Posts Tagged Conan O’Brien

Conan: “It’s a Bag of Bones Situation!”

Conan O’Brien‘s been answering fans questions. This video is the fourth in a series. The headline will make sense once you’ve watched the video. Enjoy.

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On Vinyl: Jack White and Conan O’Brien!?!

Pop & Hiss, the LA Times music blog, has the details regarding a release involving musician Jack White and TV host Conan O’Brien:

“‘And They Call Me Mad?’ — that title is amazing for various reasons — is a 7-inch single with O’Brien’s improvised, spoken-word retelling of Frankenstein on one side and an interview with O’Brien by White on the other.”

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CJ Wallis on Please Subscribe

The basic concept of the Please Subscribe documentary (“Please Subscribe follows YouTube celebrites David Choi, Happy Slip, Daxflame, and Tay Zonday as they discuss how online media and YouTube has affected each of their lives and the face of entertainment.“) sparked my interest fairly quickly. The documentary, made by CJ Wallis and the Soska Sisters, hopes to play at several film festivals in the near to long term.  I recently conducted an email interview with Wallis. In addition to this documentary, according to Wallis: “I recently directed/edited/conceived the forthcoming Sarah Slean music video and am currently in development on my debut feature film, Frank Flood.  The girls are getting a ton of attention for Dead Hooker In A Trunk and are currently in development on two scripts. I also have some original music under the label Elective, which is also going rather well.”

Read the rest of this entry »

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Watch: Conan on 60 Minutes

Here’s the link to the 15-minute 60 Minutes  interview with Conan O’Brien. (And here’s the text piece that accompanies the video).


Watch CBS News Videos Online

I’ve never looked at the 60 Minutes’ online presence before and was pleasantly surprised to find that in addition to the core interview, you are offered nearly 10 minutes’ worth of additional footage via 10 bonus cuts. My favorite is when interviewer Steve Kroft and O’Brien go for a ride in O’Brien’s Ford Taurus. As teased by CBS: “The catch: he’s driving a dust covered, 1992 Taurus that may or may not be street legal.”

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Cable & Coco: Well Played, George Lopez & TBS

You’re TBS–a cable channel not exactly known for late night talk shows. You entered the fray last year, giving TV actor/stand-up comic George Lopez (Lopez Tonight).  Fox goes after Conan O’Brien (aka Team Coco) only to find it challenging from an affiliates standpoint (they were locked into myriad syndicated deals for years, making 11 PM unavailable). TBS steps into the void and with Lopez’s help (as detailed in this Bill Carter [the late night expert at the New York Times] piece) gets O’Brien to commit to a show starting in November 2010.

If you’re TBS, you want to get O’Brien marketing his brand on TBS ASAP. But NBC has a clause preventing him from appearing on TV until June. What do you in the interim? This.

Well played, TBS. And I can’t wait for November.

And in the meantime, I will check out Lopez Tonight, because of the classy way Lopez viewed gaining O’Brien as an opportunity and happily offered his 11 PM time slot (committing to midnight).

Speaking of Lopez, he did a great bit last night acknowledging O’Brien and even “interviewing” Coco. Good stuff.

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Martinbrough, Yost and My Thoughts on Jay Leno

How to Draw Noir Comics

How to Draw Noir Comics

The past few days have included two of my interviews running at Robot 6. In the first one, I got a chance to speak with Shawn Martinbrough, about both his book How to Draw Noir Comics: The Art and Technique of Visual Storytelling as well his current work on Marvel’s Luke Cage Noir. Then yesterday, I enjoyed a discussion with writer Christopher Yost on his writing of DC Comics’ Red Robin series.

In other news, I’m working on more pop culture interviews for this fine blog. Until the Internet logistical stars align and I have some new interviews to run, I will try to boost the level of unique content I have at this site. With the recent upgrade, I find it much easier to update the blog and give it the look I prefer.

I was never a fan of Jay Leno’s Tonight Show. When he retired, and Conan O’Brien took over, it was the first time I could watch it since the retirement of the late, great Johnny Carson. I sincerely doubt I could objectively review an episode of Leno’s new show. Heck I cannot even bring myself to link to it in this post. My personal dislike of Leno originates with his late former manager, Helen Kushnick. As amazingly detailed in Bill Carter’s The Late Shift: Letterman, Leno, and the Network Battle for the Night, Kushnick set the wheels in motion for Johnny Carson’s early retirement and for Leno to take his place.

Leno always claimed he never knew the mercenary tactics and stunts she pulled to get Leno where he wanted to be. But really, Leno avoided knowing about her methods until her conduct got so out of control that NBC had to fire her. In my mind, Letterman should have been the only one to replace Carson. And as evidenced by the fact that Carson never again appeared on the Tonight Show, but made appearances on Letterman’s CBS show, that’s what Carson thought as well. I always loved that toward the end of his life, Carson actually started writing jokes for Letterman’s monologue. Letterman waited (in accordance with Carson’s wishes one assumes) until after Carson’s passing to acknowledge this arrangement.

Anyways, I think I’ve established I’m no fan of Leno’s. So it warmed my heart to read the following line in LA Times TV critic Mary McNamara’s review of the first episode: “It’s not a good sign when the Bud Light commercial is funnier than the comedy show it interrupts.”

On another note, in double-checking Kushnick’s spelling of her name, I ran across this amazing EW piece by Dana Kennedy about Kushnick’s final years (she died in 1996)–where to her credit she made peace with  family and friends from whom she’d been estranged for many years. For years, I always regard Kushnick only in terms of her conduct managing Leno, so to see her in this light (as a genuine person, not just an entertainment executive) was valuable perspective.

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