Yeah, come to think of it, that's true.  I guess I wasn't considering Conan
when I lumped all the other shows together.  Guess I need to start watching
more TBS.

 

Doug Fields

Tampa, FL

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Mark Jeffries
Sent: Tuesday, September 11, 2012 5:09 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [TV orNotTV] Jay Leno's pay cut was 50%

 

Actually, a lot of Conan's guests now stay on the couch, I presume because
that's how they did it when Conan did "Tonight" and also because there's no
sketch in between the guests, as on "Late Night."  I guess Andy also needs
company.


 

On Tue, Sep 11, 2012 at 4:53 AM, Doug Fields <[email protected]> wrote:

Coincidentally, I watched the same episode, which was the first time I'd
tuned in Leno in at least two years (Dave was in reruns, and I wasn't ready
to go to bed).  I noted the same level of info available to Chin Boy as you
did, but what I took away from the show was how odd it seemed to again see a
late night show where previous guests stayed on the couch for the subsequent
guests' interviews.

McCain came out, and was turned so far toward Jay that Matthew Perry was
literally staring at the back of her head through the entire interview.
After the first minute of shooting McCain in complete profile as she talked
to Jay, the director finally moved her isolation camera directly to the side
of Jay's desk, so that Perry could be seen over her shoulder every time she
answered a question.  At some point during the panel, she said something
along the lines of "I really don't like to hear actors talking politics,
because they usually don't have anything intelligent to add to the
dialogue", with the obligatory turn and "no offense" to Perry, who managed
to ad lib a very funny line, calling back to an earlier joke.

It just struck me as extremely rude and condescending from start to finish
and I was impressed by Perry's restraint, as I could imagine at least 3-4
pithy responses from Perry in my head.  "Really? You don't want actors
commenting on politics? A better choice would be an art history major who's
only qualification as a pundit is being a Senator's daughter?"  (Granted,
growing up as John McCain's daughter probably really *is* good training as a
political observer, but in the moment it was the principle of the thing.)
:)

Nothing really newsworthy in what I'm saying here, but I guess I've gotten
so used to the one-guest-at-a-time format used by everybody else that it
struck me as odd to see it done "The Tonight Show way" again after avoiding
the show for so long.

Doug Fields
Tampa, FL

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