, e.g. in "In the year 2000" (which always included the participation of a celebrity guest after Andy Richter left the show) or a sketch where Conan would pretend to write in his diary while an attractive female guest was there. Quite rare for a talk show, sometimes interviews began normally but turned into sketches with both the guest and Conan participating, usually when the guest was a "friend of the show."

Costumed characters edit

Unusual for a late night talk show, Late Night made frequent use of various costumed characters such as The Masturbating Bear, Robot on a Toilet, and Pimpbot 5000. The humor in these sketches often derived from the crude construction of the characters' costumes as well as the absurdist nature of their conceptions. For example, Pimpbot 5000 was a 1950s-style robot who dressed and acted in the manner of an exaggerated blaxploitation pimp, while The Masturbating Bear was a man in a bear costume wearing an oversized diaper who would invariably begin to fondle himself to the tune of Aram Khachaturian's "Sabre Dance" when brought on stage. Many of these characters did little more in their appearances than walk across the stage or be wheeled out from behind the curtain, but some had extensive sketches on the show.

Appearances in other shows edit

The show made a cameo appearance in the Sesame Street special Elmopalooza, where Conan was interviewing two aliens while Big Bird was passing by them carrying a video tape.

The show also made an appearance on The Simpsons in the episode "Bart Gets Famous", where Conan interviews a now famous Bart.

Production edit

 
A ticket to the show

Late Night was a production of Lorne Michaels's Broadway Video (and, since 2003, O'Brien's Conaco). It was taped in Studio 6A in the GE Building at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in New York City. Next to the door were framed pictures of Letterman, Carson, Jack Paar and Steve Allen, each of whose groundbreaking late-night shows originated from studio 6A or 6B (where The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon is currently taped).[32] The studio holds just over 200 audience members. It was taped at about 5:30 pm as an uninterrupted hour-long program, with the band playing music through the portions that would be filled by commercials. Generally, shows were taped at 5:30 pm Monday through Friday, although for much of the show's run, reruns would be aired on Mondays and the show would not tape that day.

The show's format consisted of an opening monologue from O'Brien, followed by various "desk bits". These generally included several brief sketches, recurring segments, or some other form of comedy. Typically O'Brien would play the 'straight man' role to the general absurdity of the comedy, treating the material or wacky nature of the sketches with sincerity. In the show's second and fourth segments, O'Brien interviewed two celebrity guests, between which, in the third segment, O'Brien listed the next night's/week's guests. There was often a comedy bit as well during this segment. The show's fifth segment was usually reserved for a musical or stand-up comedy performance, or occasionally another guest interview. The show's final segment was usually a quick "goodnight" and the closing credits, which sometimes featured part of a bit from earlier in the show. Quite rare for a talkshow, frequently comedy segments would also spill into the interviews, typically when a guest was a 'friend' of the show.

During the live tapings, and prior to the show,[citation needed] there was an audience warm-up, during which the audience watched a montage of highlights from the show, and staff writer Brian McCann greeted the audience (this task was formerly undertaken by head writer Mike Sweeney). McCann delivered a few jokes, told the audience what to expect, and finally introduced the band and then O'Brien. O'Brien then thanked the audience for coming, meeting as many audience members as he could. He would often then do a musical number with the band to pump up the audience (Burning Love was one standard). After the show was finished taping, O'Brien sang the "End of the Show Song", which never aired on Late Night, although in February 2009, a short video of it was posted on Late Night Underground.[33] The End of the Show Song finally did reach air on January 21, 2010, his penultimate show as Tonight Show host. It also was aired on the March 29, 2012 episode of Conan. The tradition of singing The End of the Show Song has continued, un-aired as usual, on Conan.

Broadcast edit

 
O'Brien poking fun at the show's new HDTV widescreen format

Late Night began broadcasting in 1080i ATSC on April 26, 2005, with a downscaled letterboxed NTSC simulcast (unlike The Tonight Show, whose NTSC simulcast is fullscreen). O'Brien celebrated the conversion to the widescreen HDTV format with jokes throughout the week.

On December 6, 2005 Late Night with Conan O'Brien segments began selling on the iTunes Store. Most segments were priced at $1.99, as were most episodes of other shows, with "special" best-ofs and other longer segments priced at $9.99. In December, 2007 NBC stopped selling all its television shows on iTunes, but the network returned it to iTunes in September 2008 after NBC and Apple worked out a new agreement. The show was offered free at Hulu.com and the NBC website but has been unavailable on the Internet since the 2010 Tonight Show conflict. However, in May 2018, O'Brien and TBS, announced they would partner with NBC to make his entire Late Night archives available online, marking the 25th anniversary of O'Brien's late night debut.[34]

Special episodes edit

Remote pieces and episodes shot on location edit

Remote pieces shot on location were a recurring staple on Late Night, but occasionally, entire episodes were shot on location, usually during sweeps months. The first vacation for the show was a week-long stint of shows in Los Angeles the week of November 9–12, 1999. This was the only location week for the show while Andy Richter was with the show, and the only time the show's theme was altered for the week, with a more surf-style version of the show's normal theme (though the Toronto shows ended the normal theme with a piece of "O Canada"). The show was broadcast from NBC's L.A. studios (NBC Studios Burbank) and an L.A.-themed set was built, very similar in layout to the New York set.

From February 10–13, 2004, Late Night broadcast from the Elgin Theatre in Toronto, Canada. The guests for these episodes were all Canadians (with the exception of Adam Sandler), and included such stars as Jim Carrey and Mike Myers. As the show was taped at a theater, unlike the trip to L.A., the set built was not like the show's standard set.

 
Chicago Theatre during Conan's week of shows there

From May 9–12, 2006, the show made a similar venture to the Chicago Theatre in Chicago, Illinois, taking cues from their previous trip to Toronto. Between April 30 – May 4, 2007, the show originated from the Orpheum Theatre in San Francisco.

In a sketch called "Conan O'Brien Hates My Homeland", Conan mocked every nation in the world to see which ones he gets letters from. An announcer on the Finnish entertainment channel SubTV, which airs the show a couple of days after it is aired in the US, asked people to defend Finland before Conan got to insult it, and the viewers in Finland began sending mail before the bit had even gotten to the letter F. Conan responded by assuming the Finnish "just couldn't wait" to be insulted and officially insulted Finland in the segment. An overwhelming number of postcards were supposedly received, which apparently "forced" Conan to give Finland a formal apology. Conan then went as far as to have the flag of Finland shown in the background during a speech and slandered the Finns' "hated" neighbor Sweden with a sign saying "Sweden Sucks!" printed over the flag of Sweden. It would seem that this chain of events led to elevated ratings in Finland and subsequently also sparked a special relationship with the viewers in Finland. Later when Conan was talking to audience members before the show, a group of fans visiting from Finland commented that he resembled their female president Tarja Halonen. Conan mentioned the resemblance on his show, even showing pictures of Halonen next to himself. When he discovered that Halonen was up for reelection he began making satirical commercials in support of Halonen and vowed to travel to Finland to meet her if she won re-election. When she did indeed win re-election in January 2006, Conan traveled to Finland and met with her.[35] One episode, broadcast on March 10, 2006, was compiled mainly of footage from O'Brien's trip to Finland. In the episode, Conan greeted fans at the airport, participated in a Sami cultural ceremony, appeared on a Finnish talk show, and attempted to visit a fan who had written to him. The episode was not strictly taped as a live episode there, however, but was prefaced by an introduction by O'Brien taped in New York. The Finland episode came as the culmination of a long-running joke on the show.

Aside from location shows, the show also did special one-shots in its early years. In 1995, one episode of the show was taped aboard a New York City ferry in New York Harbor. Dubbed "The Show on a Boat" by the showtunes-style song-and-dance number performed by a trio of "sailors" at the start of the show, O'Brien, Richter, the band and guests were all crammed onto the deck of the ferry. The show was taped at its normal afternoon time, while it was still light out.

Technical and production difficulties edit

A more unexpected shoot occurred on October 10, 1996, when a five-alarm fire in Rockefeller Plaza rendered the 6A studios out of commission for the remainder of that week. The fire occurred on early Thursday morning, which left O'Brien's staff precious little time to assemble a show elsewhere. Pressed for time as 12:35 approached, O'Brien taped the show outside, after dark, despite the cold weather, on a makeshift set[36] with the Prometheus statue and 30 Rock serving as a backdrop.The East L.A. rock band Los Lobos performed in the blustery wind a song from their newest album, "Colossal Head" . Furthering the unfortunate nature of the evening's circumstances was the final guest, Julie Scardina, who brought along wild animals, including birds that Conan explained had to be kept tied up, as they could not be freed outside. Earlier in the show, O'Brien and Richter walked into Brookstone (located in the lobby of Rockefeller Center), camera crew in tow, and bought a massaging leather recliner for the first guest, Samuel L. Jackson. The second of the two "fire shows", on Friday night, was taped in the Today Show studio, which was not affected by the fire.

During the Northeast Blackout of 2003, O'Brien and the staff taped a short 10-minute introduction explaining that the episode they had planned would not be taking place due to the blackout. Studio 6A was powered by a generator and lit by battery-powered floodlights. A standby show was aired in-progress after the intro. One of the scheduled guests that night, The Dandy Warhols, commandeered the studio's green room, where they stayed until they performed on the show the next night.

