|
Nostalgia4Butts posted:Conan is now the old man of late night. Like I said earlier, I was too young to ever watch Dave's Late Night show. But all the things people are saying about his Late Night show (it was something they "discovered", it felt like they were in on the joke, it felt new and fresh and like comedy written for them instead of their parents, etc) are all the things I felt like watching Conan's Late Night show for the first few seasons in the mid 90's. So let's do this all again in 15 years or so.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 06:04 |
|
|
# ? Apr 20, 2024 16:18 |
|
That was just about everything I was hoping for. Godspeed to yet another of my imaginary TV friends. Anyway, tomorrow the 11:35 slot reverts to pre-Dave status for awhile, so see you then for Crimetime After Prime Time! Only without Silk Stalkings, so not even that!
|
# ? May 21, 2015 06:04 |
|
OldSenileGuy posted:Like I said earlier, I was too young to ever watch Dave's Late Night show. But all the things people are saying about his Late Night show (it was something they "discovered", it felt like they were in on the joke, it felt new and fresh and like comedy written for them instead of their parents, etc) are all the things I felt like watching Conan's Late Night show for the first few seasons in the mid 90's. So let's do this all again in 15 years or so. I can't agree more. I was born in '82 so I never saw Dave's Late Night live, but Conan's Late Night pretty much defined the last half of the 90's for me. As a gen x'er I just can't see how Seth Meyers' could ever have the same relevance, but I guess thats just how it goes. I am definitely planning on going back and checking out whatever clips I can find of Dave's NBC days.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 06:13 |
|
FWIW, Conan had one of his best interviews in a while with Patton Oswalt just shooting the poo poo about Dave. You take him off script and get him really engaged and vulnerable, and he's still got the stuff.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 06:20 |
|
DivisionPost posted:FWIW, Conan had one of his best interviews in a while with Patton Oswalt just shooting the poo poo about Dave. You take him off script and get him really engaged and vulnerable, and he's still got the stuff. Conan's biggest strength is ad-libbing. Dude was fantastic on Stern back in February, even when Howard brought up the Leno thing again.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 06:25 |
|
OldSenileGuy posted:Like I said earlier, I was too young to ever watch Dave's Late Night show. But all the things people are saying about his Late Night show (it was something they "discovered", it felt like they were in on the joke, it felt new and fresh and like comedy written for them instead of their parents, etc) are all the things I felt like watching Conan's Late Night show for the first few seasons in the mid 90's. So let's do this all again in 15 years or so. Conan's NBC run, after he found his footing, was pretty incredible in the 90s. He did an admirable job in keeping with the spirit that Letterman had established for that show/time slot. He did stupid stunts, he had stupid bits and he had a large cast of stupid characters like the masturbating bear, Pimpbot 5000 and all the rest. Plus how his announcer Joel really sold the idea he was an unstable psycho with those wonderful facial expressions and vocal work. Conan still has the best bits of the other hosts out there now though. He is the next best thing to Dave now that Dave has retired. I have high hopes for Colbert but that's 4 months away. DJ Pauls Gimp Arm posted:I can't agree more. I was born in '82 so I never saw Dave's Late Night live, but Conan's Late Night pretty much defined the last half of the 90's for me. As a gen x'er I just can't see how Seth Meyers' could ever have the same relevance, but I guess thats just how it goes. I am definitely planning on going back and checking out whatever clips I can find of Dave's NBC days. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=user?Zschim?videos Dude had a shitload of NBC-era Letterman full shows uploaded.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 06:33 |
|
say no to bats posted:Conan still has the best bits of the other hosts out there now though. He is the next best thing to Dave now that Dave has retired. Yep. Conan is continuing the Dave tradition more than anyone else by a long shot. The past couple years he seems to be stepping back towards that sort of comedy again, which is awesome to see. It's weird seeing Kimmell talk so emotionally about Dave and show the pictures of him and his teens with the late night cake and license plate, and then do a show that's so mainstream compared to him.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 06:37 |
|
DJ Pauls Gimp Arm posted:I can't agree more. I was born in '82 so I never saw Dave's Late Night live, but Conan's Late Night pretty much defined the last half of the 90's for me. As a gen x'er I just can't see how Seth Meyers' could ever have the same relevance, but I guess thats just how it goes. I am definitely planning on going back and checking out whatever clips I can find of Dave's NBC days. The late night host who was that for me was Craig Ferguson, but unlike those guys, who got to live their careers out on late night TV, Craig got pushed off to make room for that dumb Brit git. For whatever reason, I'm very unattached to the early nineties as a pop cultural era, so grunge, Simpsons, Conan, all do nothing for me. Craig was something I just found one day and he had a weird horse and amazing interviews and a robot sidekick, and I'm a little jealous that y'all get/got to watch their guy carve a niche while mine is hosting a game show and starring in failed pilots.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 06:55 |
