View Full Version : Last Call with Carson Daly is ending after 17 years
https://ew.com/tv/2019/02/12/carson-daly-nbc-last-call/
Carson Daly is calling it quits with his late-night show to spend more time with his family, but NBC plans to replace Last Call with a new show in the 1:30 slot. A finale date has yet to be announced. “If you had told me in 2002 I would be a part of the historic NBC late-night family for 17 years, I would have said you were crazy,” Daly said in a statement. “Hard to believe it’s been so long – 2,000 episodes. It’s time to move on to something new and let someone else have access to this incredible platform.” Last Call premiered on Jan. 8, 2002 as a successor to the long-running post-Late Night interview show Later. Daly originally hosted Last Call like a traditional talk show, taping in Saturday Night Live's Studio 8H. Last Call evolved to its current format, featuring pre-taped long-form interviews and musical performances by emerging artists. NBC notes that Daly's work had him appearing on all three-dayparts -- late-night with Last Call, mornings with Today and primetime with The Voice. My 20’s was about finding a good job,” Daly said. “My 30’s was about taking on as many of them as I could. Now, in my 40’s, I’m focused on quality over quantity … I’m forever grateful and proud to all who have worked with us at Last Call over the years. "
James28 02-12-2019, 10:23 PM If NBC wants Last Call to be a brand, I say just find a new host for Last Call for next season to replace Carson, considering how difficult it would be to come up with a completely new title.
I didn’t know that show was still on.
Heenan Fan 02-13-2019, 04:26 AM Who?
AMackII 02-13-2019, 04:31 AM I didn’t know that show was still on.
For At Least Right Now, Yes. I’m guessing the finale of Last Call with Carson Daly will be on either March 28th, May 2nd, May 10th or May 17th because NBC can have plenty of time to figure out who can be Carson’s Late Night successor since Carson already just took his talents to The Voice & The Today Show in recent years.
For At Least Right Now, Yes. I’m guessing the finale of Last Call with Carson Daly will be on either March 28th, May 2nd, May 10th or May 17th because NBC can have plenty of time to figure out who can be Carson’s Late Night successor since Carson already just took his talents to The Voice & The Today Show in recent years.
What a bland legacy, to be on TV for 17 years and capture no real media attention for the show you put on.
AMackII 02-15-2019, 04:32 PM What a bland legacy, to be on TV for 17 years and capture no real media attention for the show you put on.
Well, At Least Carson was better as the host of Total Request Live on MTV from 1998 to 2003. It’s a perfect time for Carson to walk away from Last Call once the 17 year old late night show enters its 2000th episode before later this year but i’ve never watch NBC’s Last Call on weeknight because i’m in bed asleep.
I didn’t know that show was still on.
I believe that his budget was gutted to pay for Conan Brien's exit. He had to reformat (https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/carson-daly-sticking-with-last-call-for-now-as-nbc-mulls-a-reboot) the show (the show had morphed (https://uproxx.com/tv/last-call-carson-daly-legacy/) from a studio produced one-on-one interview show, to a traditional talk show with house band, to documentary-style field interview program), and they quit advertising it altogether. Another reason for why the show likely changed so much was around that time is that Carson also become a correspondent / co-host of The Today Show (https://www.billboard.com/articles/news/5694988/carson-daly-to-join-today-show-likely-leaving-late-night).
NBC taps YouTube star Lilly Singh to replace Carson Daly, becoming broadcast TV's only female late-night host (https://variety.com/2019/tv/news/lilly-singh-nbc-talk-show-a-little-late-1203164007/)
Last Call with Carson Daly will give way to A Little Late with Lilly Singh in September, NBC announced this evening. NBC says A Little Late will feature Singh conducting interviews in-studio, participating in comedy sketches and other "signature elements." The 30-year-old Singh was formally introduced on Thursday's Tonight Show. “An Indian-Canadian woman with her own late night show? Now that is a dream come true,” Singh said in a statement. “I’m thrilled to bring it to life on NBC, and I hope my parents consider this to be as exciting as a grandchild.” ALSO: Watch Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers welcome Singh to NBC late-night with a champagne toast (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ph1CwhhuaEY).