Gimmick episodes edit

Other shows that were taped in the regular 6A studio were augmented by special gimmicks:

A lot of high-concept gimmick episodes were done in the early years of the show, such as a 1995 show done entirely on a boat of the circle line or "Time Travel Week", four episodes from early 1996, where Conan and Andy (and the rest of the crew) "time-traveled" to a different point in time each night. Times and locations included The Civil War, Ancient Greece, The future, and The early '80s (featuring a cameo by David Letterman in the cold open, who occupied Conan's studio in 1983, cruelly brushing off Conan and Andy's attempt at explaining their presence in Letterman's dressing room by saying, "Why don't you two fellas go find a nice, warm place to screw yourselves? Security!").

In 1997, a special episode was taped in which the studio audience was composed solely of grade-school age children, primarily 5–10 years of age. Conan interacted with the children, encouraging them to laugh and cheer to keep away the boredom monster.

The February 19, 1998 episode was aired against coverage of the 1998 Winter Olympics on CBS, and therefore, Conan assumed no one was watching, and they could do anything. He and Andy took to performing increasingly outrageous acts, such as Conan revealing a Hanson T-shirt under his shirt and tie, and confessing his hatred for the NBC screen bug, going as far as to kill it with a can of Raid. He and Andy also smoked on the air (with a cutaway showing a mother finding her two kids imitating Conan), Max Weinberg confessed to killing Bruce Springsteen's previous drummer, as well as a number of other people he didn't like (even showing a map of where he buried them), Al Roker walked into the studio and confessed he never liked the weather, and Conan asked a female audience member to have consensual sex with him, which the woman vehemently refused. The event became known as "Nobody's Watching".[37]

The October 18, 2002 episode was re-shot entirely in clay animation nearly seven months after its first airing, including the opening credits and commercial bumpers. The episode's originally broadcast soundtrack was retained while the visuals were reproduced to mirror the original footage in a small-scale reproduction of the studio 6A.

On October 31, 2006, a similarly conceptualized Halloween episode was created from an episode which originally aired in May and featured Larry King, among other guests. Using a process the show called "Skelevision", all the visuals were re-shot with a Halloween motif, with human skeletons adorned with the clothing and accessories of the humans. This re-shoot was shot using the actual studio, and the puppeteers moved the skeletons with wires and cables while being visually obscured by green screen technology. Once again, the opening and bumpers were altered, this time including a model of a hearse winding through a foggy landscape and cemetery, and the voice of Bill Hader as Vincent Price in place of Joel Godard.

U2 exclusive edit

 
O'Brien interviewing U2 on Late Night

The October 5, 2005 episode of Late Night was devoted entirely to the band U2, marking the first time in the show's then 13-year run that it had devoted an entire show to a single guest.[38] Jim Pitt, the talent executive in charge of booking acts for the show, remarked that in his 12 years of working for Late Night, U2 and Johnny Cash were the "dream artists" he'd tried, but never succeeded in getting.[38] The band performed three songs, two more than the customary one song, then had a lengthy interview with Conan.

Episodes during the 2007–2008 writer's strike edit

After two months of being off-air, the first show to air during the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike on January 2, 2008 featured a small musical segment at the beginning of the show detailing O'Brien's newly grown beard in a show of support for the striking writers. At the beginning of the January 28 episode, it was revealed that Conan had shaved his beard, which was followed with a similar musical segment.

Several times during the episodes produced during the writer's strike, O'Brien would kill time by spinning his wedding ring on his desk, which he previously only did during rehearsals. His personal best was 41 seconds, achieved during an un-aired rehearsal. After several unsuccessful on-air attempts to break his record, during the show originally broadcast on February 9, 2008, O'Brien broke his record for endurance ring spinning, setting a time of 51 seconds by coating his wedding ring with Vaseline and spinning it on a Teflon surface. The feat was accomplished with the help of MIT physics professor Peter Fisher. These episodes are considered by most fans to be the magnum opus of O'Brien's television career, considering the spontaneity of each episode. The strike also gave rise to associate producer Jordan Schlansky's repeated appearances on the show as an embellished version of himself.

"Feud" with Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert edit

Early on in the later half of the 2007–2008 Writer's Guild strike, Conan O'Brien accused his show of being the sole cause of presidential candidate Mike Huckabee's status in the polls, due to his use of the Walker, Texas Ranger Lever while Chuck Norris was coincidentally sponsoring Huckabee. Stephen Colbert made the claim that because of "the Colbert bump," he was responsible for Huckabee's current success in the 2008 presidential race. O'Brien claimed that he was responsible for Colbert's success because he had made mention of him on his show. In response, Jon Stewart, host of The Daily Show, claimed that he was responsible for the success of O'Brien, and in turn the success of Huckabee and Colbert. This resulted in a three-part comedic battle among the three hosts, with all three appearing on each other's shows. The feud ended on Late Night with an all-out mock brawl between the three talk-show hosts.[39]

Anniversary episodes edit

In 1996, a third anniversary episode was taped, though it aired in the regular 12:35/11:35 late night time slot. The show was composed of clips of the best of the first three years, and featured cameos from many former guests, including Janeane Garofalo, Scott Thompson, Tony Randall and George Wendt. Typical of O'Brien's style of comedy, he introduced his first guest (Wendt) by listing his notable achievements in television (particularly Cheers) then introduced each subsequent guest by repeatedly listing Wendt's achievements (insinuating that all of his guests for that night's show played the role of Norm on Cheers). In 1998, Late Night aired a fifth anniversary special in prime time, mostly consisting of clips from the first five years. It was taped in the Saturday Night Live studio, also in the GE Building. The special was later sold on VHS tape. In 2003, a similar tenth anniversary special was taped in New York City's famed Beacon Theatre and later made available on DVD.

The final episode edit

Late Night with Conan O'Brien's last episode was recorded February 20, 2009, and aired shortly after midnight that next morning. The episode featured clips from past shows and a reflection on the show's sixteen-year-long run. John Mayer sent a farewell video message, singing a song about how Los Angeles is "going to eat [Conan] alive" (an ironic foretelling of things to come). In a short remote piece, Conan released regular contributor Abe Vigoda "into the wild," as he could not bring him to Los Angeles for the move to The Tonight Show. Will Ferrell made a surprise visit as George W. Bush, which quickly devolved into Ferrell tearing off his business suit to reveal an ill-fitting green leprechaun outfit that had been worn in a number of previous appearances on the show.[40]

Former sidekick Andy Richter, who re-joined O'Brien when he took over The Tonight Show in June, joined O'Brien onstage for two segments, watching clips and reminiscing about the show.[40] Among the clips shown, O'Brien noted that his all-time favorite Late Night piece was when he attended a re-enactment of an American Civil War-era baseball game, played at a Long Island, New York museum, Old Bethpage Village Restoration. During the course of the final week, O'Brien began violently dismantling and handing out pieces of the production set to the audience. In the final show, a large piece of the stage's frame was pulled down and chopped into pieces. O'Brien then promised to give each audience member in attendance a piece of the set.[40]

One of Conan's favorite bands, The White Stripes, performed a new, slower arrangement of their song "We're Going to Be Friends" based on Conan's lullaby rendition of the song, with drummer Meg White playing second guitar and singing along with vocalist/guitarist Jack White. The performance proved to be the band's last before their breakup in February 2011.[41] The song would be used many years later as the theme for O'Brien’s podcast Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend. The program concluded with a visibly emotional O'Brien giving a farewell speech from behind his desk, thanking his fans, writers, producers, backstage crew, his family, the Max Weinberg 7, David Letterman, Joel Godard, Jay Leno, and Lorne Michaels, as well as a final assurance that he would not "grow up" as he moved to The Tonight Show.[40]

About 3.4 million viewers watched O'Brien's final episode of Late Night, the largest audience since the January 24, 2005 episode that followed Jay Leno's tribute to Johnny Carson.[42]

After the end of the series, Studio 6A at Rockefeller Center was remodeled for The Dr. Oz Show.[43] In the summer of 2013, NBC moved Late Night with Jimmy Fallon to Studio 6A while 6B, which housed Late Night since Fallon succeeded O'Brien in 2009, was being renovated when Fallon took over The Tonight Show on February 17, 2014 while The Dr. Oz Show moved to ABC's Upper West Side studios.

Awards and nominations edit

Year Award Category Result
1996 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44]
1997 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44]
Writers Guild of America Award Comedy/Variety (Including Talk) – Series Won[44]
1998 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44]
1999 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44]
Writers Guild of America Award Comedy/Variety (Including Talk) – Series Nominated[44]
2000 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44]
Writers Guild of America Award Comedy/Variety (Including Talk) – Series Won[44]
2001 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44]
Writers Guild of America Award Comedy/Variety (Including Talk) – Series Nominated[44]
2002 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44]
Writers Guild of America Award Comedy/Variety (Including Talk) – Series Won[44][45]
2003 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44][45]
Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series Nominated[46]
Writers Guild of America Award Comedy/Variety (Including Talk) – Series Won[44][45]
2004 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44][45]
Outstanding Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video for a Series Nominated[46]
Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series Nominated[46]
Writers Guild of America Award Comedy/Variety (Including Talk) – Series Nominated[44]
2005 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44][45]
Outstanding Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video for a Series Nominated[46]
Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series Nominated[46]
People's Choice Award Favorite Late Night Talk Show Host Nominated[44]
Telvis Award Special Telvis Won[44]
Writers Guild of America Award Comedy/Variety (Including Talk) – Series Won[44]
2006 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44][45]
Outstanding Lighting Direction (Electronic, Multi-Camera) for VMC Programming Nominated[46]
Outstanding Multi-Camera Picture Editing for a Series Nominated[46]
Outstanding Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video for a Series Nominated[46]
Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series Nominated[46]
PGA Award Television Producer of the Year Award in Variety Television Nominated[46]
People's Choice Award Favorite Late Night Talk Show Host Nominated[44]
Writers Guild of America Award Comedy/Variety (Including Talk) – Series Won[44]
2007 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Won[44][45]
Outstanding Lighting Direction (Electronic, Multi-Camera) for VMC Programming Nominated[46]
Outstanding Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video for a Series Nominated[46]
Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series Nominated[46]
Writers Guild of America Award Comedy/Variety (Including Talk) – Series Nominated[44]
PGA Award Television Producer of the Year Award in Variety Television Nominated[46]
2008 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44][45]
Outstanding Lighting Direction (Electronic, Multi-Camera) for VMC Programming Nominated[46]
Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Variety, Music Series or a Special Nominated[46]
Outstanding Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video for a Series Nominated[46]
2009 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated[44][45]
Writers Guild of America Award Comedy/Variety (Including Talk) – Series Nominated[44]

Set design edit

O'Brien's Late Night had three long-term permanent sets, but retained the basic structure used when Letterman occupied Studio 6A: the performance space at the viewer's left, and the desk area, to the viewer's right, where interviews were done. O'Brien did his monologue in the performance area, emerging at the start of each episode from the area where musical guests perform. The Max Weinberg 7 were in the corner made by the stage-right wall and the wall in front of the audience. The desk area had a desk for O'Brien, a chair and couch(es) to the viewer's left for guests (and originally Andy Richter), and a coffee table.

