I’ve been at the Letterman Show since 1991, that’s 18 years. I would say, during that time, the
comedic sensibility of the show has changed, I want to say, half a dozen times because Dave has
gotten older, but the average age of the average writer had stayed the same. So, they bring in
their sensibilities on what they think is funny, and they try and interject it in the show. So the
show’s comedic sensibility changes, and it’s all valid. We don’t write anything and think, Oh I
need to write this joke to appeal to the crucial male, 18 to 34 demographic. We don’t think like
that, at least I don’t. I just think, what’s the funniest take that I can do? Sometimes I think that
things have passed me by just because I’m older and the people watching are younger.
Sometimes I think that, but funny is funny is funny. If you show somebody a Marx Brothers
Movie who’s never seen one, I think that they’ll think it’s funny. I don’t think they’re going to
ask, “Why isn’t Groucho naked? I want to see Groucho’s deal!”
Late Night has really changed in the last three decades. First of all, there’s more variety and
more competition. Before 1982, there was Johnny Carson and people that he knocked off. All of
Late Night was Carson, and it was a monologue, it was some sort of bawdy, broad comedy
aimed at people over 30 clearly and white people, white men over 30. So that was it and Then,
Dave came along in 1982 and NBC gave Dave Letterman one directive, whatever you do, we
want it not to be the Tonight Show. We want a 3 joke monologue, not a 25 joke monologue. We
just don’t want it to look like the Tonight Show. So, given that go ahead, it was very free
flowing, it was irony-based, and it was, as the old producer Bob Morton used to say, Late Night
with Dave Letterman celebrated failure. It was not sleek, it was very anarchistic. So then that
comes along.
Then, you have Dave moving to CBS, 11:30, and you have this situation with Jay, where you
had one show that was host driven and concept driven which is Dave and material driven, I
would say more concept driven. And then another show which is Jay who was just essentially
just a comic who got his own show and it’s a monologue and guest, a little more traditional. And
then you had the 12:30 shows with Conan. And all of a sudden they were, David started this with
going after the younger audiences I mean people always say, I started watching Dave in college.
So there was a real market out there, and like I mentioned before, Late Night became this very
lucrative industry for the networks, very cheap to produce. Of course, once people start making
money, it’s going to tend to get watered down and it’s not going to be as fearless because there
are a lot of people whose livelihoods depend on your success. It’s not just kids screwing around
anymore.
Then, what happened in the late 90s is that cable emerged as a late night force, with the Daily
Show Steve Colbert, and it was much more topical. Not that the Letterman Show didn’t always
take care of what was in the news, and so did Jay but it became more topical and more issue-
oriented, and I think we’ve certainly gone in that direction at The Late Show. So that’s the
evolution of that.
Now, I think that if I was to predict, and believe me I’m always wrong, so put your money
elsewhere. I think we’re going to reach a critical mass with the topicality thing and people
getting their news, because I think it’s going to get a little too partisan and I think that late night
shows are going to be put in a situation that they shouldn’t be put in, unbeknownst to them. I
think it’s probably going to go back to being a little sillier and less celebrity driven and easier to
take unless foe serious. You look at the guy like Craig Ferguson and watch what he is doing.
Nobody is doing what he is doing, and I think he will emerge. Because He is silly, it’s all him.
The guests don’t really have to say anything. He is going to take care of it. I think that’s where
we’re going.
I don’t think that Johnny ever dreamed that he would influence an election. He never talked
about Watergate when Watergate was going on. He talked about it after the fact, but now Tina
Fey had as much to do with the last election as Dave did, with the situation with McCain, as the
Daily Show does. Look where that is, that’s where we are with these shows and none of these
shows set out to influence elections, but that’s what happens. They’re right in the popular
culture. I never bought all those studies and surveys about people getting their news from late
night television, and I still don’t, but I think that people turn to late night television to see what
the point of view is on the news. I think they know going in. I don’t think we’re in the education
business.
Here’s the deal with society, People fall in love with the idea of things rather than the reality of
things, and that holds true for late night. It’s so much more provocative and sexier to say that
people are watching our show and getting their news from Dave Letterman, and let me tell you
as somebody who writes monologue jokes and somebody who knows Dave I’m telling you we
find that very funny.
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