Will Lilly Singh's massive YouTube following deliver viewers to NBC's 1:35 timeslot? (https://jezebel.com/youtuber-lilly-singh-gets-a-late-night-spot-but-will-h-1833319127)
NBC's announcement that Singh will succeed Carson Daly with A Little Late With Lilly Singh, making her the first female host of a network late-night show since Joan Rivers in the 1980s, was met with applause (https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/15/business/media/lilly-singh-carson-daly-nbc.html). Singh has a massive audience on YouTube with 14.5 million subscribers (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfm4y4rHF5HGrSr-qbvOwOg) to her channel. But as Hazel Cills points out, young people don't watch late-night TV these days. Cills says it's "unclear how Singh’s audience will translate not just to traditional TV but late night specifically. When YouTuber Grace Helbig got a nightly talk show with E! back in 2015, nobody watched it and it was quickly canceled after just eight episodes. Singh’s demographic is also young women, mainly teenagers and women in their early twenties, which is partly the audience that doesn’t even watch late night TV or traditional TV anymore. It’s clear in hiring Singh that NBC is trying to revamp stale, white ideas about what late night TV can be by hiring someone arguably nobody over 25 knows, for a medium that nobody under 25 watches anymore. But will the youths make their way to an ancient TV set to watch Singh? Only time will tell."
ALSO:
Who is Lilly Singh? How a YouTuber landed a network late-night show (https://slate.com/culture/2019/03/who-is-lilly-singh-youtube-star-nbc-late-night.html)
"I'm Getting My Own TV Show": Watch Singh's YouTube reaction to her new show (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9RkJ-67xqwo)
YouTube is taking over late-night (https://www.vulture.com/2019/03/the-youtube-takeover-of-late-night.html)
Nowadays, late-night hosts like Jimmy Fallon, Samantha Bee, Jimmy Kimmel and James Corden design their shows with an eye towards going viral on YouTube. "The new-media takeover of late night is complete," says Bethy Squires. "YouTuber Lilly Singh is taking over Carson Daly’s 1:30 a.m. spot, and Jimmy Fallon is recording entire Tonight Show episodes on a phone. (Specifically a Samsung Galaxy, in stores now!) Ever since the first SNL Digital Short, late night has been getting a second life online. But like some terrible cyberpunk movie, the online second life is becoming more important than the broadcasted first life. Entire chunks of late night are digital-exclusive today, and late-night hosts live and die by their branding and ability to surf internet trends."
Carson Daly says goodbye to Last Call after 18 seasons and 2,000 episodes (https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/carson-dalys-last-call-airs-final-episode-1213324)
Last Call with Carson Daly debuted in 2002 when Daly was 28 and coming off of MTV's Total Request Live. "NBC wisely thought that the kid who was known for wearing black fingernail polish and talking Limp Bizkit every day was perfect late-night host material, and so they gave me a shot," Daly said of Last Call, which he described as his "home and personal playground." Daly added: "I am proud as hell of Last Call. The littlest, scrappiest show on late night, it's been my home and personal playground for almost two decades, and I'm eternally grateful for the opportunities, the friendships and all the lasting memories I've made along the way. YouTube star Lilly Singh will take over Daly's 1:35 a.m. timeslot this fall with A Little Late With Lilly Singh.
Carson Daly is proud of hosting a late-night show few people watched for 17 years (https://www.vulture.com/2019/06/last-call-with-carson-daly-ends.html)
Daly reflects on his Last Call experience, and says he's glad to have found something else to do after MTV -- especially a late-night show, an arena where big names like Magic Johnson and Chevy Chase have failed. “If you’d told me, ‘We’ll give you a choice: You’re going to have the biggest talk show in the history of mankind and you’ll have it for six years, or you’ll have a show that probably the majority of people aren’t going to know about but we’ll guarantee it will be on for twice as long,’ I would take the latter every time,” he says.
NBC taps YouTube star Lilly Singh to replace Carson Daly, becoming broadcast TV's only female late-night host (https://variety.com/2019/tv/news/lilly-singh-nbc-talk-show-a-little-late-1203164007/)
Last Call with Carson Daly will give way to A Little Late with Lilly Singh in September, NBC announced this evening. NBC says A Little Late will feature Singh conducting interviews in-studio, participating in comedy sketches and other "signature elements." The 30-year-old Singh was formally introduced on Thursday's Tonight Show. “An Indian-Canadian woman with her own late night show? Now that is a dream come true,” Singh said in a statement. “I’m thrilled to bring it to life on NBC, and I hope my parents consider this to be as exciting as a grandchild.” ALSO: Watch Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers welcome Singh to NBC late-night with a champagne toast (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ph1CwhhuaEY).
