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#1 |
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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
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TBS' "Conan" to End in 2021 as Conan O’Brien Signs Deal for HBO Max Variety Show
"Conan" to End on TBS in June 2021; Conan O’Brien Extends Deal with WarnerMedia for Weekly Variety Show on HBO Max
by Peter White November 17, 2020 Conan O’Brien is getting out of the nightly game and has swapped his daily show for a weekly variety series on HBO Max. The move means that O’Brien will no longer front a late-night talk show for the first time in 28 years. "Conan", which has aired on TBS since 2010, will conclude at the end of its 10th season in June 2021, WarnerMedia said Tuesday. He has fronted more than 1,400 episodes of the show, which launched after the comedian’s acrimonious departure from "The Tonight Show". “In 1993 Johnny Carson gave me the best advice of my career: ‘As soon as possible, get to a streaming platform.’ I’m thrilled that I get to continue doing whatever the hell it is I do on HBO Max, and I look forward to a free subscription,” joked O’Brien. Team Coco, which will produce the new HBO Max weekly show, is already in business with the streamer, making four stand-up specials featuring comedians including Chris Redd and Moses Storm. “28 years is a monumental achievement in late-night television,” said Brett Weitz, General Manager for TNT, TBS and truTV. “We’re incredibly proud of the groundbreaking work that Conan and his team have accomplished during the 10 years at TBS and are so glad that we will continue to have his presence on our air with the ‘Conan Without Borders’ specials. We celebrate his success and are glad to see it grow across our WarnerMedia family.” “Conan’s unique brand of energetic, relatable, and at times, absurdist, comedy has charmed late-night audiences for nearly three decades. We can’t wait to see what he and the rest of Team Coco will dream up for this brand new, variety format each week,” said Casey Bloys, Chief Content Officer, HBO and HBO Max. https://deadline.com/2020/11/conan-t...ax-1234617122/ |
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#2 |
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To be honest with you, looking back, I had a feeling that Conan's TBS show as going to end once he cut it back to an half an hour and got rid of in-house band. And then the pandemic came in and stripped the show down even further.
It makes sense for Conan O'Brien to leave late-night since it's not where his fans get their "Conan" fix these days Moving to HBO Max to host a weekly variety show and ending his late-night show after 28 years is just latest career evolution for Conan. "These days," says Michael Schneider, "O’Brien is probably more celebrated as a successful podcaster (Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend and producer of several more), the host of a popular run of travel specials (Conan Without Borders), his clips on social media and for just being Conan O’Brien, than he is for a cable TV show." Schneider adds: "O’Brien had a new energy to reinvent himself, developing the 'Team Coco' brand — which had evolved out of fans protesting his NBC exit — into a digital platform. And to make more noise, he began to take the show out of the studio more, to Comic-Con and then in those travel segments that turned into Conan Without Borders." ALSO: Rather than discuss his talk show ending, Conan told fans to stop obsessing over his long hair on his Tuesday show. |
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Last edited by TMC; 11-18-2020 at 06:46 AM. |
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#3 |
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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,168
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"Conan" to End June 24 with Hour-long Finale
by Dan Snierson May 3, 2021 Coco is preparing to go go. Conan O'Brien will host his TBS late-night talk show "Conan" for the last time on June 24, the network announced Monday. The shows leading up to his grand farewell will feature all sorts of special guests, culminating in an hour-long finale that will celebrate the last 11 years of "Conan". https://ew.com/tv/conan-tbs-show-finale-date/ |
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#4 |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
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Conan O'Brien's exit should a sign that the late-night talk show format needs to be shaken up
"While O’Brien ultimately stayed true to late night’s roots, Conan has evolved better than his predecessors," says Olivia Cathcart. "Institutions like The Tonight Show, Late Night, and The Late Show have struggled to adapt to the changing landscape across the internet and social media, politics, and celebrity. Traditional late night is a relic of the past. Instead of constant rebranding, it would serve better to take its final bow and set the stage for the next generation of late night programming, one better suited for today’s TV viewer. In many ways, the internet killed the late night star. Late night was born early in TV’s history, when there were only a few channels and at a time where a TV in every house was not a given like it is today. It rose to a place of cultural dominance as TV became more and more common, and by the late ‘60s and ‘70s Johnny Carson and his Tonight Show held significant sway over the public. Networks have been chasing that prominence ever since, despite social and technological changes making it impossible for that to happen again...While we’ve always known celebrities are not as relatable as