Primarily, set changes involved the background behind the desk and chair and couch. The original set, used from the show's debut in 1993 until the fall of 1996, was primarily yellow, and the desk background resembled the living room of a New York City apartment, with windows that looked out at a Manhattan backdrop; it was modeled after Lorne Michaels' office.[47] For years afterwards, O'Brien mocked this original set, particularly its "mustard color". The two subsequent set designs featured darker blues and violets to emulate the feel of nighttime, with the final set featuring a balcony railing in front of a backdrop with the view from the top of Rockefeller Center. This set debuted on September 4, 2001, and necessitated changes almost instantly as its backdrop view of New York City contained the World Trade Center, which was destroyed a week later. A special curtain was used to obstruct the towers temporarily, until eventually the curtain became a permanent part of the set design even after the backdrop was altered. During his final week of episodes, Conan took an axe to parts of the set, giving it out to audience members as souvenirs, not wanting to allow it to simply be thrown away.

International broadcasts edit

Country TV Network(s) Weekly Schedule (local time)
  Israel Yes stars Comedy 11:15 pm Weeknights
  Australia The Comedy Channel 11:15 pm Weeknights
  Canada 'A' Simulcast with NBC
  Finland Sub Usually starts at 12:00 am Weeknights, otherwise starts during the following hour
  Sweden TV4 Plus Usually starts some time between 11:55 pm and 12:10 am Weeknights
The Middle East Super Comedy
Latin America I-Sat 12:30 am Weeknights
  Turkey e2 11:00 pm Tuesday–Friday
  Portugal SIC Radical
  Ireland 3e Usually starts at 12:00 am Weeknights, otherwise starts during the following hour

CNBC Europe used to air Late Night with Conan O'Brien on weeknights from 11:45 pm–12:30 am CET, with weekend editions on Saturdays and Sundays at 9:45 pm–10:30 pm CET. However, in March 2007, CNBC Europe decided to show only the weekend editions, and drop the weeknight editions, to make way for more business news programmes in their weeknight schedules.

On the week of August 4, 2008, however, CNBC Europe has discontinued showing the NBC Nightly News, which for many years was shown live from America in a 12:30 am–1:00 am CET slot. Late Night with Conan O'Brien has now replaced NBC Nightly News in the 12:30 am–1:00 am slot. The weeknight editions are a 30-minute condensed version of the show. The show follows the weeknight condensed version of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno which airs at 12:00 am CET.

In September 2008, CNBC Europe changed the weeknight schedules to include full uncut editions of Late Night with Conan O'Brien broadcast in the 11:45 am CET/10:45 pm GMT 45-minute time slot. This schedule usually runs from Tuesdays to Fridays. CNBC Europe decided to stop broadcasting Late Night as of January 1, 2009, a mere two months before Conan's last show as host. Instead of following The Tonight Show reruns on weekends, CNBC now broadcasts two Tonight Show episodes in a row.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Late Night With Conan O'Brien; February 20, 2009
  2. ^ "Leno promises smooth transition to O'Brien". Today.com. September 28, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2008.
  3. ^ . CNN. Associated Press. July 21, 2008. Archived from the original on July 24, 2008. Retrieved July 21, 2008. Leno's last show will be Friday, May 29, and O'Brien will start the following Monday, June 1, NBC executives told a Television Critics Association meeting Monday.
  4. ^ de Moraes, Lisa (July 22, 2008). "For Jay Leno, Parting Is Such Sour Sorrow". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 7, 2010.
  5. ^ a b c d e "The Battle for Late Night[dead link]" A&E Network, April 27, 2010.
  6. ^ a b c d Rosenthal, Phil (September 14, 2003). . Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on March 14, 2008. Retrieved May 11, 2008.
  7. ^ a b The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, May 29, 2009.
  8. ^ "Episode 1". Late Night with Conan O'Brien. Season 1. Episode 1. September 13, 1993. NBC.
  9. ^ Hogan, Marc (April 22, 2018). "Jonathan Richman: I, Jonathan Album Review | Pitchfork". pitchfork.com. Retrieved April 26, 2018.
  10. ^ . Conanofthenight.com. September 15, 1993. Archived from the original on October 25, 2011. Retrieved October 30, 2011.
  11. ^ . Conanofthenight.com. September 15, 1993. Archived from the original on October 25, 2011. Retrieved October 30, 2011.
  12. ^ O'Brien, Conan (September 13, 1993). "O'Brien Flops!". The New York Times (op-ed).
  13. ^ a b Heisler, Steve Interview – Dana Carvey and Robert Smigel The A.V. Club (June 15, 2009). Retrieved on 5-09-10.
  14. ^ Steinberg, Jacques (October 17, 1994). "DEFYING THE TV ODDS: CONAN O'BRIEN LIVES!". The New York Times via Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
  15. ^ Hlavaty, Craig (April 27, 2017). "20 years ago Conan O'Brien came to Houston to complain about his time slot". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
  16. ^ Ess, Ramsey. . Splitsider. Archived from the original on July 25, 2014. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
  17. ^ Hirschberg, Lynn (May 24, 2009). "Heeeere's ... Conan!!!". The New York Times.
  18. ^ . Conanofthenight.com. October 7, 1994. Archived from the original on October 25, 2011. Retrieved October 30, 2011.
  19. ^ a b O'Brien, Conan (August 13, 2003). . The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on May 13, 2006. Retrieved May 11, 2008.
  20. ^ Carter, Bill (January 28, 2002). "Wanting Late-Night Presence, Fox Looks at Conan O'Brien". The New York Times. Retrieved September 24, 2021.
  21. ^ "10th Anniversary Special". Late Night with Conan O'Brien. September 14, 2003.
  22. ^ Freydkin, Donna (February 25, 2009). "Fallon talking a blue streak to take over for Conan". USA Today. Retrieved March 1, 2009.
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on April 13, 2018. Retrieved April 12, 2018.
  24. ^ Santa Ana, Otto (2009). "Did You Call in Mexican? The Racial Politics of Jay Leno Immigrant Jokes". Language in Society. 38 (1): 23–45. doi:10.1017/S0047404508090027. JSTOR 40207913. S2CID 145777390. Retrieved October 25, 2021.
  25. ^ a b IndieWire article: "Listen: John Lurie Talks ‘Fishing With John,’ Working With Jim Jarmusch, Conan O’Brien & More In Hour-Plus Podcast Talk."
  26. ^ a b YouTube video: "John Lurie - WTF Podcast with Marc Maron #696".
  27. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : Team Coco (February 11, 2014). "Vanessa Bayer: I Was Too Ugly For A Peanut Commercial". YouTube. Retrieved July 14, 2019.
  28. ^ "John Krasinski Biography". people.com. 2014. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  29. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : Team Coco (November 7, 2012). "Mindy Kaling Was A Conan Intern". YouTube. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  30. ^ Darwin, Liza (March 2, 2012). "Ellie Kemper featured in Nylon Guys". Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  31. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : SuzakuX (February 4, 2013). "Conan O'Brien Mercilessly Ridicules Jack McBrayer". YouTube. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  32. ^ . NBC.com. Archived from the original on November 13, 2011. Retrieved October 30, 2011.
  33. ^ . Latenightunderground.com. Archived from the original on February 13, 2009. Retrieved October 30, 2011.
  34. ^ Lisa de Moraes (May 3, 2018). "Conan O'Brien's TBS Late Night Show Shifts To 30-Minute Format in 2019". Deadline Hollywood.
  35. ^ Conan Meets The President Of Finland – Conan
  36. ^ . NBCU Photobank. Archived from the original on April 25, 2012. Retrieved October 30, 2011.
  37. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Nobody's Watching Conan (with Fat Al Roker) 1998-02-19". YouTube. Late Night with Conan O'Brien. Retrieved June 5, 2016.
  38. ^ a b "U2 takes over Conan O'Brien's show". The Associated Press (via Today.com). October 4, 2005. Retrieved February 5, 2010.
  39. ^ "Conan, Stewart, Colbert unite in mock feud". Today.com. February 5, 2008. Retrieved May 11, 2008.
  40. ^ a b c d Entertainment Weekly article: "Conan O'Brien: His last 'Late Night' a triumph, no insult, highly comic, not a dog".
  41. ^ Ganz, Caryn (February 20, 2009). . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on February 23, 2009. Retrieved February 5, 2010.
  42. ^ de Moraes, Lisa (February 27, 2009). "Seinfeld, NBC Renew Their Vows With 'The Marriage Ref'". Washington Post. Retrieved February 27, 2009.
  43. ^ Battaglio, Stephen. "He Will Survive". TV Guide. November 7, 2011. Page 20.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Internet Movie Database staff (2010). "Awards for Conan O'Brien". Internet Movie Database. IMDb.com, Inc. Retrieved January 15, 2010.
  45. ^ a b c d e f g h i . NBC.com – The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien. tonightshowwithconanobrien.com. 2010. Archived from the original on December 12, 2009. Retrieved January 15, 2010.
  46. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Internet Movie Database staff (2010). "Awards for "Late Night with Conan O'Brien"". Internet Movie Database. IMDb.com, Inc. Retrieved October 6, 2010.
  47. ^ Louie, Elaine (April 30, 2005). "The Set Makes The Host". The New York Times. Retrieved March 10, 2023. Not so Conan O'Brien. The set of "Late Night With Conan O'Brien," at the 30 Rockefeller Center studio his predecessor used, is tidy. The set, which looks like a hip men's club, was inspired by the office of Lorne Michaels, the executive producer of "Late Night" and "Saturday Night Live."

