The War For Late Night: When Leno Went Early and Television Went Crazy (2010) After reading
The Late Shift, I was hopeful that
The War for Late Night by
Bill Carter would be just as crazy and nutty, especially with all the other late night hosts involved with the chaos surrounding the impact of what happened when
NBC moved
Jay to the 10pm slot. Surprisingly,
The War for Late Night never reaches those ungodly heights as seen in
The Late Shift. It's not until the last 1/4 of the book does it come close to getting there as we follow
Jay Leno and
NBC manuervering to take
The Tonight Show away from
Conan O'Brien.
But what about the first 3/4 of the book? It was a very good read, but there really were no earth shattering reveals here. What we get instead is literally a mini-bio of every single host that was directly affected by the 10pm shift.
Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel, Jimmy Fallon, Craig Ferguson all get their own spotlight here. We hear where they came from, how they worked their way up the talk show circuit, where they ended up and the results of how the shift affected them. And in each case it's pretty good. But as good and interesting as this was, it was nowhere near that of the all revealing
The Late Shift, because most of the stuff during this second go-around was played out in the press and on TV for our benefit.
The best part for me while reading both books has been the ability to run to
YouTube and pull up which ever clip is being dissected. And there are plenty here to keep you entertained. Everything from
Jimmy Kimmel's infamous
10 at 10 segment to
Conan's People Of the Earth speech and of course the
Superbowl commercial get there 15 minutes. The biggest shock for me was in hearing that
David Letterman had actually reached out and invited
Conan to be a part of it. His response: "No
**** way I'm doing that. This is not a joke to me - It's real".
I watched old clips and new clips and a whole hell of a lot in between. I've had my fill of monologues and skits to keep me busy for a long time. And one thing I can say with certainty is this:
Jay Leno still sucks in my eyes. I know there are Pro-
Jay supporters here and will go to the ends of the Earth rattling off why they think he is the best. That's fine. You have your opinions and they are valid. But to me, I don't like his style of comedy. I never have and I never will.
We all have our favorites that we would have liked to see carry on the name of
The Tonight Show, but
Jerry Seinfeld said it best, "There is no institution. The moment
Johnny Carson called it a career, the institution went with him." QFT.
Regardless of who should or shouldn't have gotten the keys to
The Tonight Show, one thing is for certain, the viewers were treated to some of the best late night moments in years. It was like watching
WWF taking on the
WCW on Monday nights with the constant volleying back and forth. Great stuff indeed.
I can definitely recommend
The War For Late Night. This is a good, even keel read all the way through. It's just not "dish worthy" as it's predecessor. Personally I can see myself reading this one along with
The Late Shift again.