|
Finally watching the show now (I work nights, so I had recorded it) It's pretty awesome that he spoke about Colbert on his last episode.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 07:02 |
|
Conan was the last person who had the ability to be weird on TV. That 12:30 slot used to be one of the few spots that you could had weird and edgy material. Now the Television business is dying and EVERYTHING on the networks has to be so sanitized and scrutinized because even though it might be on at 12:30 or even 3:00 AM someone is going to notice it and put it on the internet. A perfect example of this recently is "Too Many Cooks" which even a few years ago would have been noticed by a couple dozen people and been a rumor at best becomes a huge thing overnight. With the Networks playing it safe and trying to put anything interesting online you have too many eyes on the product. The magic from Dave and Conan came because they knew that they could push the envelope in whatever ways they wanted and no one who would complain and more importantly in charge would notice. Kimmel, Fallon and the rest are never going to be able to do anything other than the boring sanitized show in the vein of Leno. The Networks want a cheap, safe daily show with high profile celebrities to draw in viewers and more importantly advertising dollars. The celebrities and more importantly their management/publicists want a talking head that they can go on and promote their project with no chance of any surprises. The internet is both the savior of edgy comedy and the death of it on mainstream television. Honestly I don't think we will ever see anything edgy on mainstream television ever again.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 07:56 |
|
Just finished watching. What a wonderful, wonderful way to end the show. Foo Fighters were fantastic, the Top Ten was done great, he set the stage for Colbert, and it wasn't too sappy. Also insanely happy that Leno didn't come on.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 08:00 |
|
I used to tape Late Nite and watch it before going to school in the morning. One of my favorite eras was during the writer's strike, when they had no material to speak of. They'd throw toast at the audience, bring on off-off-off Broadway acts, and do all sorts of crap for "Hal Gertner's Network Time Killers." (I love how he'd never pronounce Gernee's name correctly.) It truly was a Late Nite World of Love. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_t9kcir8RA
|
# ? May 21, 2015 08:06 |
|
Is that Melissa Etheridge as one of the backup singers? EDIT: I don't really know how to process No More Dave. I was five when his morning show started. My mother found that show and was instantly captivated by the weirdness, and ever since then, Dave has always been around as a weird smartass who messed with celebrities and celebrated ordinary people (while also messing with them). Smart-dumb comedy is my favorite, and I owe a lot of my sense of humor to him. I also perhaps owe some of my ironic detachment from everything to him, too, but that's something I should discuss with my therapist after I get my full psychological workup. I'm sad that Conan is kind of relegated to being a cable afterthought now (especially since I don't have cable anymore), I'm sad that someone as anti-dynamic as Seth Meyers has the Late Night slot, I'm sad that someone as anti-Craig Ferguson as James Corden has the Late Late Show (I can't deal with listening to his voice, even), and I can at least enjoy Jimmy Fallon sometimes when I'm in the mood for something upbeat - best when Higgins and The Roots are involved. Hoping for good Colbertness. I'm torn between bemoaning No More Dave and going 'he did over 6000 goddamned episodes, what more could we possibly want?' Except maybe a half-hour podcast where he just grouses about things on a weekly basis. No guests, no nothing. Just Dave going "Now HERE'S what I don't get about this latest thing..." Also, seconding the motion for NBC to get off its rear end and make a Tonight/Late Night archive site of every drat episode of all of it. I want to watch Steve Allen Tonight Shows, even. Steve Vader fucked around with this message at 08:50 on May 21, 2015 |
# ? May 21, 2015 08:34 |
|
DJ Pauls Gimp Arm posted:I can't agree more. I was born in '82 so I never saw Dave's Late Night live If you mean you never saw it at the studio, that makes sense. If you don't remember Late Night on live TV? What the... I was born in 82 as well, and saw quite a bit of Late Night. It didn't even move until 1993. I still maintain that Dave hasn't entertained me like he used to for a decade. I partly blame The Daily Show (I needed a liberal pressure valve more than celebrity interviews during the Bush administration), but its been a long time since he left the studio to mess with people, or dropped stuff off the roof of the building, or saw if a guy in a bear suit can hail a taxi. A lot of what Dave used to do set up for Conan, Ferguson, and others down the road. Especially his NBC show, which was charming with how low budget it was. He changed over time as he became a Broadway attraction. In recent years, he became basically Ed Sullivan, which worked because, y'know. But like Sullivan and the Beatles, Dave's people had a really good niche in booking indie bands and the like in between appearances by superstars. I think the British hipster guy on NME this month was on Late Show months ago. I often times watch a late night show based entirely on musical guests, and Dave had the biggest variety. I'll still find it really weird to see him not on the schedule, though. Craptacular! fucked around with this message at 09:14 on May 21, 2015 |
# ? May 21, 2015 09:04 |
|