Further reading edit

External links edit

late, night, with, conan, brien, celebrity, secrets, redirects, here, game, show, that, originally, this, title, star, secrets, conan, brien, subsequent, program, tonight, show, with, conan, brien, conan, brien, most, recent, program, conan, talk, show, americ. Celebrity Secrets redirects here For the game show that originally had this title see All Star Secrets For Conan O Brien s subsequent program see The Tonight Show with Conan O Brien For Conan O Brien s most recent program see Conan talk show Late Night with Conan O Brien is an American late night talk show hosted by Conan O Brien 1 NBC aired 2 725 episodes from September 13 1993 to February 20 2009 The show featured varied comedic material celebrity interviews and musical and comedy performances Late Night aired weeknights at 12 37 am Eastern 11 37 pm Central and 12 37 am Mountain in the United States From 1993 until 2000 Andy Richter served as O Brien s sidekick following his departure O Brien was the show s sole featured performer The show s house musical act was The Max Weinberg 7 and led by E Street Band drummer Max Weinberg Late Night with Conan O BrienAlso known asLate Night franchise brand GenreLate night talk showVariety showCreated byDavid LettermanConan O BrienLorne MichaelsDeveloped byLorne MichaelsPresented byConan O BrienStarringAndy RichterThe Max Weinberg 7Narrated byJoel GodardComposersOpening theme Howard Shore and John LurieClosing theme Cornell Knowledge by Jimmy VivinoCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons16No of episodes2 725 list of episodes ProductionExecutive producersLorne MichaelsJeff RossProduction locationsStudio 6A NBC Studios New York New YorkCamera setupMulti cameraRunning time42 43 minutesProduction companiesBroadway VideoConaco 2001 2009 Universal Media Studios formerly NBC Productions NBC Studios NBCUniversal Television Studio Worldwide Pants Inc uncredited ReleaseOriginal networkNBCOriginal releaseSeptember 13 1993 1993 09 13 February 20 2009 2009 02 20 RelatedThe Tonight Show with Conan O BrienConanThe second incarnation of NBC s Late Night franchise O Brien s program debuted in 1993 after David Letterman who hosted the first incarnation of Late Night moved to CBS to host Late Show opposite The Tonight Show In 2004 as part of a deal to secure a new contract NBC announced that O Brien would leave Late Night in 2009 to succeed Jay Leno as the host of The Tonight Show 2 3 Jimmy Fallon began hosting his version of Late Night on March 2 2009 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Replacing David Letterman 1 2 Debut 1 3 1996 2000 1 4 2001 2009 2 US television ratings late night talk shows 3 Format 3 1 Humor 3 2 The Max Weinberg 7 3 2 1 Theme song and other music 3 3 Joel Godard 3 4 Writing staff 3 5 Sketch actors and cameo appearances 3 6 Costumed characters 4 Appearances in other shows 5 Production 5 1 Broadcast 6 Special episodes 6 1 Remote pieces and episodes shot on location 6 2 Technical and production difficulties 6 3 Gimmick episodes 6 4 U2 exclusive 6 5 Episodes during the 2007 2008 writer s strike 6 5 1 Feud with Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert 6 6 Anniversary episodes 6 7 The final episode 7 Awards and nominations 8 Set design 9 International broadcasts 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory editReplacing David Letterman edit Upon Johnny Carson s retirement from The Tonight Show in 1992 executives at NBC announced that Carson s frequent guest host Jay Leno would be Carson s replacement and not David Letterman NBC later said that Letterman s high ratings for Late Night were the reason they kept him where he was Letterman was bitterly disappointed and angry at not having been given The Tonight Show job and at Carson s advice he left NBC after eleven years on Late Night CBS signed Letterman to host his own show opposite The Tonight Show Letterman moved his show to CBS virtually unchanged taking most of the staff skits and comedy formats with him However NBC owned the rights to the Late Night name forcing Letterman to rename his show Late Show with David Letterman NBC was not prepared to replace both Letterman and Late Night Aside from the name it needed to build a new show 5 Both Dana Carvey and Garry Shandling declined to host it 6 Saturday Night Live producer Lorne Michaels was brought in to develop the new show 5 and comedians Jon Stewart Drew Carey and Paul Provenza auditioned to host 6 Michaels suggested to Conan O Brien an unknown writer for The Simpsons and former writer for Saturday Night Live that he should audition for the job Despite having about 40 seconds 7 of television performance experience as an occasional extra on Saturday Night Live sketches O Brien auditioned for the show on April 13 1993 His guests were Jason Alexander and Mimi Rogers and the audition took place on the set of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno 6 NBC offered the show to O Brien on April 26 and O Brien made his first meaningful television appearance later that day when Leno introduced him on Tonight 7 On the final episode of his 16 year run O Brien stated that he owed his career to Lorne Michaels Debut edit O Brien s Late Night debuted on September 13 1993 with Andy Richter chosen as O Brien s sidekick The premiere episode featured John Goodman who received a First Guest medal for his appearance Drew Barrymore and Tony Randall with cameos from George Wendt and Bob Costas The episode featured a cold open of O Brien s walk to the studio with constant reminders that he was expected to live up to Letterman meanwhile Tom Brokaw makes a cameo After seeming to be unaffected by the comments O Brien arrives at his dressing room and cheerfully prepares to hang himself However a warning that the show is about to start causes him to abandon his plans 5 8 The show s first musical guest was English rock band Radiohead who performed during the second episode American singer songwriter Jonathan Richman was the show s second musical guest 9 O Brien s inexperience was apparent and the show was generally considered mediocre by critics in terms of hosting The Chicago Sun Times Lon Grankhe called O Brien nervous unprepared and generally geeky 10 and Tom Shales wrote As for O Brien the young man is a living collage of annoying nervous habits He giggles and titters jiggles about and fiddles with his cuffs He has dark beady little eyes like a rabbit He s one of the whitest white men ever 11 O Brien wrote for The New York Times a satirical review of the first episode the day it aired titled O Brien Flops in which he told readers Frankly I was not impressed 12 The originality and quality of the comedy however led by original head writer Robert Smigel was widely praised Although O Brien benefited by comparison from the quick critical and commercial failure of the fellow new late night The Chevy Chase Show 5 NBC only offered short term contracts 13 weeks at a time 6 and once for six weeks as widely reported by the press at the time 5 O Brien was reportedly almost fired at least once in this period but NBC had no one to replace him According to Smigel We were basically canceled at Conan and then they changed their minds in August of 94 gave us a reprieve 13 One NBC affiliate KPRC TV in Houston dropped Late Night with Conan O Brien in September 1994 due to low ratings and was replaced with first run episodes of The Jenny Jones Show KPRC reinstated O Brien s Late Night in the fall of 1996 but scheduled it to air as late as 2 40 a m while the station in addition to The Jenny Jones Show had aired Extra Access Hollywood Ricki Lake Montel Williams Inside Edition and a rebroadcast of its 10 00 p m newscast between Leno and O Brien Houston became the subject of a skit via classic remote piece in which O Brien made impromptu stops at Houston s central bus terminal and the Astrodome to watch an episode of his own show with Houstonians in 1997 KPRC began airing Late Night with Conan O Brien directly following The Tonight Show with Jay Leno in 2004 14 15 O Brien When I first got this job I came here to 30 Rock Letterman How did you get this job Was it a theme writing contest O Brien Yeah It was what would I do with a talk show And I was fourth Letterman visits Late Night with Conan O Brien March 1 1994 16 According to O Brien NBC network executive Warren Littlefield told him with regard to Andy Richter he d never succeed until I got rid of that big fat dildo That was the tone of the conversations between us and the network It was widely expected that the host of Talk Soup Greg Kinnear would take over the role but Kinnear turned down the opportunity Kinnear would instead become host of Late Night s then lead out program Later in February 1994 remaining there for two years before deciding to pursue an acting career 17 Stars like Tom Hanks agreed to appear on Late Night which boosted audience awareness Even Letterman who admired O Brien s comic sensibility appeared as a guest to register his support O Brien s performance style improved through experience and he began to receive more favorable reviews and ratings the following year 18 With the ratings gradually improving over the course of two years Late Night reached a new level of critical and commercial success in 1996 Tom Shales officially recanted his previous critical review with the headline I was wrong and O Brien received his first Emmy nomination for writing which he received every year until 2011 1996 2000 edit nbsp Andy Richter served as sidekick from 1993 to 2000 He eventually returned as announcer sidekick for The Tonight Show with Conan O Brien and later Conan In 2000 Richter left Late Night on good terms to pursue his acting career a move that emotionally affected O Brien as evidenced by Richter s last show The show s comedy bits and banter had usually depended on O Brien s interaction with Richter O Brien s wacky non sequitur comedy became more pronounced as he played all of his comedy and commentary directly to the audience and Max Weinberg instead of towards Richter 2001 2009 edit nbsp Conan O Brien in the music video for The White Stripes The Denial Twist 2005 nbsp The Max Weinberg 7 during a taping of Late Night with Conan O Brien in Chicago in 2006 nbsp O Brien in 2006In 2002 when time came to renew his contract O Brien had notable offers from other networks to defect 19 Fox was reported to have made particularly strong overtures pitching him an 11 00 p m show 20 O Brien decided to re sign with NBC however joking that he initially wanted to make a 13 week deal a nod to his first contract He ultimately signed through 2005 indicating that it was symbolic of surpassing Letterman s run with 12 years of hosting 19 In 2003 O Brien s own production company Conaco was added as a producer of Late Night The show celebrated its 10th anniversary another milestone that O Brien said he wanted to achieve with his 2002 contract During the anniversary show Mr T handed O Brien a chain with a large gold 7 on it O Brien But Mr T we ve been on the air for ten years Mr T I know that fool But you only been funny