Jay Leno to prime time: Why NBC is doing it

by nirajan | December 10, 2008 at 05:51 am
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Jay Leno Interview with Keith Olbermann

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Jay Leno Interview with Keith Olbermann

Everyone knew the face of late-night TV would change when Jay Leno left The ­Tonight Show, but prime time as well? On Dec. 9, NBC announced that the reigning king of late night will stay put at the network by hosting an untitled new gabfest at 10 p.m. every weeknight, starting next fall. Leno, who is set to step down from The ­Tonight Show on May 29, will pack the first-ever Monday–Friday prime-time talk show with signature bits like those corny “Jaywalking” segments and a stable of A-list guests — which could set up a potential booking war with his successor, Conan O’Brien. (“I am absolutely thrilled that Jay is staying at NBC,” O’Brien said on his show Tuesday, although there are certainly drawbacks to the arrangement.)

Leno, who appeared at a press conference yesterday with his obviously relieved NBC bosses, said he’d prefer to “fight with family” than move to another network — a real possibility had NBC not persuaded him to reject offers by ABC, Fox, and even Sony to jump ship once his 17-year-run ends next spring. “My parents always said, Whatever you do in life, ­always try to come in fourth,” joked Leno of NBC’s current prime-time standing, before adding, “I’m comfortable with the people I work with. It makes it easier.”


For NBC, it’s also cheaper. Leno’s new deal isn’t exactly a bargain — published ­reports put the new contract at more than $30 million a year — but it’s a fraction of what it costs to program a scripted series in the 10 p.m. time slot, which hasn’t launched a bona fide hit in four years. The average ­drama now costs around $3 million an episode to produce; Leno needs roughly $400,000 per night for his new show. So NBC should save a mint by making him the new face of 10 p.m. (Middling but consistent performers like Law & Order: SVU are expected to move one hour earlier.) And unlike dramas, which air in originals only around 22 times a year, Leno can guarantee 46 weeks of fresh programming once he begins next fall. “Not only is the cost of the show lower, but we are offering advertisers a DVR-proof show that you can join in progress,” insists NBC co-chairman Marc Graboff. “It’s a better solution.”

And if there’s one thing NBC needs now, it’s solutions. Viewership is down 11 percent, the fall slate is in shambles, and the network needs to salvage whatever credibility it has left with Madison Avenue. This week, NBC/Universal sacked programming exec Teri Weinberg and studio president Katherine Pope, merged their jobs, and gave the newly created position to former international programming chief Angela Bromstad. In tapping Leno, the network further utilizes a ­proven late-night performer. While his current Tonight Show ­average of 4.8 million viewers is certainly less than what a hit scripted show would bring in, it’s more eyes than ­recent 10 p.m. NBC programs Lipstick ­Jungle and My Own Worst Enemy have been ­attracting.

The move also restores a sense of much-needed order. “Networks aren’t what they used to be in terms of prime-time programming,” says media analyst Harold Vogel. “This is probably a better time to try than any time in the past. It has a real shot of working.” Ironically, the competition could also end up benefiting. The reduction of scripted programs in the 10 p.m. hour provides the other networks leverage to attract better shows at a cheaper price — and could give ­other series in the time slot a better chance of survival. And for NBC, ceding prime-time territory can be risky, as evidenced by The CW’s decision to sell away its Sunday nights this fall. (In case you weren’t watching — and judging by the ratings, you weren’t — the farmed-out ­programming block failed miserably.)

In many ways, slotting Leno in prime time seems like an admission that NBC’s current series development process just hasn’t worked, and for now, it’s giving up on the hour that once launched hits like Law & Order and ER. Says one producer with a series ­currently airing on NBC, “It may be a very smart cost-saving measure, but it’s a sad day for the state of network TV.” Yet a damn good one for Jay Leno fans.


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