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Sunday, January 10, 2010

NBC & Leno - what is the point of towing the line?

Ever since NBC made the decision to move Leno to prime time the world of media professionals has been waiting with bated breath to see what the experiment would yield.

New York Times 12/08 - Where is Leno Going? To Prime Time on NBC
Advertising Age 09/09 - Whatever the Ratings, Leno's Show is the Future of Broadcast.
(note that in order to access the Advertising Age article you will need to sign in to the University Library Article Database using your 7 digit student ID)

While The Jay Leno Show was significantly cheaper to produce than an hour long drama that would typically air in the same time slot, it's doesn't appear to be very clear to anyone outside NBC why they would continue to ride such low ratings for such a long period.
Jay Leno in primetime review: newyorker.com

CBS has publicly recognized that they and other networks have reaped the viewership that NBC hemorrhaged during this experiment: CBS Chief: Failed Leno/NBC experiment boosted CBS.

Advertising Age's John Rash offers some reasons as to why Leno was not working at his new time slot and what a blank canvas might mean: The Rash Report Peacock Network Appears to Call and Audible on Day of Big Game.

With a failed experiment on their hands that, according to the LA Times, some TV veterans estimate to be close to a $200 million dollar mistake. How Zucker's Leno quick fix got NBC into a quagmire - latimes.com

Possible discussion points:

What long term and short term effects to you see this having on NBC and its' affiliate stations?

Did the failure of Leno's show negatively impact NBC's affiliate stations? How large of an impact do you think this ultimately had on O'Brien in The Tonight Show seat? Be sure to support your opinion.

Is this a sign that "reality television" programming (which is often much less expensive to produce) will be unable to replace the scripted show? Or was this experiment just a bad example? What adjustments could have been made?

Why does NBC continue to maintain that this has not been a failure?

How do you see this relating to GM's recent sale of NBC to Comcast?

Your own discussion topics / questions.

1 comment:

  1. This isn't the first time that The Tonight Show has gone through host controversy. When Johnny Carson planned his retirement from the show in 1992, David Letterman not only wanted to move into that earlier time slot from his late night spot after The Tonight Show, but was considered by Carson and others as the natural successor (despite Leno having been Carson's permanent guest host for several years). Letterman, having had his heart set on the earlier time slot, defected from NBC and joined CBS. The Late Show with David Letterman obviously became The Tonight Show's primary rival which resulted in a big win for the late night television industry on the whole.
    The controversy has lately created a ratings spike for all the late night talk shows and when the dust settles, it could once again prove a positive for each show despite it's network and the time slot it falls in.

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