for seven 21 O Brien s last season on Late Night attracted an average of 1 98 million viewers compared to 1 92 million viewers for The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson 22 US television ratings late night talk shows editSeason Nielsen Rank Nielsen Rating 23 1993 94 4 2 01994 95 3 2 21995 96 3 2 21996 97 4 2 51997 98 4 2 51998 99 4 2 51999 2000 4 2 52000 01 4 2 52001 02 3 tied with Politically Incorrect 2 52002 03 3 2 62003 04 3 2 62004 05 3 2 52005 06 3 2 52006 07 3 2 42007 08 3 2 02008 09 3 2 0Format editHumor edit The show was known for its wacky and absurd sophomoric comedic sensibility that is edgier than most other talk shows Like his Late Night predecessor David Letterman the show s humor also had a streak of biting sarcasm and irony According to Robert Smigel who served as head writer in 1993 the show s comedic approach was to focus on being different from David Letterman I set down a lot of rules some of which were crazy but ultimately it forced us to come up with a lot of original stuff We had the added bonus of being Letterman s replacement Typically O Brien would play the straight man role to the general absurdity of the comedy treating the material or wacky nature of the sketches with sincerity The show had an unusual quantity of comedy and original content rather than other talk shows such as Late Show with David Letterman or The Tonight Show with Jay Leno that relied heavily on recurring segments and found humor The show was particularly unique in the lack of found humor to derive content from i e most content being scripted as opposed to Letterman s Small Town News or Jay Leno s headlines that used this found humor O Brien would often playfully chide his audience for an underwhelming or overly enthusiastic response to his jokes Particularly in the early years comedic sketches overtook all segments on the show occasionally even interrupting guest interviews and O Brien s monologue Frequently sketches would randomly begin without introduction such as during banter between Richter and O Brien A lot of the humor had a fantasy like quality to it where inanimate objects would talk or silly characters would disrupt the show Sometimes a short story would emerge in these sketches with a resolution culminating in a song One recurring technique is to superimpose lips onto an existing image as in the Syncro Vox limited animation technique resulting in the speaker saying things often quite out of character Although Late Night used political humor it did so far less frequently than competing shows did During the 1996 and 2000 presidential election seasons Late Night was found to be the least politically oriented late night program It averaged 310 political jokes per election season in contrast to the Leno led Tonight Show with 1 275 24 See List of Late Night with Conan O Brien sketches for an extensive list The Max Weinberg 7 edit The show s house band was The Max Weinberg 7 led by drummer Max Weinberg The other six members were Mark Pender on trumpet Richie LaBamba Rosenberg on trombone Mike Merritt on bass Jerry Vivino on saxophone and brother Jimmy Vivino on guitar and Scott Healy on keyboards Weinberg sometimes took extended leaves of absence to tour with Bruce Springsteen as the drummer for the E Street Band During his absence James Wormworth would typically fill in on drums and the band was led by Vivino under the name Jimmy Vivino and the Max Weinberg 7 With the departure of Andy Richter from Late Night in May 2000 Max Weinberg assumed a bigger role as an interlocutor for O Brien s jokes One common running gag was Max s awkwardness on camera and his apparent lack of chemistry with Conan Weinberg was often used in sketches as well which usually revolved around his purported sexual deviance mostly a penchant for bedding barely legal groupies although long running sketches also spoofed Max s lack of knowledge of current affairs LaBamba was also used as the butt of many of Conan s jokes These humorous sketches usually revolved around LaBamba s sizeable mustache his poor acting skills and his alleged inability to read written music Mark Pender would often sing songs on the topic of a current event which ended with him screeching uncontrollably and climbing the risers into the audience All members of the 7 have had successful side careers as studio musicians Theme song and other music edit The show s opening theme was co written by composer Howard Shore and John Lurie of the band The Lounge Lizards Lurie would later say that he was contracted by Shore to write the theme and after he turned in the piece Shore made minimal changes and claimed an unwarranted co writing credit 25 26 Lurie also claimed to have been a finalist for Late Night s band leader position but said producers told him Conan thinks you re funnier than him and that scares him 25 26 As is common in the talk show format the Max Weinberg 7 performed the show s opening and closing themes played bumpers into and out of commercial breaks they actually played through the entire break for the studio audience and a short piece during O Brien s crossover to his desk after his monologue The show s closing theme was called Cornell Knowledge and was lifted from Jerry and Jimmy Vivino s first album together However on Late Night it was played at a much quicker tempo than the album version The band also played a wide variety of songs as bumpers coming to and from commercial breaks and introducing guests usually popular music from a variety of eras Joel Godard edit Joel Godard a long time announcer for NBC shows was the program s announcer and a frequent comedy contributor On the show s final episode Conan noted that Godard was originally hired to simply announce the show s intro and claimed nobody thought you d ever see him however he was gradually worked into the show s comedy pieces These bits usually revolved around Godard s supposed homosexual fetishes deviant sexual habits substance abuse and suicidal tendencies The humor came in part from Godard s delivery No matter how depressing or deviant the topic being discussed was he always did so in an exaggeratedly cheerful voice and with a huge smile plastered on his face Several sketches ended with Godard apparently committing suicide in his announcer s booth When Andy Richter left the show in 2000 Joel Godard became more common among sketches Writing staff edit In the first few seasons of the show the writing staff consisted of several now prolific comics including Robert Smigel as the head writer Bob Odenkirk Louis C K Tommy Blacha and Dino Stamatopoulos Smigel left his position as head writer of the show in 1995 to pen several movies 13 but continued to appear on the show to do bits as Triumph the Insult Comic Dog and the Satellite Interviews Jonathan Groff took over his position until replaced by Mike Sweeney in 2001 Members of the show s writing staff frequently appeared in sketches on the show Among the most prolific were Brian McCann Preparation H Raymond FedEx Pope The Loser Airsick Moth Jerry Butters Awesome Dave Funhole Guy Bulletproof Legs Guy Adrian Raisin Foster S amp M Lincoln etc Brian Stack Hannigan the Traveling Salesman Artie Kendall the Ghost Crooner The Interrupter Kilty McBagpipes Fan tastic Guy Clive Clemmons Frankenstein Ira Slipnut Brian etc Jon Glaser Segue Sam Pubes Awareness Del Wrist Hulk Ahole Ronald Gorton s Fisherman Jeremy Slipnut Jon etc Kevin Dorff Coked up Werewolf Jesus Christ Mansy the half man half pansy Joe s Bartender Todd the Tiny Guy etc and Andy Blitz Awful Ballgame Chanter Vin Diesel s brother Leonard Diesel Slipnut Andy Chuck Aloo aka the star of the 24 spin off series 60 Blitz went so far as to travel to India for one bit in which he carried his computer through the streets of India to get technical support firsthand from the telephone representative at NBC s technical help center Several writing staff interns have gone on to become noted actors or writers including Vanessa Bayer 27 John Krasinski 28 Mindy Kaling 29 Ellie Kemper 30 and Jack McBrayer 31 Sketch actors and cameo appearances edit Late Night employed a number of sketch actors many of whom were frequently reused in different roles in different episodes Several years before joining the cast of Saturday Night Live and before playing the role of Leslie Knope on another NBC TV show Parks and Recreation Amy Poehler often appeared as a regular in many sketches though she was best remembered for playing the recurring role of Andy Richter s Conan obsessed teenage sister Stacy Other notable comedians such as Jack McBrayer Rob Riggle Rob Corddry H Jon Benjamin Ellie Kemper Bobby Moynihan Matt Besser Ian Roberts Matt Walsh and Andrew Daly also frequently appeared as sketch actors on the show for several years Triumph the Insult Comic Dog created and voiced by original head writer Robert Smigel began as part of a sketch on Late Night Celebrities such as Dr Joyce Brothers Nipsey Russell Abe Vigoda James Lipton Bob Saget and William Preston as the character Carl Oldy Olsen also made frequent cameo appearances in comedy sketches on the show at different periods One of the show s graphic designers Pierre Bernard was featured in several sketches such as Pierre Bernard s Recliner of Rage and Nerding It Up For Pierre Celebrity guests of the night would also occasionally appear in sketches either during their interviews or during the earlier comedy segments e g in In the year 2000 which always included the participation of a celebrity guest after Andy Richter left the show or a sketch where Conan would pretend to write in his diary while an attractive female guest was there Quite rare for a talk show sometimes interviews began normally but turned into sketches with both the guest and Conan participating usually when the guest was a friend of the show Costumed characters edit Unusual for a late night talk show Late Night made frequent use of various costumed characters such as The Masturbating Bear Robot on a Toilet and Pimpbot 5000 The humor in these sketches often derived from the crude construction of the characters costumes as well as the absurdist nature of their conceptions For example Pimpbot 5000 was a 1950s style robot who dressed and acted in the manner of an exaggerated blaxploitation pimp while The Masturbating Bear was a man in a bear costume wearing an oversized diaper who would invariably begin to fondle himself to the tune of Aram Khachaturian s Sabre Dance when brought on stage Many of these characters did little more in their appearances than walk across the stage or be wheeled out from behind the curtain but some had extensive sketches on the show Appearances in other shows editThe show made a cameo appearance in the Sesame Street special Elmopalooza where Conan was interviewing two aliens while Big Bird was passing by them carrying a video tape The show also made an appearance on The Simpsons in the episode Bart Gets Famous where Conan interviews a now famous Bart Production edit nbsp A ticket to the showLate Night was a production of Lorne Michaels s Broadway Video and since 2003 O Brien s Conaco