eight months as host of “The Tonight Show,” leaving a once-venerable
late-night franchise hobbled by corporate missteps and changing
audience dynamics.
“Ladies and gentlemen, we have exactly one hour to
steal every single item in this studio,” O’Brien joked to his audience
at the start of the show.
He added: “We’ve had a lot of fun being here these
last seven months, but like everything in life, the fun has to come to
an end a decade too early.”
The studio audience greeted O’Brien with a one-minute standing ovation, accompanied by chants of “Conan! Conan! Conan!”
When a curtain failed to close after one comedy bit,
O’Brien joked: “We didn’t rehearse today because we don’t care. We’ve
all been drinking.”
Guests included
Neither
Some of O’Brien’s outspoken fans — who have relished
the comic’s attacks on his employer in recent days — lined up in heavy
rain early Friday morning at the studio to try to score tickets to the
final broadcast. Many young fans who were small children when O’Brien
burst to fame as host of
A last-minute splurge on travel tickets brought 27-year-old
“It was a very spontaneous trip,” Knudsen
acknowledged. “But it’s Conan. I had to do it. I’ve been watching him
since his first season on ‘Late Night.’ It was a family tradition —
starting with Letterman — to stay up late to watch the show. When Conan
took over, he stuck with me and I stuck with him.”
Leno is “a lower level of comedy,” said Martinez,
who said she attended Thursday’s O’Brien taping. “Conan connects with
his audience. He goes out of his way to let us know we’re on the same
level. I connected with him. He’s so much like me…. I would totally
do the string dance.”
The chain of events that led to O’Brien’s departure began
talk show — which had begun in September to much fanfare — and
returning him to late night. The move came after pressure from local
stations, which also worried that O’Brien’s “Tonight” was struggling in
the ratings opposite
The situation escalated the next week when O’Brien
issued a statement that he would not accept the network’s proposal that
his program begin at
O’Brien confirmed on his Thursday show that he had reached an agreement to exit the network. He will reportedly receive nearly
O’Brien was the fifth host of “Tonight,” which premiered in 1954, after
Under the deal, O’Brien will not be able to return to television or do interviews until
O’Brien has spent much of his recent telecasts taking potshots at his employer. During one monologue, he noted that
“If
But on Friday’s show, he paid heartfelt tribute to
his longtime employer with a serious aside, at one point even choking
up as he expressed gratitude for his years at the network and the
opportunity to host “The Tonight Show.”
“I am enormously proud of the work we have done together, and I want to thank
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