Dave went out very low key... classy. In comparison to Carson it was a low leveled affair. As a fan since the early 80's, I'll miss that gap-toothed bastard. He was better at 12:30 but I cannot disregard his entire body of work. Paul Schaffer was also a load... always. Anton Figg, the drummer, being there since day 1 is cool.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 09:17 |
|
Yoshifan823 posted:The late night host who was that for me was Craig Ferguson, but unlike those guys, who got to live their careers out on late night TV, Craig got pushed off to make room for that dumb Brit git. The fact you found him only makes you part of the chosen ones that "get it". Stand proud knowing who the true late night King is. Craig will forever be the best kept secret.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 09:27 |
|
Craig wasn't good. And celebrity game show is also terrible. You people are insane.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 10:08 |
|
Celebrity Game Show is indeed terrible. But yer silly about that other stuff. The sanity thing is debatable.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 10:15 |
|
God I feel old now. I guess there's still Conan I can watch occasionally when I want some late night comedy, but gently caress, losing Craig and then Letterman sucks.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 10:33 |
|
Yoshifan823 posted:For whatever reason, I'm very unattached to the early nineties as a pop cultural era, so grunge, Simpsons, Conan, all do nothing for me. I think most people who think of Conan think of 1997-2004. He may have started in 93, but he had a long hill to climb. In the weeks before the Leno/Letterman war, as everyone was lining up their guests, Conan had nobody scheduled yet. TV Guide's writer who was covering the late night wars felt pity on him. His first year or so was just being unfairly compared to Dave (and the opening sketch of his first episode was NYC stereotypes all vaguely threatening him about how "you BETTER be as good as Letterman!") Dave's NBC show had the comfy low-budget vibe of Craig Ferguson's show, but Conan's show looked almost public access. He was just a guy who wrote some Simpson's episodes for a while, and then about the time college internet became widespread and students had sites like LiveJournal that he started to really gain a following. What else were students up late going to watch, Tom Snyder? EDIT: It's really weird, I didn't like Craig's show for quite a period and I think I'm the only one. He started growing his show with strange gags and recurring characters that felt like some sort of really bad Pee-Wee's Funhouse to me, as well as doing things like thinking that randomly inserting "rear end Mode" into a jingle was funny. I was REALLY unhappy when Geoff was just a soundboard that kept saying "Balls!" at opportune times. Then they actually brought the comedian on board to be out of camera view doing the voice of Geoff and some of the 'callers' at the desk and the show swung back in the other direction and I loved it. Craptacular! fucked around with this message at 11:45 on May 21, 2015 |
# ? May 21, 2015 11:35 |
|
Robnoxious posted:Dave went out very low key... classy. Bassist Will Lee is (or was ) the only original WMDB member, besides Shaffer, obviously. As for how Letterman changed from a.. well, an rear end in a top hat, into a broadcaster, this WSJ article really sums it up nicely. quote:Letterman’s seismic move to CBS in 1993 (after NBC chose Leno over him, poisoning his relationship with the network and the comic) brought a new show name, a time change, additional ratings pressure and some of that previously avoided slickness. When a super fan discusses the “Late Show,” it’s easy to sound like a disaffected rock critic bemoaning a beloved artist’s later work. That complaint is overbaked. There was fun stuff on CBS, too. Dave could still find awkwardness with guests (ask Joaquin Phoenix) and his tanking as the 1995 Oscar host gratifyingly underlined that Letterman would never convert to a showbiz suck-up.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 12:50 |
|
That was really the absolute perfect last top 10 list. Loved how instead of saying thank you to Bill he said, "Saw you on TV last night, you okay?"
|
# ? May 21, 2015 13:03 |
|
That shot of Dave and Robin Williams in the montage killed me.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 13:48 |
|
DivisionPost posted:Leno got the ratings. Dave got the legacy. Leno got ratings but contributed nothing. He's the Nickelback of late night.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 15:03 |
|
A coworker told me yesterday that he doesn't find Letterman or Conan funny, and he can't believe they took Leno off the air. I knew these people existed, but I don't think I'd ever encountered one of them before.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 16:28 |
|
Steve Vader posted:
i would watch all of the tom snyder Diabolik900 posted:A coworker told me yesterday that he doesn't find Letterman or Conan funny, and he can't believe they took Leno off the air. I knew these people existed, but I don't think I'd ever encountered one of them before. ps i hate your coworker
|
# ? May 21, 2015 16:44 |
|
also hey they posted the Foo Fighters performance https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrVjOUIoo6Q
|
# ? May 21, 2015 16:46 |
|
Mods, please change the thread title to David Letterman: He's Gone Already, Chief.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 17:02 |
|
Hopkins FBI posted:Mods, please change the thread title to David Letterman: He's Gone Already, Chief.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 17:17 |
|
I'm watching Letterman's last show and by god was that monologue terrible
|
# ? May 21, 2015 17:29 |
|
Toxxupation posted:I'm watching Letterman's last show and by god was that monologue terrible Do you like anything? Like at all?