It was taped in Studio 6A in the GE Building at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in New York City Next to the door were framed pictures of Letterman Carson Jack Paar and Steve Allen each of whose groundbreaking late night shows originated from studio 6A or 6B where The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon is currently taped 32 The studio holds just over 200 audience members It was taped at about 5 30 pm as an uninterrupted hour long program with the band playing music through the portions that would be filled by commercials Generally shows were taped at 5 30 pm Monday through Friday although for much of the show s run reruns would be aired on Mondays and the show would not tape that day The show s format consisted of an opening monologue from O Brien followed by various desk bits These generally included several brief sketches recurring segments or some other form of comedy Typically O Brien would play the straight man role to the general absurdity of the comedy treating the material or wacky nature of the sketches with sincerity In the show s second and fourth segments O Brien interviewed two celebrity guests between which in the third segment O Brien listed the next night s week s guests There was often a comedy bit as well during this segment The show s fifth segment was usually reserved for a musical or stand up comedy performance or occasionally another guest interview The show s final segment was usually a quick goodnight and the closing credits which sometimes featured part of a bit from earlier in the show Quite rare for a talkshow frequently comedy segments would also spill into the interviews typically when a guest was a friend of the show During the live tapings and prior to the show citation needed there was an audience warm up during which the audience watched a montage of highlights from the show and staff writer Brian McCann greeted the audience this task was formerly undertaken by head writer Mike Sweeney McCann delivered a few jokes told the audience what to expect and finally introduced the band and then O Brien O Brien then thanked the audience for coming meeting as many audience members as he could He would often then do a musical number with the band to pump up the audience Burning Love was one standard After the show was finished taping O Brien sang the End of the Show Song which never aired on Late Night although in February 2009 a short video of it was posted on Late Night Underground 33 The End of the Show Song finally did reach air on January 21 2010 his penultimate show as Tonight Show host It also was aired on the March 29 2012 episode of Conan The tradition of singing The End of the Show Song has continued un aired as usual on Conan Broadcast edit nbsp O Brien poking fun at the show s new HDTV widescreen formatLate Night began broadcasting in 1080i ATSC on April 26 2005 with a downscaled letterboxed NTSC simulcast unlike The Tonight Show whose NTSC simulcast is fullscreen O Brien celebrated the conversion to the widescreen HDTV format with jokes throughout the week On December 6 2005 Late Night with Conan O Brien segments began selling on the iTunes Store Most segments were priced at 1 99 as were most episodes of other shows with special best ofs and other longer segments priced at 9 99 In December 2007 NBC stopped selling all its television shows on iTunes but the network returned it to iTunes in September 2008 after NBC and Apple worked out a new agreement The show was offered free at Hulu com and the NBC website but has been unavailable on the Internet since the 2010 Tonight Show conflict However in May 2018 O Brien and TBS announced they would partner with NBC to make his entire Late Night archives available online marking the 25th anniversary of O Brien s late night debut 34 Special episodes editRemote pieces and episodes shot on location edit Remote pieces shot on location were a recurring staple on Late Night but occasionally entire episodes were shot on location usually during sweeps months The first vacation for the show was a week long stint of shows in Los Angeles the week of November 9 12 1999 This was the only location week for the show while Andy Richter was with the show and the only time the show s theme was altered for the week with a more surf style version of the show s normal theme though the Toronto shows ended the normal theme with a piece of O Canada The show was broadcast from NBC s L A studios NBC Studios Burbank and an L A themed set was built very similar in layout to the New York set From February 10 13 2004 Late Night broadcast from the Elgin Theatre in Toronto Canada The guests for these episodes were all Canadians with the exception of Adam Sandler and included such stars as Jim Carrey and Mike Myers As the show was taped at a theater unlike the trip to L A the set built was not like the show s standard set nbsp Chicago Theatre during Conan s week of shows thereFrom May 9 12 2006 the show made a similar venture to the Chicago Theatre in Chicago Illinois taking cues from their previous trip to Toronto Between April 30 May 4 2007 the show originated from the Orpheum Theatre in San Francisco In a sketch called Conan O Brien Hates My Homeland Conan mocked every nation in the world to see which ones he gets letters from An announcer on the Finnish entertainment channel SubTV which airs the show a couple of days after it is aired in the US asked people to defend Finland before Conan got to insult it and the viewers in Finland began sending mail before the bit had even gotten to the letter F Conan responded by assuming the Finnish just couldn t wait to be insulted and officially insulted Finland in the segment An overwhelming number of postcards were supposedly received which apparently forced Conan to give Finland a formal apology Conan then went as far as to have the flag of Finland shown in the background during a speech and slandered the Finns hated neighbor Sweden with a sign saying Sweden Sucks printed over the flag of Sweden It would seem that this chain of events led to elevated ratings in Finland and subsequently also sparked a special relationship with the viewers in Finland Later when Conan was talking to audience members before the show a group of fans visiting from Finland commented that he resembled their female president Tarja Halonen Conan mentioned the resemblance on his show even showing pictures of Halonen next to himself When he discovered that Halonen was up for reelection he began making satirical commercials in support of Halonen and vowed to travel to Finland to meet her if she won re election When she did indeed win re election in January 2006 Conan traveled to Finland and met with her 35 One episode broadcast on March 10 2006 was compiled mainly of footage from O Brien s trip to Finland In the episode Conan greeted fans at the airport participated in a Sami cultural ceremony appeared on a Finnish talk show and attempted to visit a fan who had written to him The episode was not strictly taped as a live episode there however but was prefaced by an introduction by O Brien taped in New York The Finland episode came as the culmination of a long running joke on the show Aside from location shows the show also did special one shots in its early years In 1995 one episode of the show was taped aboard a New York City ferry in New York Harbor Dubbed The Show on a Boat by the showtunes style song and dance number performed by a trio of sailors at the start of the show O Brien Richter the band and guests were all crammed onto the deck of the ferry The show was taped at its normal afternoon time while it was still light out Technical and production difficulties edit A more unexpected shoot occurred on October 10 1996 when a five alarm fire in Rockefeller Plaza rendered the 6A studios out of commission for the remainder of that week The fire occurred on early Thursday morning which left O Brien s staff precious little time to assemble a show elsewhere Pressed for time as 12 35 approached O Brien taped the show outside after dark despite the cold weather on a makeshift set 36 with the Prometheus statue and 30 Rock serving as a backdrop The East L A rock band Los Lobos performed in the blustery wind a song from their newest album Colossal Head Furthering the unfortunate nature of the evening s circumstances was the final guest Julie Scardina who brought along wild animals including birds that Conan explained had to be kept tied up as they could not be freed outside Earlier in the show O Brien and Richter walked into Brookstone located in the lobby of Rockefeller Center camera crew in tow and bought a massaging leather recliner for the first guest Samuel L Jackson The second of the two fire shows on Friday night was taped in the Today Show studio which was not affected by the fire During the Northeast Blackout of 2003 O Brien and the staff taped a short 10 minute introduction explaining that the episode they had planned would not be taking place due to the blackout Studio 6A was powered by a generator and lit by battery powered floodlights A standby show was aired in progress after the intro One of the scheduled guests that night The Dandy Warhols commandeered the studio s green room where they stayed until they performed on the show the next night Gimmick episodes edit Other shows that were taped in the regular 6A studio were augmented by special gimmicks A lot of high concept gimmick episodes were done in the early years of the show such as a 1995 show done entirely on a boat of the circle line or Time Travel Week four episodes from early 1996 where Conan and Andy and the rest of the crew time traveled to a different point in time each night Times and locations included The Civil War Ancient Greece The future and The early 80s featuring a cameo by David Letterman in the cold open who occupied Conan s studio in 1983 cruelly brushing off Conan and Andy s attempt at explaining their presence in Letterman s dressing room by saying Why don t you two fellas go find a nice warm place to screw yourselves Security In 1997 a special episode was taped in which the studio audience was composed solely of grade school age children primarily 5 10 years of age Conan interacted with the children encouraging them to laugh and cheer to keep away the boredom monster The February 19 1998 episode was aired against coverage of the 1998 Winter Olympics on CBS and therefore Conan assumed no one was watching and they could do anything He and Andy took to performing increasingly outrageous acts such as Conan revealing a Hanson T shirt under his shirt and tie and confessing his hatred for the NBC screen bug going as far as to kill it with a can of Raid He and Andy also smoked on the air with a cutaway showing a mother finding her two kids imitating Conan Max Weinberg confessed to killing Bruce Springsteen s previous drummer as well as a number of other people he didn t like even showing a map of where he buried them Al Roker walked into the studio and confessed he never liked the weather and Conan asked a female audience member to have consensual sex with him