they try to appear, the one-of-us image is no longer attractive. The fakeness of these interviews became ever more obvious in the pandemic-born Zoom-based episodes. Without a shared stage presence, the hosts lack the charm that is needed to convincingly create a facade of longtime friendship and appreciation for their guests who, by and large, are not as interesting as their PR machines make them out to be. Though we should all know by now how these things work, with anecdotes and bits pre-planned, the puppet strings became ostentatious. Like a lot of entertainment media, celebrity culture was a form of escapism. We enjoyed peering into a life of luxury most of us will never see. While social media has made this easier than ever by giving celebrities control over their own image, it also killed all the fun (and some reputations). From Gal Gadot’s 'Imagine' video to Chrissy Teigen’s endlessly tone-deaf humblebrags, we’ve seen that celebrities are, in fact, not like us. More than that, their wealth and privilege is no longer viewed as inspiring but odious. Late night is largely a PR tool, one that celebrities no longer have to depend on, and one audiences no longer have the patience to suspend disbelief for." |
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#5 |
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Member
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Conan O'Brien will end his TBS show with two weeks of full audiences and final guest Jack Black
Rather than return to his studio at Warner Bros. for his final shows, Conan O'Brien will continue taping his Conan show at The Largo Theater, but with full audiences for the weeks of June 14 and June 21. His final show on June 24 with Jack Black will be expanded to one hour. During his final two weeks, Conan will welcome Martin Short, Bill Hader, Mila Kunis, Dana Carvey, JB Smoove and Patton Oswalt. Conan will also welcome a mystery guest on June 22. “Following all LA County Covid Guidelines, attendees will need to be fully vaccinated on the day of attendance and show proof of vaccination,” the show said. “At this time, masks will be required. Tickets are available now. For more information and to enter the free ticket lottery, go to Teamcoco.com/Tickets. Fans can also follow @TeamCoco on Instagram and Twitter for special ticket giveaways.” |
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#6 |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
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Conan O'Brien has had the worst ratings drop of the late-night hosts this season
As TBS' Conan comes to an end this week after 11 years, the late-night show has sunk 29% in total viewers from last season and 36% in the key 18-49 demo, according to The Wrap. Conan has averaged just 282,000 total viewers per episode with 132,000 in the demo, including delayed viewing. Last season, those numbers were at 399,000 and 205,000, respectively. |
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#7 |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
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Conan O'Brien is finally free of the late-night format that never quite fit him properly
Conan's talents transcend the talk show format, says Dennis Perkins. Yet for the past 28 years, Conan was entrenched in a late-night format that was always an awkward fit. "When O’Brien took over Late Night, the late-night hosting post was a cultural sinecure, a comic throne from which to bestow laughs upon those guests granted an audience," says Perkins. "But Conan is not a removed and beneficent bestower—he’s a once-in-a generation comic jester, whose true place is down in the comedy trenches, leaping at every opportunity to find the joke, no matter where he lands. Jumping metaphors a third time, Conan’s not the ringmaster, he’s the funniest clown in the center ring spotlight, who’s also secretly the brains of the whole outfit." Perkins says it was a good thing that The Tonight Show never worked out for Conan because NBC's 11:30 p.m. timeslot would've dulled his off-the-wall comic originality and sparking weirdness. "The current, Jimmy Fallon-hosted incarnation shows just what it would have looked like if O’Brien had truly succumbed to his Tonight Show fate—a wan, charmless cruise of effortful wackiness and placid fawning," says Perkins. Now that he's free of the talk show format, Conan can go back to being "Conan." "With his upcoming move to whatever the hell he’s going to be doing on HBO Max—we know it will be weekly, in the variety show family, and most likely weird, but that’s about it—O’Brien is finally, after almost three decades, stepping wholly away from a hand-me-down entertainment format that never quite fit him properly, and that he never really needed," says Perkins. "And, unlike Letterman’s more genuine retrenchment into prospector-bearded semi-obscurity (and the occasional comedy emeritus Netflix sit-down), there’s a genuine sense of freedom and joy at the prospect of Conan O’Brien deciding to stay in the game, on his own terms. With a cushy HBO deal supplementing his thriving and hand-tailored multimedia Team Coco comedy empire, the late-night-battle-hardened, 58-year-old Conan is striding into a free-form, subscriber-subsidized playroom where he can get back to letting his legendarily febrile comic imagination do whatever the hell it wants. After 28 years, it’s about time." ALSO:
Jimmy Fallon pays tribute to Conan O'Brien Fallon was among the last late-night hosts to send off his Late Night and Tonight Show predecessor from late-night television. "Congratulations @ConanOBrien. One of the funniest brains in comedy," Fallon tweeted Friday morning. "Without you, I wouldn’t have a job. Thank you for everything. I’ve always said - you can’t spell HBO without at least one of the letters from CONAN." Fallon made his late-night talk show debut with Conan in 2000. Chris Pratt "mistakes" Jimmy Kimmel for Conan O'Brien by throwing him a retirement party “Jimmy, thank you so much for letting me be a part of this incredible night,” Pratt told Kimmel. “It’s just so nice to be able to congratulate you in person — come on, guys — on his last show!” There will never be another distinctive daily voice quite like Conan O’Brien’s "The same way some kids looked up to baseball players, he was an idol to me, and the coolest person imaginable," says Rob LeDonne, who wore Late Night with Conan O'Brien merchandise to high school, of Conan O'Brien. "As a result, I never missed a single show. Since it aired way past my bedtime, I’d hit record on my VHS player every night I went to sleep, and then fast-forwarded to the 12:30 a.m. hour when I got home from school. Of course, I'd rewatch classic sketches ad nauseam. I also have vivid memories of friends and family rolling their eyes at me one summer because I wouldn't stop reading fake predictions out loud from the companion book to the show's popular segment, 'In the Year 2000.' (Example: “It will be revealed that carrots will not actually improve your eyesight. But they are still number one when it comes to scratching a deep rectal itch.") In other words, I was a member of the Late Night hive—a Conan stan, years before the figure of speech came into vogue." With Conan's time in late-night now over, LeDonne says that the TBS show allowed Conan to do a talk show on his own terms. "O’Brien could have done anything with Conan, but in a direct reaction to the Trump years and disturbed by a bubbling xenophobia, he used his platform to produce a series of travel specials to introduce Americans to the human side of other cultures, dubbing it 'Conan Without Borders,'" says LeDonne. "When Trump was stoking fears of immigration and border walls, O’Brien went to Mexico. Immediately after Trump reportedly called Haiti a 'sh*thole' country, Conan went there too. And in an effort to raise awareness about the Armenian genocide, he devoted an episode to visiting that country as well. Now, aside from brief ... gap(s) in (2009 and) 2010, viewers won’t be treated to a daily talk show hosted by O’Brien for the first time since 1993. And while we sure have a hell of a lot of other options, there will never be another regular distinctive daily voice quite like O’Brien’s. We won’t be treated to a daily monologue or his famous string-dance, Conan using his physicality, including towering height and bright red hair, to masterful effect. We’ll be missing his trusty sidekick Andy Richter and his perfect quips. And we’ll miss a trademark fetishization of silly intelligence, with Conan reminding us not only to never forget to be foolish no matter how hard one works, but also that those two things can even go hand-in-hand to beautiful effect. So until his HBO Max show premieres on some unknown date, and in whatever form it takes, I’ll still be wearing my Late Night merch proudly. Regardless of whether or not it gets me laid." ALSO:
Jimmy Kimmel pays tribute to Conan O'Brien by taking a shot at Jay Leno “I also wanted to congratulate Conan O’Brien on 28 years of very, very funny late-night television,” Kimmel said in his Jimmy Kimmel Live! monologue Thursday night. “Conan wrapped up his show on TBS tonight. You know, before Conan, I didn’t even know bears could masturbate.” Kimmel, one of Conan's fiercest defenders in 2010 when Leno wanted The Tonight Show back, added: "Anyway, here’s to Conan and Andy Richter and everybody involved with that show. We look forward to whatever you have planned next at HBO Max...And I also want to say, congratulations to Jay Leno on his new time slot at TBS.” Earlier in the day, Kimmel paid tribute to Conan and Andy Richter, with whom he collaborated with on the short-lived ABC game show Big Fan. "Tonight, two men I respect tremendously close a chapter of their brilliant careers," Kimmel tweeted. "Conan made doing his job the hard way look easy. He & Andy are among the funniest of the many funny people I’ve met. Congratulations to you & your co-workers on a remarkable achievement." ALSO:
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#8 |
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Freakshow
Moderator
Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,168
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Conan O’Brien gives update on hew HBO Max show
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#9 |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 126,800
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Andy Richter: Critics praising Conan O'Brien's Oscars performance should've been watching TBS' Conan
"Incredibly proud of what Conan did with the Oscars," the longtime Conan sidekick wrote on Bluesky, "but I wasn’t surprised he’d be hilarious, especially because he was supported by a genius crew of writers who had all worked on CONAN, some going all the way back to the Late Night days...…and the reviews are in, and they are all raving. They’re all saying how funny and in control he was, how inventive and fresh the comedy was, and how silly and inspired and joyful the show was. They are all 100% correct, of course, but I couldn’t help but feel as I read the reviews……'oh, you the mean the Oscar’s was basically an extravagant version of the show that we did on TBS for 11 years, as in same host, same writers, same sensibility? The one that went off the air in 2021? Ah, jeez, if only there was something like that on tv now.'" |
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