Will Lilly Singh's massive YouTube following deliver viewers to NBC's 1:35 timeslot? (https://jezebel.com/youtuber-lilly-singh-gets-a-late-night-spot-but-will-h-1833319127)
NBC's announcement that Singh will succeed Carson Daly with A Little Late With Lilly Singh, making her the first female host of a network late-night show since Joan Rivers in the 1980s, was met with applause (https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/15/business/media/lilly-singh-carson-daly-nbc.html). Singh has a massive audience on YouTube with 14.5 million subscribers (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfm4y4rHF5HGrSr-qbvOwOg) to her channel. But as Hazel Cills points out, young people don't watch late-night TV these days. Cills says it's "unclear how Singh’s audience will translate not just to traditional TV but late night specifically. When YouTuber Grace Helbig got a nightly talk show with E! back in 2015, nobody watched it and it was quickly canceled after just eight episodes. Singh’s demographic is also young women, mainly teenagers and women in their early twenties, which is partly the audience that doesn’t even watch late night TV or traditional TV anymore. It’s clear in hiring Singh that NBC is trying to revamp stale, white ideas about what late night TV can be by hiring someone arguably nobody over 25 knows, for a medium that nobody under 25 watches anymore. But will the youths make their way to an ancient TV set to watch Singh? Only time will tell."
ALSO:
Who is Lilly Singh? How a YouTuber landed a network late-night show (https://slate.com/culture/2019/03/who-is-lilly-singh-youtube-star-nbc-late-night.html)
"I'm Getting My Own TV Show": Watch Singh's YouTube reaction to her new show (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9RkJ-67xqwo)
Why A Little Late with Lilly Singh is a politics-free zone (https://www.vulture.com/2019/09/little-late-with-lilly-singh-sean-oconnor-interview.html)
A Little Late head writer Sean O'Connor, a veteran of James Corden's Late Late Show, says Lilly Singh's new show is a "no politics" zone. "It’s a perfect storm of a few things," he explains. "The timeliness, but also — being the last show that airs, every joke has been made, whether it’s been on Twitter all day or on the 25 other late-night shows. And I feel like Lilly wants to talk about things that only she can talk about." O'Connor also says that avoiding politics helps Singh stay positive.
ALSO:
Lilly Singh looks perfectly suited for late-night TV, but she needs to break her YouTube vlogger habit of addressing the studio audience and the camera relentlessly (https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/television/article-it-works-canadian-lilly-singh-really-is-revolutionary-in-late-night/)
A reminder: NBC is airing A Little Late with Lilly Singh: The Primetime Special on Wednesday at 10 p.m. (https://ew.com/tv/2019/09/17/a-little-late-with-lilly-singh-prime-time-special-this-is-us-christina-aguilera/)
A Little Late with Lilly Singh premieres steady with Last Call with Carson Daly's finale ratings (https://www.thewrap.com/a-little-late-with-lilly-singh-premiere-ratings-carson-daly-last-call-finale-nbc/)
Singh's debut episode was streamed on YouTube hours before its premiere Monday night, garnering more than 13,000 tweets. ALSO: Singh tells Jimmy Fallon that NBC told her there wasn't a budget for manicures since the other late-night hosts didn't get them (http://www.justjaredjr.com/2019/09/17/lilly-singh-doesnt-have-a-budget-to-get-her-nails-done-for-a-little-late-because-of-this-silly-reason/).
Lilly Singh's A Little Late debut features a music video of her knocking the late-night door down (https://www.primetimer.com/item/Lilly-Singhs-A-Little-Late-debut-features-a-music-video-of-her-knocking-the-late-night-door-down-DjSBwG)
Watch Singh's music video, in which she explains why she's not like the late-night Jimmys.
What's promising about Lilly Singh's first week in late-night is her "in the moment stage presence" (https://variety.com/2019/tv/reviews/little-late-with-lilly-singh-review-1203343199/)
"She’s an engaged interviewer capable of steering the conversation where it needs to go, even when the occasional games she tries to play with guests mostly end up more confusing than entertaining," Caroline Framke says of the A Little Late host. "There are definitely times when her age and advanced knowledge of what it means to Be Online clash with celebrities who are so used to late night softballs from smiling forty-something men (it’s no coincidence that her best interview of the week is the one with Tracee Ellis Ross, an extraordinarily game guest and bona fide Instagram savant in her own right). But even when the show isn’t totally on point, Singh’s ability to adapt and crack spontaneous jokes should get A Little Late on a steadier track before too long." ALSO: Singh's 96-episode first season will be taped, two shows per night four nights a week, over the next three months (https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/tv/story/2019-09-18/lilly-singh-women-in-late-night).
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