which the woman vehemently refused The event became known as Nobody s Watching 37 The October 18 2002 episode was re shot entirely in clay animation nearly seven months after its first airing including the opening credits and commercial bumpers The episode s originally broadcast soundtrack was retained while the visuals were reproduced to mirror the original footage in a small scale reproduction of the studio 6A On October 31 2006 a similarly conceptualized Halloween episode was created from an episode which originally aired in May and featured Larry King among other guests Using a process the show called Skelevision all the visuals were re shot with a Halloween motif with human skeletons adorned with the clothing and accessories of the humans This re shoot was shot using the actual studio and the puppeteers moved the skeletons with wires and cables while being visually obscured by green screen technology Once again the opening and bumpers were altered this time including a model of a hearse winding through a foggy landscape and cemetery and the voice of Bill Hader as Vincent Price in place of Joel Godard U2 exclusive edit nbsp O Brien interviewing U2 on Late NightThe October 5 2005 episode of Late Night was devoted entirely to the band U2 marking the first time in the show s then 13 year run that it had devoted an entire show to a single guest 38 Jim Pitt the talent executive in charge of booking acts for the show remarked that in his 12 years of working for Late Night U2 and Johnny Cash were the dream artists he d tried but never succeeded in getting 38 The band performed three songs two more than the customary one song then had a lengthy interview with Conan Episodes during the 2007 2008 writer s strike edit After two months of being off air the first show to air during the 2007 2008 Writers Guild of America strike on January 2 2008 featured a small musical segment at the beginning of the show detailing O Brien s newly grown beard in a show of support for the striking writers At the beginning of the January 28 episode it was revealed that Conan had shaved his beard which was followed with a similar musical segment Several times during the episodes produced during the writer s strike O Brien would kill time by spinning his wedding ring on his desk which he previously only did during rehearsals His personal best was 41 seconds achieved during an un aired rehearsal After several unsuccessful on air attempts to break his record during the show originally broadcast on February 9 2008 O Brien broke his record for endurance ring spinning setting a time of 51 seconds by coating his wedding ring with Vaseline and spinning it on a Teflon surface The feat was accomplished with the help of MIT physics professor Peter Fisher These episodes are considered by most fans to be the magnum opus of O Brien s television career considering the spontaneity of each episode The strike also gave rise to associate producer Jordan Schlansky s repeated appearances on the show as an embellished version of himself Feud with Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert edit Main article Who Made Huckabee Early on in the later half of the 2007 2008 Writer s Guild strike Conan O Brien accused his show of being the sole cause of presidential candidate Mike Huckabee s status in the polls due to his use of the Walker Texas Ranger Lever while Chuck Norris was coincidentally sponsoring Huckabee Stephen Colbert made the claim that because of the Colbert bump he was responsible for Huckabee s current success in the 2008 presidential race O Brien claimed that he was responsible for Colbert s success because he had made mention of him on his show In response Jon Stewart host of The Daily Show claimed that he was responsible for the success of O Brien and in turn the success of Huckabee and Colbert This resulted in a three part comedic battle among the three hosts with all three appearing on each other s shows The feud ended on Late Night with an all out mock brawl between the three talk show hosts 39 Anniversary episodes edit In 1996 a third anniversary episode was taped though it aired in the regular 12 35 11 35 late night time slot The show was composed of clips of the best of the first three years and featured cameos from many former guests including Janeane Garofalo Scott Thompson Tony Randall and George Wendt Typical of O Brien s style of comedy he introduced his first guest Wendt by listing his notable achievements in television particularly Cheers then introduced each subsequent guest by repeatedly listing Wendt s achievements insinuating that all of his guests for that night s show played the role of Norm on Cheers In 1998 Late Night aired a fifth anniversary special in prime time mostly consisting of clips from the first five years It was taped in the Saturday Night Live studio also in the GE Building The special was later sold on VHS tape In 2003 a similar tenth anniversary special was taped in New York City s famed Beacon Theatre and later made available on DVD The final episode edit Late Night with Conan O Brien s last episode was recorded February 20 2009 and aired shortly after midnight that next morning The episode featured clips from past shows and a reflection on the show s sixteen year long run John Mayer sent a farewell video message singing a song about how Los Angeles is going to eat Conan alive an ironic foretelling of things to come In a short remote piece Conan released regular contributor Abe Vigoda into the wild as he could not bring him to Los Angeles for the move to The Tonight Show Will Ferrell made a surprise visit as George W Bush which quickly devolved into Ferrell tearing off his business suit to reveal an ill fitting green leprechaun outfit that had been worn in a number of previous appearances on the show 40 Former sidekick Andy Richter who re joined O Brien when he took over The Tonight Show in June joined O Brien onstage for two segments watching clips and reminiscing about the show 40 Among the clips shown O Brien noted that his all time favorite Late Night piece was when he attended a re enactment of an American Civil War era baseball game played at a Long Island New York museum Old Bethpage Village Restoration During the course of the final week O Brien began violently dismantling and handing out pieces of the production set to the audience In the final show a large piece of the stage s frame was pulled down and chopped into pieces O Brien then promised to give each audience member in attendance a piece of the set 40 One of Conan s favorite bands The White Stripes performed a new slower arrangement of their song We re Going to Be Friends based on Conan s lullaby rendition of the song with drummer Meg White playing second guitar and singing along with vocalist guitarist Jack White The performance proved to be the band s last before their breakup in February 2011 41 The song would be used many years later as the theme for O Brien s podcast Conan O Brien Needs a Friend The program concluded with a visibly emotional O Brien giving a farewell speech from behind his desk thanking his fans writers producers backstage crew his family the Max Weinberg 7 David Letterman Joel Godard Jay Leno and Lorne Michaels as well as a final assurance that he would not grow up as he moved to The Tonight Show 40 About 3 4 million viewers watched O Brien s final episode of Late Night the largest audience since the January 24 2005 episode that followed Jay Leno s tribute to Johnny Carson 42 After the end of the series Studio 6A at Rockefeller Center was remodeled for The Dr Oz Show 43 In the summer of 2013 NBC moved Late Night with Jimmy Fallon to Studio 6A while 6B which housed Late Night since Fallon succeeded O Brien in 2009 was being renovated when Fallon took over The Tonight Show on February 17 2014 while The Dr Oz Show moved to ABC s Upper West Side studios Awards and nominations editYear Award Category Result1996 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 1997 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Variety Including Talk Series Won 44 1998 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 1999 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Variety Including Talk Series Nominated 44 2000 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Variety Including Talk Series Won 44 2001 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Variety Including Talk Series Nominated 44 2002 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Variety Including Talk Series Won 44 45 2003 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 45 Outstanding Variety Music or Comedy Series Nominated 46 Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Variety Including Talk Series Won 44 45 2004 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 45 Outstanding Technical Direction Camerawork Video for a Series Nominated 46 Outstanding Variety Music or Comedy Series Nominated 46 Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Variety Including Talk Series Nominated 44 2005 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 45 Outstanding Technical Direction Camerawork Video for a Series Nominated 46 Outstanding Variety Music or Comedy Series Nominated 46 People s Choice Award Favorite Late Night Talk Show Host Nominated 44 Telvis Award Special Telvis Won 44 Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Variety Including Talk Series Won 44 2006 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 45 Outstanding Lighting Direction Electronic Multi Camera for VMC Programming Nominated 46 Outstanding Multi Camera Picture Editing for a Series Nominated 46 Outstanding Technical Direction Camerawork Video for a Series Nominated 46 Outstanding Variety Music or Comedy Series Nominated 46 PGA Award Television Producer of the Year Award in Variety Television Nominated 46 People s Choice Award Favorite Late Night Talk Show Host Nominated 44 Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Variety Including Talk Series Won 44 2007 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Won 44 45 Outstanding Lighting Direction Electronic Multi Camera for VMC Programming Nominated 46 Outstanding Technical Direction Camerawork Video for a Series Nominated 46 Outstanding Variety Music or Comedy Series Nominated 46 Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Variety Including Talk Series Nominated 44 PGA Award Television Producer of the Year Award in Variety Television Nominated 46 2008 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 45 Outstanding Lighting Direction Electronic Multi Camera for VMC Programming Nominated 46 Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Variety Music Series or a Special Nominated 46 Outstanding Technical Direction Camerawork Video for a Series Nominated 46 2009 Emmy Award Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing for a Variety or Music Program Nominated 44 45 Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Variety Including Talk Series Nominated 44 Set design editO Brien s Late Night had three long term permanent sets but retained the basic