Salon Home
Media Property

Conan O'Brien

Sunday, Jan 17, 2010 7:05 PM UTC2010-01-17T19:05:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Ratings soaring for Conan

Controversy bolsters O'Brien -- even past Letterman

Conan O’Brien’s battle with his network certainly hasn’t hurt his ratings.

With his jabs at NBC network executives apparently resonating in a country filled with the unemployed, viewership has soared.

O’Brien’s ratings have been rising through the week, which was an extraordinary one in late-night television and saw O’Brien and David Letterman hurling barbed remarks at Jay Leno, and Leno firing back.

“Tonight” ratings Friday were 50 percent higher than they’ve been this season, and O’Brien beat CBS’ Letterman, according to a preliminary Nielsen Co. estimate based on large markets. In the 18-to-49-year-old demographic that NBC relies on to set advertising prices, O’Brien even beat Leno’s prime-time show.

Settlement talks continued Saturday on a deal that would let O’Brien leave NBC and restore Leno to the 11:35 p.m. time slot he occupied for 17 years through last spring.

O’Brien’s team sees the ratings as vindication. His manager, Gavin Polone, on Saturday compared it to when Leno, trailing Letterman in the ratings in the mid-1990s, drew attention for the memorable appearance of Hugh Grant after his arrest. Leno passed Letterman in popularity and never looked back.

Continue Reading

  More David Bauder

Thursday, Jun 30, 2011 9:31 PM UTC2011-06-30T21:31:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Today’s must-see viral videos

Watch: Julian Assange's MasterCard parody, Jean-Claude Van Damme's Russian comedy and a "Real Housewife" song

Julian Assange's MasterCard parody

Julian Assange's MasterCard parody

1. Wikileaks’ MasterCard commercial

At first I thought this was a parody, but then changed my mind and thought it was real. Then it turned out to be a fake after all. Oh, that Assange!

 

2. The “Party Down” initiative

It seems that today is “Party Down” Day , in an Internet effort to make a movie of the Starz’s comedy happen. (How well has that worked out for “Arrested Development”?) Still, it was an amazing show, and this video roundup of the best lines from Roman (played by Martin Starr) inspires the question… “Are we having fun yet?”

Continue Reading

Drew Grant is a staff writer for Salon. Follow her on Twitter at @videodrewMore Drew Grant

Thursday, Jun 23, 2011 12:30 AM UTC2011-06-23T00:30:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

“Conan O’Brien Can’t Stop”: Backstage with Coco

A fascinating backstage documentary probes the egomaniacal comedian's "despair" after a $45 million payday

Conan O'Brien

Conan O'Brien

“I’m sick of people saying that I’m drunk with power! Or that I’ve lost perspective!” shouts Conan O’Brien at his sycophantic staff, during one of many moments of edgy backstage needling in Rodman Flender’s documentary “Conan O’Brien Can’t Stop.” Yeah, it’s a joke, of course. But it also represents a vein of uncomfortable humor that runs all the way through this fascinating film, a chronicle of O’Brien’s “Legally Prohibited From Being Funny on Television” tour, which brought the comedian’s traveling vaudeville act to 32 North American cities during his six-month, post-”Tonight Show” banishment from the small screen last year.

Continue Reading
Andrew O

  More Andrew O'Hehir

Thursday, May 26, 2011 12:45 PM UTC2011-05-26T12:45:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Conan’s Oprah fan taxonomy

O'Brien's guide to Oprah's audience rounds up familiar types, from "The Weeper" to "The Man Who Rocks and Claps"

Conan salutes Oprah's audience

Last night, Conan O’Brien celebrated Oprah Winfrey’s final show by honoring “the people who made the The Oprah Show truly special” over the years: her audience members. His team compiled a jokey Oprah-fan classification, encompassing all sorts — from “The Jumping Clapper” and “The Face Fanner” to “The Extremely Alarmed Grandma” and “The Man Who Rocks and Claps.”

Continue Reading

Emma Mustich is an assistant editor at Salon. Follow her on Twitter: @emustichMore Emma Mustich

Saturday, Mar 26, 2011 1:01 PM UTC2011-03-26T13:01:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Pop Torn: 10 pieces of culture we’re feeling iffy about

We're on the fence about another "Face/Off," Lindsay dropping her last name, 3-D Musketeers, and so much more!

Good or bad? Help us decide!

Good or bad? Help us decide!

Wednesday in New York, it managed to snow, hail and be passingly warm out, all at the same time. Now imagine that these little tidbits of cultural news from this week were like the weather in New York. Now you see what we’re getting at, right?

1. Lindsay Lohan dropping her last name: Problem is, we’ll still know those are her parents.

2. Michael Scott proposes to Holly on “The Office”: Good episode, but it really took this much hype to get people talking about “The Office” again? Not a great sign for when Carell leaves.

Continue Reading

Drew Grant is a staff writer for Salon. Follow her on Twitter at @videodrewMore Drew Grant

Sunday, Dec 5, 2010 12:01 AM UTC2010-12-05T00:01:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Why you should be watching Jimmy Kimmel

In the wake of the late-night wars, one host emerges victorious -- and his name isn't Jay or Conan or Dave

Clockwise from lower left: Jimmy Fallon, David Letterman, Jimmy Kimmel, Jay Leno, Conan O'Brien and Jimmy Kimmel

Clockwise from lower left: Jimmy Fallon, David Letterman, Jimmy Kimmel, Jay Leno, Conan O'Brien and Jimmy Kimmel

Shots were fired, angry accusations flew, risky stands were taken, and gigantic egos were bruised — but did anyone really win the late night wars? Since waging a valiant crusade against NBC and Jay Leno, Conan O’Brien finally retreated to TBS, comforted by the rabid devotion of Team Coco members nationwide. But even as his ratings remain impressive, he’s faced with one recurring question: How many self-deprecating basic cable jokes does it take to mask the defeat inherent in trading in a lifelong dream of hosting “The Tonight Show” for a spot in television’s hinterlands? Meanwhile, Jay Leno continues to play the clueless country uncle who came home from the state fair with a shiny new Corvette he won at the ring toss, gamely telling his ultra-sophisticated fat jokes and terrorist jokes and ugly-sister jokes on a set about as stylish and edgy as the lobby of the Cheesecake Factory. Snickering on the sidelines, as always, is David Letterman, who delighted at playing the bemused onlooker in this bloody conflict, but still never emerged as the clear ratings winner of the lot. Although he must’ve taken some real satisfaction in demonstrating just how much pain and anguish NBC could’ve spared itself by awarding him “The Tonight Show” gig almost two decades ago, Letterman has been doing the same incredulous snark routine for so long now (without many variations or imaginative twists), that not even an awkward admission of infidelity could shake us out of our indifference.

Continue Reading

Heather Havrilesky is Salon's TV critic and author of the rabbit blog. Her memoir, "Disaster Preparedness," published in 2010.   More Heather Havrilesky

Page 1 of 10 in Conan O'Brien

Other News