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Monday, May 25, 2015

Letterman the Loser- Washington Post

I am no big fan of David Letterman ( I have always found him smug and boring...but he is better than the even more smug and boring Jimmy Fallon for instance)

But how can you call him " a loser" ( This reminds me of the time I read ( and quickly ran from) the "FDNY Rant" of disgruntled/malcontent NYC Firemen in which everyone was calling everyone else " a loser!"

Why David Letterman is among television history’s biggest losers

He played hard. He played smart. And, by many accounts, he was funnier than the other guy.
But when David Letterman leaves late-night TV after his final show Wednesday night, he will leave as an also-ran. No matter how much moral outrage his defenders can muster — no matter how many column inches were filled by writers who said America should like him more — Letterman is the man who couldn’t beat Jay Leno, and sometimes couldn’t beat Leno’s replacement.
“He was a former weatherman and a failed morning-show host who perfected a sort of snide, irreverent attitude towards showbiz types,” Rolling Stone wrote after Letterman announced his retirement last year. “After getting noticed by Johnny Carson and making a fan out of NBC bigwig Fred Silverman, however, David Letterman found himself taking his goofy antics to a 12:30 a.m. time slot — and thus, a late-night TV legend was born.”
David Letterman's late-night career(3:28)
On May 20, David Letterman hosted his last show, ending a 33-year career on late-night television. Here are some of his top moments from CBS's "The Late Show with David Letterman" and NBC's "Late Night." (Jayne W. Orenstein/The Washington Post)
There was no doubt that the legend was, well, legendary. Letterman feuded with Madonna, tried to engage a nearly mute Joaquin Phoenix and avoided getting in between Andy Kaufman and Jerry Lawler. He invented the “Top 10″ list; he invented “Stupid Pet Tricks”; he poked a hole in the absurd, celebrity-fueled gas bag that was late-night television.
But there’s this thing about legends: They usually come out on top. Abraham Lincoln didn’t lose the Civil War; B.B. King didn’t step down as the ambassador of blues. Letterman’s panache — his unbridled impertinence — wasn’t enough. People admire the New York Yankees, but not because they lost to the Boston Red Sox in the 2004 American League Championship Series.
Perhaps a sense of “shoulda-coulda-woulda” is why Letterman seemed a bit at sea in a recent New York Times look back.
“I’m awash in melancholia,” he told the paper of tonight’s exit. “Over the weekend, I was talking to my son, and I said, ‘Harry, we’ve done like over 6,000 shows.’ And he said, [high-pitched child’s voice] ‘That’s creepy.’ And I thought, well, in a way, he’s right. It is creepy.”
“It is creepy”: Not exactly the note any showman should want to go out with while comparing retirement to “a good, solid punch to the head.” Contrast this to Leno’s first act after he retired the first time: He stole back his own show from Conan O’Brien and, after his second retirement, won a Mark Twain prize and leaped back on to the stand-up comedy circuit. 
Letterman need not look to Leno to see what spunk looks like, of course. He just needs to look at the 1993 news conference in which he announced his move to CBS. The weatherman from Indiana could have been worried about the big jump to 11:30 p.m. on a new network. Instead, he joked about Amy Fisher before getting down to business.
“As some of you may know,” Letterman said, “in the past year and a half, I’ve kinda been interested in doing a show earlier than the one I’m doing now.” Ever the smart aleck, he thanked CBS for its “patience,” “support” and, slyly, “generosity.” (Letterman’s three-year deal was worth $42 million.)