structure used when Letterman occupied Studio 6A the performance space at the viewer s left and the desk area to the viewer s right where interviews were done O Brien did his monologue in the performance area emerging at the start of each episode from the area where musical guests perform The Max Weinberg 7 were in the corner made by the stage right wall and the wall in front of the audience The desk area had a desk for O Brien a chair and couch es to the viewer s left for guests and originally Andy Richter and a coffee table Primarily set changes involved the background behind the desk and chair and couch The original set used from the show s debut in 1993 until the fall of 1996 was primarily yellow and the desk background resembled the living room of a New York City apartment with windows that looked out at a Manhattan backdrop it was modeled after Lorne Michaels office 47 For years afterwards O Brien mocked this original set particularly its mustard color The two subsequent set designs featured darker blues and violets to emulate the feel of nighttime with the final set featuring a balcony railing in front of a backdrop with the view from the top of Rockefeller Center This set debuted on September 4 2001 and necessitated changes almost instantly as its backdrop view of New York City contained the World Trade Center which was destroyed a week later A special curtain was used to obstruct the towers temporarily until eventually the curtain became a permanent part of the set design even after the backdrop was altered During his final week of episodes Conan took an axe to parts of the set giving it out to audience members as souvenirs not wanting to allow it to simply be thrown away International broadcasts editThis section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Listings of international channels are discouraged by the Manual of Style Please help improve this section if you can June 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Country TV Network s Weekly Schedule local time nbsp Israel Yes stars Comedy 11 15 pm Weeknights nbsp Australia The Comedy Channel 11 15 pm Weeknights nbsp Canada A Simulcast with NBC nbsp Finland Sub Usually starts at 12 00 am Weeknights otherwise starts during the following hour nbsp Sweden TV4 Plus Usually starts some time between 11 55 pm and 12 10 am WeeknightsThe Middle East Super ComedyLatin America I Sat 12 30 am Weeknights nbsp Turkey e2 11 00 pm Tuesday Friday nbsp Portugal SIC Radical nbsp Ireland 3e Usually starts at 12 00 am Weeknights otherwise starts during the following hourCNBC Europe used to air Late Night with Conan O Brien on weeknights from 11 45 pm 12 30 am CET with weekend editions on Saturdays and Sundays at 9 45 pm 10 30 pm CET However in March 2007 CNBC Europe decided to show only the weekend editions and drop the weeknight editions to make way for more business news programmes in their weeknight schedules On the week of August 4 2008 however CNBC Europe has discontinued showing the NBC Nightly News which for many years was shown live from America in a 12 30 am 1 00 am CET slot Late Night with Conan O Brien has now replaced NBC Nightly News in the 12 30 am 1 00 am slot The weeknight editions are a 30 minute condensed version of the show The show follows the weeknight condensed version of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno which airs at 12 00 am CET In September 2008 CNBC Europe changed the weeknight schedules to include full uncut editions of Late Night with Conan O Brien broadcast in the 11 45 am CET 10 45 pm GMT 45 minute time slot This schedule usually runs from Tuesdays to Fridays CNBC Europe decided to stop broadcasting Late Night as of January 1 2009 a mere two months before Conan s last show as host Instead of following The Tonight Show reruns on weekends CNBC now broadcasts two Tonight Show episodes in a row See also editList of Late Night with Conan O Brien sketches List of Late Night with Conan O Brien characters List of Late Night with Conan O Brien episodes Pale Force The Tonight Show with Conan O Brien List of late night network TV programsReferences edit Late Night With Conan O Brien February 20 2009 Leno promises smooth transition to O Brien Today com September 28 2004 Retrieved May 11 2008 Leno s last Tonight announced CNN Associated Press July 21 2008 Archived from the original on July 24 2008 Retrieved July 21 2008 Leno s last show will be Friday May 29 and O Brien will start the following Monday June 1 NBC executives told a Television Critics Association meeting Monday de Moraes Lisa July 22 2008 For Jay Leno Parting Is Such Sour Sorrow The Washington Post Retrieved May 7 2010 a b c d e The Battle for Late Night dead link A amp E Network April 27 2010 a b c d Rosenthal Phil September 14 2003 Conan the contrarian Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on March 14 2008 Retrieved May 11 2008 a b The Tonight Show with Jay Leno May 29 2009 Episode 1 Late Night with Conan O Brien Season 1 Episode 1 September 13 1993 NBC Hogan Marc April 22 2018 Jonathan Richman I Jonathan Album Review Pitchfork pitchfork com Retrieved April 26 2018 Conan Pleads for Patience Pity He ll Surely Need It Conanofthenight com September 15 1993 Archived from the original on October 25 2011 Retrieved October 30 2011 Better Never Than Late Conan O Brien Not Worth A Hoot to the Night Owl Conanofthenight com September 15 1993 Archived from the original on October 25 2011 Retrieved October 30 2011 O Brien Conan September 13 1993 O Brien Flops The New York Times op ed a b Heisler Steve Interview Dana Carvey and Robert Smigel The A V Club June 15 2009 Retrieved on 5 09 10 Steinberg Jacques October 17 1994 DEFYING THE TV ODDS CONAN O BRIEN LIVES The New York Times via Orlando Sentinel Retrieved November 15 2021 Hlavaty Craig April 27 2017 20 years ago Conan O Brien came to Houston to complain about his time slot Houston Chronicle Retrieved November 15 2021 Ess Ramsey When Late Nights Collide The First Letterman Conan Crossover Event Splitsider Archived from the original on July 25 2014 Retrieved February 4 2014 Hirschberg Lynn May 24 2009 Heeeere s Conan The New York Times Rumors Ratings Rise For O Brien Conanofthenight com October 7 1994 Archived from the original on October 25 2011 Retrieved October 30 2011 a b O Brien Conan August 13 2003 Conan O Brien latenight host The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on May 13 2006 Retrieved May 11 2008 Carter Bill January 28 2002 Wanting Late Night Presence Fox Looks at Conan O Brien The New York Times Retrieved September 24 2021 10th Anniversary Special Late Night with Conan O Brien September 14 2003 Freydkin Donna February 25 2009 Fallon talking a blue streak to take over for Conan USA Today Retrieved March 1 2009 The TV Ratings Guide Before Late Night Became A Toilet of Trumpster Fire Jokes The 1991 2015 Late Night Talk Show Ratings Archived from the original on April 13 2018 Retrieved April 12 2018 Santa Ana Otto 2009 Did You Call in Mexican The Racial Politics of Jay Leno Immigrant Jokes Language in Society 38 1 23 45 doi 10 1017 S0047404508090027 JSTOR 40207913 S2CID 145777390 Retrieved October 25 2021 a b IndieWire article Listen John Lurie Talks Fishing With John Working With Jim Jarmusch Conan O Brien amp More In Hour Plus Podcast Talk a b YouTube video John Lurie WTF Podcast with Marc Maron 696 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Team Coco February 11 2014 Vanessa Bayer I Was Too Ugly For A Peanut Commercial YouTube Retrieved July 14 2019 John Krasinski Biography people com 2014 Retrieved July 21 2014 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Team Coco November 7 2012 Mindy Kaling Was A Conan Intern YouTube Retrieved July 21 2014 Darwin Liza March 2 2012 Ellie Kemper featured in Nylon Guys Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre Retrieved July 21 2014 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine SuzakuX February 4 2013 Conan O Brien Mercilessly Ridicules Jack McBrayer YouTube Retrieved July 21 2014 CONAN O BRIEN SIGNS OFF OF LATE NIGHT FEBRUARY 20 2009 AND JIMMY FALLON TAKES OVER MARCH 2 2009 NBC com Archived from the original on November 13 2011 Retrieved October 30 2011 TV Network for Primetime Daytime and Late Night Television Shows NBC Official Site Latenightunderground com Archived from the original on February 13 2009 Retrieved October 30 2011 Lisa de Moraes May 3 2018 Conan O Brien s TBS Late Night Show Shifts To 30 Minute Format in 2019 Deadline Hollywood Conan Meets The President Of Finland Conan Large View NBCU Photobank Archived from the original on April 25 2012 Retrieved October 30 2011 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Nobody s Watching Conan with Fat Al Roker 1998 02 19 YouTube Late Night with Conan O Brien Retrieved June 5 2016 a b U2 takes over Conan O Brien s show The Associated Press via Today com October 4 2005 Retrieved February 5 2010 Conan Stewart Colbert unite in mock feud Today com February 5 2008 Retrieved May 11 2008 a b c d Entertainment Weekly article Conan O Brien His last Late Night a triumph no insult highly comic not a dog Ganz Caryn February 20 2009 White Stripes Final Late Night Gig Conan O Brien on Special Relationship With Jack and Meg Rolling Stone Archived from the original on February 23 2009 Retrieved February 5 2010 de Moraes Lisa February 27 2009 Seinfeld NBC Renew Their Vows With The Marriage Ref Washington Post Retrieved February 27 2009 Battaglio Stephen He Will Survive TV Guide November 7 2011 Page 20 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Internet Movie Database staff 2010 Awards for Conan O Brien Internet Movie Database IMDb com Inc Retrieved January 15 2010 a b c d e f g h i Conan O Brien NBC com The Tonight Show with Conan O Brien tonightshowwithconanobrien com 2010 Archived from the original on December 12 2009 Retrieved January 15 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Internet Movie Database staff 2010 Awards for Late Night with Conan O Brien Internet Movie Database IMDb com Inc Retrieved October 6 2010 Louie Elaine April 30 2005 The Set Makes The Host The New York Times Retrieved March 10 2023 Not so Conan O Brien The set of Late Night With Conan O Brien at the 30 Rockefeller Center studio his predecessor used is tidy The set which looks like a hip men s club was inspired by the office of Lorne Michaels the executive producer of Late Night and Saturday Night Live Further reading editDeFrank Ginny 2007 Marry me Conan O Brien and other tales of well planned self delusion University of Southern California p 608 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Late Night with Conan O Brien Official website nbsp Late Night with Conan O Brien at IMDb nbsp Late Night with Conan O Brien at epguides com nbsp Joseph Konopka scenic art journals for Late Night with Conan O Brien 1993 2009 held by the Billy Rose Theatre Division New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Late Night with Conan O 27Brien amp oldid 1181687968, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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