The Late Shift: Letterman, Leno, and the Network Battle for the Night (1995) Shocking, but this is the first time I've ever read this. This was another one of those books where the majority of the stuff within it's pages I had already heard about from different sources over the years: Online forums, Magazines, Entertainment News Shows, etc... So, for me there really was no desire to give this one a read. But then I heard that
Bill Carter had a new book out called
The War For Late Night, detailing the train wreck that was
Jay Leno Vs. Conan O'Brien. Once I had a copy of that book in my hand I decided that I might as well start with
The Late Shift and make it a marathon read for myself. And I'm glad I did just that.
Simply put,
The Late Shift is hands down the nuttiest, wackiest soap opera ever printed on paper. Truth is indeed stranger than fiction. The stuff that went down was so outlandish that it had to be made up. And yet, it's all real. The book itself reads like a roller coaster. There are so many peaks and valleys that you get dizzy after awhile. But you can't really ever put the book down at all, no matter how hard you try.
The peaks in the book get to insane heights, and the highest of them all is of course
Helen Kushnick. For those that don't know about her, she was
Jay Leno's manager and Producer of the show who ruled with an iron fist. Even though this book is about
Jay Leno and
David Letterman fighting over who gets the keys to
Johnny Carson desk on
The Tonight Show, I believe the real star of the book is
Helen, without a doubt. And once she is ousted from the show (as well as the book), it does take a big hit that you end up missing her crazy antics. I did anyways.
The rest of the book continues with the roller coaster ride, but doesn't ever quite reach the same heights that you get with
Helen at the forefront. This is why it gets a lesser rating from me. But that's not to say that the rest of the book sucks. There are still a handful of scenarios that will engage you all the way to the end:
Jay hiding in a closet,
David seeking council from
Johnny and of course all the info pertaining to the pretenders to the throne:
Arsenio Hall, Pat Sajak, Chevy Chase, Dana Carvey, Dennis Miller, etc...Yes, even
Conan O'brien is here. Duh.
This is indeed a very fun, entertaining read that will have you flipping pages as fast as people were getting fired. I can easily recommend this to anyone that is a fan of Talk Shows or Soap Operas. I really hope that
The War For Late Night doesn't disappoint here. But after
The Late Shift, it's got a big task of at least equaling it. I still need to watch the movie version of
The Late Shift. I have seen parts of it over the years, but never the entire movie all at once.