Jay Leno's 'Tonight Show' legacy remembered
Click here for a free download of the latest Adobe Flash Player.
NBC NEWS - Jay Leno is leaving the late night world this week the way he came in: At number one. Still, Leno did encounter some rough seas shortly after he took over for Johnny Carson. "Many fans and TV critics thought Letterman deserved Carson's chair," notes TV Guide's Stephen Battaglio. Letterman thought so too and moved to CBS, where he ran neck and neck with Leno for the first couple of years until one show in July of 1995 changed everything. British heartthrob Hugh Grant had been arrested days earlier for soliciting a prostitute, but he still honored his previously scheduled visit with Leno. The ratings gold spun from that one show turned the late night tide in Leno's favor. "The Tonight Show"'s new viewers saw a new, more intimate set that was a nod to Leno's comedy club roots and made the host feel more at home. He kept telling jokes, even on weekends, at comedy clubs around the country. "You go to Ohio, you go to Boston, Maine, Oklahoma, if a joke works in all of those places, it'll probably work on 'The Tonight Show'," Leno explained. Now, Leno takes his comedy to prime-time and passes "The Tonight Show" torch to his final guest, Conan O'Brien. O'Brien gets to run with the show starting next Monday.
NBC Augusta 26 News brings you straight to the point news, weather, and sports from Augusta and the CSRA. Meet our NBC Augusta 26 News staff! The following comments do not necessarily represent the views of NBC Augusta 26 | news, weather, sports, community, entertainment, shopping for Augusta, Georgia. Users have agreed to these terms and in doing so accept full responsibility for their comments. Moderation is limited. Sunday, May 31 at 2:52 PM Anonymous wrote ...I liked Leno. But he did not have a "Legacy". Carson had a legacy! Inappropriate? Alert Us!
Add a commentMost PopularMore Good StuffAdvertisement
|
WAGT WeatherWAGT WeatherYouNews
This content requires the latest Adobe Flash Player and a browser with JavaScript enabled.
Click here for a free download of the latest Adobe Flash Player.
On Demand
|
Most Popular
Viewer Poll |

User Agreement