|
# ? May 21, 2015 17:50 |
|
http://nypost.com/2015/05/21/cbs-throws-david-letterman-set-into-dumpster/ I'm surprised they didn't start tearing it apart during the show.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 18:02 |
|
The REAL Goobusters posted:Do you like anything? Like at all? oh come on, that monologue was loving terrible, eye-rollingly bad dad jokes the rest of the show has been better, at least the top ten was star-studded but that opening was loving wretched the same joke about how letterman is a bad host that everyone "hates" with shaffer's annoying, really unfunny asides like they're worth a poo poo and don't interrupt what little comedic flow was present, thrown to some terrible pre-taped bits it was a really bad start to a final episode even considering letterman has always been not good at monologues
|
# ? May 21, 2015 18:03 |
|
wrote his thoughts on Letterman: http://mmqb.si.com/2015/05/21/nfl-peyton-manning-david-letterman-top-10-list-late-show-finale-cbs/
|
# ? May 21, 2015 18:10 |
|
Craptacular! posted:If you mean you never saw it at the studio, that makes sense. If you don't remember Late Night on live TV? What the... I was born in 82 as well, and saw quite a bit of Late Night. It didn't even move until 1993. I guess what I was trying to say is I have little to no memory of it in the 80's because I was a kid and usually asleep by the time it came on. That's not to say I never saw it, I just have no memory of it. I remember Johnny Carson more because my dad would watch him every night and I was sometimes still awake for that. I do remember watching Letterman's first CBS show when he went to 11:30, though. I also remember watching Arsenio Hall and Chevy Chase's show. The early 90's are kinda where my memories of these shows start. I started watching Conan regularly in 95 and that was the begining of the Late Night golden years in my opinion. DJ Pauls Gimp Arm fucked around with this message at 18:20 on May 21, 2015 |
# ? May 21, 2015 18:15 |
|
Some cable channel that doesn't give a poo poo needs to start running reruns of Dave's show. I mean, yeah, it would be weird to hear Butafucco and Lewinsky jokes in 2020, but it would be weirder if the show just left to the domain of YouTube clips.InsensitiveSeaBass posted:I'm surprised they didn't start tearing it apart during the show. pwn posted:As for how Letterman changed from a.. well, an rear end in a top hat, into a broadcaster, this WSJ article really sums it up nicely. Craptacular! fucked around with this message at 18:27 on May 21, 2015 |
# ? May 21, 2015 18:25 |
|
Toxxupation posted:oh come on, that monologue was loving terrible, eye-rollingly bad dad jokes Do you have to be terrible in every thread on the boards? I couldn't believe how many of those bits I remembered, even quick little flashes of them in montages. I grew up on the last years of Carson and watched Dave constantly but kind of fell out of it the last 5-10 years. There was so much good stuff over the years it's crazy. I can only hope Conan gets the same kind of send off. Also, Foo Fighters are stand up guys and I can't wait to see them in concert this summer.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 18:28 |
|
ChesterJT posted:Do you have to be terrible in every thread on the boards? It's p hilarious how once a guy leaves you can't raise criticisms of his work like everything he touched was gold-plated it was a bad loving monologue and it comes off worse because it's this ten minutes of dead air to kick off what should've been an awesome farewell to a comedic and late night legend and was so stilted, forced and painfully awkward I almost closed the browser out of hand why even have a monologue? letterman's legendary for being bad at and hating doing them, who cares if the final episode of your show even has one
|
# ? May 21, 2015 18:32 |
|
Have the last episodes of any of these shows had good monologues? By definition it's you making jokes and commentary about yourself and your career. It's like that for every show. It's not like Dave is going to take his last show to do jokes about John Boehner and Alex Rodriguez again.
|
# ? May 21, 2015 18:35 |
|
|
# ? Apr 20, 2024 16:18 |
|
Toxxupation posted:It's p hilarious how once a guy leaves you can't raise criticisms of his work like everything he touched was gold-plated occ go
|
# ? May 21, 2015 18:35 |