I don’t watch Kimmel, is that his regular practice?
Sometimes. He’s really rather varied as to people sticking around.
Good grief people. Steve Allen’s standard setup was a desk where both he and his guest sat. (Usually one at a time.) Jack Paar had in later years a set of chairs, no desk, no couch. (Like Mike Douglas and some versions of Dick Cavett.) He did have a couch (and desk) in earlier versions. But it was secondary. He frequently interviewed guests sitting next to him at the desk like Allen.
It was Johnny that made the couch a key item on the set.
Well, where else was he going to stroke Zsa-Zsa’s pussy?
And that’s why Johnny is, was, and always will be the king. Well one reason anyway.
Looking at that Johnny Carson clip. Dean Martin sure was chain smoking. I’m surprised he lived as long as he did with the perma tan, heavy drinking and chain smoking.
I loved George Goebel. I was getting annoyed when 'ol Dean was flicking his ashes in his drink.
I thought it was Raquel’s.
I do remember he offered a year’s salary to peek under Dolly Parton’s shirt.
Way to spoil a joke.
I was just thinking about this myself not too long ago. It used to be expected to hang around, that’s why there was a couch. Lately it seems like the expectation is that the guests will leave.
That seems to be the impression. Busy, busy, busy, no time to sit while somebody else promotes their gig.
Well, the primary role of these shows is to provide a forum for promotion. Sure, they’re funny and entertaining, but they make their money by being a platform for promotion. So having folks come on without anything to promote is kinda missing the point.
Yes, the bumping of guests used to occur fairly often. Johnny would do that. Now it seems that everything is scripted more tightly. Jay was the king of keeping things on timeline, going through the banter, getting to the promotion, moving to the next segment. Having the other guests hang out is tempting to disrupt that flow.
It was 1969?
Watched the clip, Steve seems to be following the format of a radio program, where both sit behind the same desk and use the same microphone. Possibly carryover from that and possibly not coming up with the idea of using multiple mics, or the overhead boom mic.
I think they quit hanging around because the host was really irritable and yelling at them and flipping off the producer and shit.
Never mind.
+1.
:leafie:
No shit. “What an asshole,” I was thinking to myself.
Every talk show host has a few regulars that show up when they need to fill in a spot. Letterman had Tony Randall and currently has Regis Philbin. And Craig Ferguson has Kristen Bell and a few others I’m forgetting. He even takes her with him on his overseas shows.
If Tony Randall turned up on Letterman without anything specific to promote it was usually because another guest had cancelled. Randall lived in Manhattan and he was always game to come over to the Ed Sullivan Theater if he was needed. Plus he could be counted on to be witty and engaging for 7 minutes.
I just said that.
Bump guests like Matt Damon too often and things like this can happen.
I wonder if guests who come on later resent if a previous guest keeps interrupting. They may not want their promotional spot to be hijacked by someone else, even if it was funny.