NBC Extends Jimmy Fallon’s ‘Tonight Show’ Deal Through 2021

August 13, 2015 10:04am PT by Marisa Guthrie

 Douglas Gorenstein/NBC

With the anticipated bow of Stephen Colbert on CBS, NBC has locked Jimmy Fallon as Tonight Show host for six more years, through the 2021 season.

NBC Entrainment chairman Bob Greenblatt made the announcement Thursday morning from the podium during his session at the Television Critics Association summer press tour.

Greenblatt noted that everyone at NBC are “big fans” of Colbert. But he called Fallon the genre’s most “versatile star” who has remade the Tonight institution into a “destination” since he took over in February 2014.

The Tonight Show is averaging a 1.1 rating  in adults 18-49 and 3.8 million viewers overall for the 2014-15 season. 

“We’re elated that [Fallon] is going to be around in the role he was born to play,” added Greenblatt.

Colbert and Fallon are friends, with the former having made multiple appearances on Fallon’s Tonight as well as Late Night. And Colbert told members of the press on Monday that he was not interested stoking a rivalry like the one that existed between predecessors Jay Leno and David Letterman.

“Maybe I missed the competitive gene,” he said. “The idea of war between hosts makes no sense to me. Fighting amongst each other doesn’t sound funny, so I’m not interested.”

Greenblatt also noted that the 2016 presidential election will continue to benefit Late Night with Seth Meyers, whose bailiwick at former home Saturday Night Live was certainly political comedy. To that end, Meyers has recently ditched the standup monologue (something he has admitted is not his strong suit) and now begins the show behind the desk with a riff on the day’s news. And Greenblatt noted that the show is on a 20-week ratings high. 

“Heading into this crazy election year, I think it will only give Seth more and more momentum,” added Greenblatt. 

Marisa Guthrie

Marisa Guthrie

THRnews@thr.com

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Donny Deutsch on Donald Trump Circus: “Paddy Chayefsky Could Not Have Written This”

August 12, 2015 3:43pm PT by Marisa Guthrie

The TV personality spoke at TCA to promote his USA Network comedy 'Donny!,' which bows Nov. 10.Donny Deutsch  Scott Roth/Invision/AP

The TV personality spoke at TCA to promote his USA Network comedy ‘Donny!,’ which bows Nov. 10.

Donny Deutsch has been a ubiquitous presence on TV since he participated in the first season of NBC’s The Apprentice in 2004. He’s hosted his own talk show (on CNBC), filled in for vacationing hosts on myriad others and has been a regular on NBC’s Today. And now, USA Network is letting him play himself in the new comedy Donny!, which bows Nov. 10.

The erstwhile ad exec and New York personality is known for his business smarts and raging ego. And USA programming chief Jackie de Crinis admitted that prior to taking the pitch meeting with Deutsch, many people warned her that he is “off-putting, arrogant and a little self-centered.”

“And they weren’t wrong,” she said, by way of an introduction for the question and answer session with Deutsch, co-star Emily Tarver and showrunner Angie Day at the Television Critics Association summer press tour. And then she added, “But he’s also, funny charming and intelligent.”

Donny! revolves around Deutsch as a daytime talk show host; the show is filmed at his Upper East Side apartment, but the rest of the characters are fictional. And like The Larry Sanders Show and Curb Your Enthusiasm, the program is improvisational or “soft scripted,” as Day explained.

Deutsch noted that Donny! is a “tremendous homage” to Sanders and Curb and added that starring in his own comedy is a dream come true. (“I feel like I’m getting to play center field for the New York Yankees.”)

The pilot features a cameo from Christy Brinkley. And there will be plenty of other recognizable guest stars from Deutsch’s thick rolodex of contacts and friends including Regis Philbin, Al SharptonKathie Lee Gifford and Hoda Kotb.

And Deutsch added that if the show is renewed for season two, he’d work on getting his old friend and current GOP presidential aspirant Donald Trump to agree to a cameo. That is, “If Donald doesn’t get elected,” he said.

And Deutsch predicted that “at the very least, he’s going to be a king maker … If he runs as an Independent he’s going to hand it to the Democrats. He’s going to be a big factor in this [election] one way or another.”

But Deutsch mused that Trump may not fully appreciate the roller coaster he’s launched himself on.

“I don’t know how much he’s thought it through. I know Donald well enough to know that he’s just going with it and having fun,” said Deutsch. “Say what you want about the guy, he’s this incredible brand. He’s this enzyme right now and he wants attention, and of course he’s getting it. Paddy Chayefsky could not have written this.”

Marisa Guthrie

Marisa Guthrie

THRnews@thr.com

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ABC’s ‘World News Tonight’ Snaps NBC ‘Nightly News’ 288-Week Winning Streak

ABC’s ‘World News Tonight’ Snaps NBC ‘Nightly News’ 288-Week Winning Streak – The Hollywood Reporter

April 07, 2015 30 minutes ago by Marisa Guthrie

The Lester Holt-anchored NBC broadcast was bested by David Muir's ABC program among total viewers. ABC/Heidi Gutman

The Lester Holt-anchored NBC broadcast was bested by David Muir’s ABC program among total viewers.

After 288 consecutive weeks as the most-watched of the three broadcast evening newscasts, NBC Nightly News falls to ABC’s World News Tonight. It is Nightly‘s first total viewer loss since September 2009 and comes as anchor Brian Williams remains on a six-month suspension for embellishing his proximity to danger during a 2003 reporting trip to Iraq.

ABC’s World News Tonight with David Muir bested Nightly News by 84,000 viewers for the week ending April 3, according to Nielsen. World News pulled in 7.997 million viewers to Nightly‘s 7.913 million. Lester Holt is currently filling in for Williams.
 
“Lester Holt has led NBC Nightly News to great success over the past two months, and we continue to be pleased with his strong performance during this time,” an NBC News spokesperson said in a statement. “We’re proud of the caliber of our work and remain committed to delivering the highest quality broadcast for our audience every night.”

Nightly is still ahead for the season with an average of 9.2 million total viewers compared to ABC’s 9.1 million. But Muir’s broadcast has already picked off several weeks among viewers 25-54, the demographic upon which most news programming is sold to advertisers. World News also won the week among that demo, 1.95 million viewers compared to NBC’s 1.79 million.

For ABC News and Muir – who took over the broadcast from Diane Sawyer last September – the win is an important milestone although it will have no impact on the shows’ immediate financial picture. That would only happen if Muir continues to best Nightly. But the ABC broadcast under Muir is having its best season in years, adding more than half a million viewers this season and winning the month of November (a so-called sweeps month when advertisers rates are set) in the 25-54 demo for the first time in 18 years. And Muir has brought his love of field reporting to newscast anchoring from Havana, Cuba and the Syrian border. 

It’s also unclear what impact, if any, ABC’s ratings win will have on Holt’s future on the show. Many inside NBC News continue to advocate for the well-liked veteran anchor, who has been a stabilizing force at a broadcast and a news division rocked by a series of missteps. Andrew Lack officially assumed the chairmanship of NBC News and MSNBC only yesterday. His task will be to set Nightly‘s course for the future. And though Lack is known to have a warm relationship with Williams, insiders note that he is very carefully and deliberately approaching the thorny issue.

Marisa Guthrie

Marisa Guthrie

THRnews@thr.com

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