Register   |  Login Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to B&C Magazine
STORY TOOLS

NBC to Lay Off Leno Staff Next Week; Guest Hosts Could Save Jobs


  • Talkback
  • Blogs
  • Podcasts
  • Photos


We would love your feedback!


Post a comment

» VIEW ALL TALKBACK THREADS
Mike Malone
BC Beat

November, 8 2007
Silverman Swings for the Fences
If you haven't had a chance to read the Ben Silverman profile in Esquire--and there's a very good ch...
More

Mike Malone
Station to Station

November, 8 2007
Clear Channel/Newport Deal on the Rocks?
A trusted source tells us there's some serious trouble with the mega-station deal between Clear...
More

Paige Albiniak
Beyond the Box

November, 7 2007
PBS' BitTorrent Partnership
It’s ironic that PBS has signed up with BitTorrent (and Vuze, separately) to distribute its co...
More

Liz McKeon
BC Beat

November, 1 2007
'Reaper': Good, Clean Halloween Fun
I expected more gore from the Halloween episode of Reaper, and less whining. I haven&rs...
More

In this edition of Broadcasting & Cable TechTalk: Raising the Bar on Sports in HD
Broadcasting & Cable TechTalk
In this edition of Broadcasting & Cable TechTalk, Senior Editor Glen Dickson discusses sports programming as a driver in the evolution of high-definition TV.

Related Stories:
DirecTV Adds NBA TV in HD
IBC 2007: Pro-Bell Introduces Small Routers

Snell Pitches Image "Conditioner" Hear It Now

» VIEW ALL PODCASTS Subscribe Now to TechTalk and never miss an episode
Writers on Strike
Writers Guild of America West members picketed Wednesday in front of Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, Calif.
Frank Bennack Jr.
Hall of Fame - Frank Bennack Jr.

» VIEW ALL GALLERIES
» VIEW FEATURED GALLERY

Advertisement

B&C NEWSLETTERS

Click on a title below to learn more.
Broadcasting & Cable Today
B&C HD Update
B&C Telco IP Update
B&C Local Cable Advertising Sales
B&C Hispanic Television Update
B&C International Update
B&C TechTalk

NBC Tells Nonwriting Tonight Show Staffers They'll Be Laid Off at End of Next Week in Wake of WGA Strike, But Guest Hosts Could Bring Show Back Nov. 19 and Save Those Jobs -- Late Night with Conan O'Brien Staff in Same Situation

By Ben Grossman -- Broadcasting & Cable, 11/9/2007 3:57:00 PM

NBC informed the nonwriting staff of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno that it will be laid off at the end of next week in the wake of the show shutting down for the writers’ strike.

Jay Leno

And with Leno still refusing to cross the picket line, the show is looking at coming back on the air Nov. 19 with guest hosts so that it can save the jobs of the nonwriters.

“All sorts of things are being discussed, including guest hosts,” Tonight Show executive producer Debbie Vickers said. “Our preference is that we return to production of The Tonight Show with Jay as host as soon as possible.”

B&C also learned that the same timetable has been given to the staff of NBC’s Late Night with Conan O’Brien. That show's nonwriters also face layoffs at the end of the week of Nov. 12.

But Vickers also wants to save the jobs of her nonwriting staffers.

“We want to protect the staff, who have been loyal to this show for decades, in the same way that Johnny Carson reluctantly returned without his writers in 1988,” she said.

Late-night shows have gone into repeats since the strike began Monday as the hosts walked out in solidarity with their writing staffs.

With the shows shut down, networks can cut costs by laying off most of the rest of the staff.

And Leno’s chief writer doesn’t expect Leno back anytime soon.

“I talk to Jay every day, and he will not be the first [late-night host] to cross the picket line,” said Tonight Show head writer Joe Medeiros, also a strike captain for the Writers Guild of America. “So they are looking at guest hosts as one possibility so all those people don’t have to lose their jobs.”

Medeiros on Friday expressed anger at NBC for pulling the plug on the staff so quickly.

“This is the way that NBC treats the No. 1 late-night talk show that makes them $50 million a year and has been No. 1 for 12 years?” he said, noting that NBC even turned off his NBC e-mail account.

Even prior to the strike taking effect, many knew that the nonwriting late-night show staff members from all networks would probably begin to see layoffs within two to three weeks if their hosts did not resume their on-air duties.

The hosts are compelled to return without their writing staffs to save the jobs of all of the nonwriters, which can number more than 100 per show.

There is precedent for hosts to come back sans writers, as Johnny Carson and David Letterman both did during the 1988 strike.

Medeiros also spoke in animated fashion about NBC’s decision to replace Leno with Conan O’Brien in 2009.

“And all this after they already kicked the man out the door,” Medeiros said.

CBS has already said that The Late Show with David Letterman will remain in repeats the week of Nov. 12.

ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel Live continues to run in repeats, as its host has backed the writers not only by stepping aside, but even driving a taco truck around to picket sites in Los Angeles. Leno has also been a constant presence at picketing around town.

For a gallery of photos from the picket line, click here.

For full coverage of the strike, click here.



There are no comments posted for this article.


Advertisements




©2007 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites