David Letterman
The Hold Steady Star on Letterman; Jay Leno 'Done' With NBC?
As we told you earlier in the week, on Tuesday, Brooklyn's most beloved indie band, the Hold Steady, released its new album, Stay Positive. And tonight, the band is the musical guest on the Late Show With David Letterman. Pitchfork reports that the Hold Steady will also star on in a taped segment on tonight's show: "Apparently, Letterman's crew followed the Hold Steady on the road for a few days earlier this year, and captured what it's like to be in 'America's Rock Band'. The segment is about five minutes long, and it will air tonight before Letterman's Top 10 List." read more »
David Letterman Baffled by Spencer's Existence
The Hills' notorious duo, Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag, went on the Late Show with David Letterman Friday night to promote... Well, themselves. In the clip above, Mr. Pratt discloses his and Brody Jenner's evil plan to date the girls of The Hills that got him onto the show and tells Mr. Letterman that he now gets $100K for public appearances and reps the "future Jay-Z," who's currently 12-years-old.
Watch to see Mr. Pratt reduced to an uncharacteristic awkwardness as Mr. Letterman laughs as most of the things he says. read more »
Playing Obama for Yucks
SOUTH BEND -- Barack Obama could probably use some levity, apparently.
Here's a Daily Show correspondent taping segments with some more traditional correspondents at an event here.
Also, tonight the candidate will read a top 10 list on David Letterman (a native Hoosier!).
Here it is, as released by the campaign: read more »
Source at Fund-Raiser: Edwards Calls McCain 'Crazy' and Says Hillary Thinks There's More on Rezko
Before John Edwards let David Letterman mess up his hair on the Late Show last night, the former Senator was at a private fund-raiser in midtown Manhattan, also attended by Kevin Bacon, Susan Sarandon, Tim Robbins and Alex Forger—one of the co-executors of the Jackie Onassis estate.
A reader who attended the event—held in the Fifth Avenue home of Edwards contributor Joseph Bondi—emailed me last night with this report of Edwards' remarks: read more »
A Tonsorial Tutorial: Shaving David Letterman's 'Silly' Strike Beard
History has shown that a political movement is merely an idea until it finds a badge, a recognizable symbol of solidarity in strife. Women’s Lib had burning braziers; Environmentalists have the color green; the French Revolution is known for its guillotine; and Socialism waves a red flag. The Writers Guild Strike, now in its third month, has its own emblème, too—the strike beard.
But unlike with most political movements, the act of relinquishing a strike beard has also taken on a kind of symbolism. Just ask Diane Wood, the 26-year-old daughter of Adrian Wood, who owns Paul Molé, an old-school Upper East Side barbershop that’s been shaving faces since 1913. After all, Ms. Wood shaved David Letterman’s beard yesterday, less than a week after the late-night talk show host returned to the air, having recently reached an agreement with the W.G.A. read more »
Writers' Strike Grows on Conan O'Brien, David Letterman
In this week’s New Yorker, Ben McGrath writes a Talk of the Town about, well, beards. In days of yore, the piece points out, facial fuzz was de rigueur among a certain set of powerful gents—Confucius, Abraham Lincoln and Rasputin among them.
But now, it seems, there’s begun a resurgence of the bearded-bigwig milieu—particularly those ‘working’ in film and television. The reason for this trend, of course, has more to do with the extended W.G.A. strike than anything else. Now famous personalities—many of which heretofore seemed peach fuzz-free, let alone capable of generating thick cheek rugs—have started to cultivate beards of their own. Take, as the item does, Conan O’Brien, who had reportedly spent the last 44 years of his life with a clean, baby-smooth shave. Not so any more; the pompadour’d late-night talk show host now has what he bills “a hobby on my face.” read more »
Late-Night Shows Back by Jan. 2
As the Media Mob told us this morning, there were reports of late-night shows possibly returning by Jan. 2. Those rumors have been confirmed by NBC this morning, according to The New York Times.
NBC officially announced today that its two late-night stars, Jay Leno and Conan O’Brien, will return to the air on Jan. 2 even if the strike against networks and studios by entertainment writers is not resolved by then. read more »
Late-Night Shows Could Be Back Soon
There may be no end in sight to the writers strike, but the late-night shows could soon be back on the air anyway.
The Writers Guild said over the weekend that it would be willing to sign individual agreements with media companies, and the independent company that owns The Late Show with David Letterman said it plans to take advantage of that move to work towards a deal, according to several reports. read more »
Strike Boosts Letterman Against Leno
David Letterman is winning the battle of the re-runs, the New York Post reports.
Since the writers strike began over a month ago, forcing both Mr. Letterman of CBS and his late-night rival, Jay Leno of NBC, into re-runs, Mr. Letterman's numbers are down only around 21 percent, whle Mr. Leno's are off by 40 percent. Mr. Leno still leads, but, says the Post, "Letterman hasn't been this close to Leno in years." read more »
Grodin Growls Back
The suburbs haven’t dulled David Letterman’s grumpiest—and funniest—guest. read more »
No Late-Night TV Tonight
“There will be no ‘Tonight Show’ tonight,” said Joe Meceiros, the show’s head writer, outside NBC Studios in Burbank, California today, according to the New York Times' TV Decoder blog.
Celebrity guests won’t feel the same financial pinch as writers, of course, but some authors and performers [scheduled to appear on late-night talk shows] will undoubtedly miss out on what might have been rare opportunities at national exposure.
Garth Brooks was expected to perform on “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno” tonight, in his “first late-night television performance since announcing his retirement nine years ago,” NBC said last week. But Mr. Brooks’ appearance is on hold, along with the late-night programming on NBC, CBS and Comedy Central.
In a strange way, ABC may benefit from the postponement of “The Tonight Show” and “The Late Show with David Letterman,” because its news program “Nightline” will be live and original tonight. However, “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” which airs at 12:05 a.m., will revert to a repeat tonight. “We will take it day by day,” an ABC spokeswoman confirmed today.
City Hall Park: Obama on Letterman
Barack Obama is going to be on David Letterman tonight. So, I went to City Hall Park to hear what people thought might happen.
Gloria Tate, who works at a criminal non-profit in the Woolworth Buidling, put her sandwich down long enough to say she doubts there'll be many Hillary Clinton jokes because, you know, they're going to be on the same ticket, she said.
Great. What kind of top ten is he going to do then?
-- Azi Paybarah


