For a while after that news conference, Letterman was riding high. He beat Leno in the ratings for a few years; an HBO film portrayed Leno as a bit of a lunk. But then Leno interviewed Hugh Grant on July 10, 1995, beating Letterman for the first time. Leno held on to the lead for much of the next two decades.
Thus began Letterman’s very long, very public tenure as second banana.
“We prevailed for a while, and then I lost my way a little bit,” Letterman told the Times. “Quite a little bit. And at that point, there was not much I could do about it. People just liked watching his show more than they liked watching my show.”
Sounds brutal. Some said it didn’t make a difference: Letterman was loved less than Leno, but loved by those that mattered.
“As Leno prepares for his final few Tonight Shows, he finds himself in a unique position: More widely watched than any of his competitors, yet widely reviled by the majority of his peers,” EW wrote last year.
So what? After all, Letterman’s shtick did not always play well — his attempt at hosting the Academy Awards ended in disaster, for example. And after he suffered personal setbacks, he retreated from the snark that had made him famous. He took a hiatus for a quintuple bypass in 2000, then brought his doctors on-air to thank them for saving his life. And he fessed up to an extramarital affair in 2009.
“I want to be the person I always thought I was and probably was pretending I was,” he told Oprah Winfrey in 2013. “I hurt a lot of people. … I’m not looking to blame anybody. I’m looking to find out why I behaved the way I behaved.”
This was the guy who pioneered “Will It Float?”
“Now he’s more of the Old Softy,” The Washington Post’s Hank Stuever wrote. “Maybe it was the heart surgery.”
When not gushing with gratitude or regret, Letterman could seem petty. Even as the host reached out to Leno for a 2010 Superbowl commercial, he was taking O’Brien’s side in the Leno-O’Brien wars.
As ABC 7 explained: “I was delighted by everything that happened — except you losing your job,” Letterman told O’Brien on ‘The Late Show’ in a May 2012 interview, during which both TV hosts did a mock imitation of Leno.”
If Letterman wanted to use a 20-year-old feud for laughs or simply remind his audience the feud existed, such comments seemed irrelevant. Late night was already moving on.
“Today’s late-night talk shows – viral-culture enterprises comprised of buzz moments and component parts that can be embedded, downloaded, tweeted — are produced with tonight, tomorrow, or anytime audiences in mind,” EW wrote last year. “Letterman helped develop this game too. But he, like Leno, doesn’t play it/never played it as well or with as much interest as his successors.”
Sounds like a silver medal is in order.
More on Letterman’s final days:
Justin Wm. Moyer is a reporter for The Washington Post's Morning Mix. Follow him on Twitter: @justinwmmoyer.
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Czechm8
9:17 AM EDT
A mean-spirited article if I ever read one.
Dagan Crofter
1:28 AM EDT
Yet another "controversial" click-bait article from the Post. Get eyeballs and provoke comments.  
 
Quality content and substance are optional. Guess you do what you have to do these days. Still, you'd think people would begin to see right through this nonsense.
shayladane
5/24/2015 9:02 PM EDT
What is the point of your article? To castigate Letterman for not being number one? Are you doing this because you have the venue and because you can? I question your motives, Mr. Moyer. This whole article seems pointless and possibly insulting. Shame on you! 
 
Mouton Noir
5/24/2015 2:21 PM EDT [Edited]
See, here's the thing: Leno isn't funny. Letterman is. Letterman's humor may have been edgier, darker and sometimes even mean, but it was original and funny. Leno's was boring. I don't think I ever heard Leno tell a joke whose punchline I couldn't hear coming from a mile away like a galloping horse. He was safe. He was conventional. He was mainstream.
Cleopatra
5/23/2015 9:31 PM EDT
Leno, three years younger than Letterman, did not have a quintuple bypass. 
 
Leno also has no children. 
 
Letterman's father died at the age of 57, and Dave said he wanted to spend as much quality time with his family as possible. 
 
Leno going back on the road may seem spunky, but that isn't a good thing for a 68 year old father of an 11 year old son. 
 
And when Leno FINALLY left.....I don't recall a send off from a fellow host like this.... 
 
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=y29ELOsXSI0 
 
Warts and all, I would take Dave any day and am sad to see him go.... 
Reg Bloor
5/23/2015 7:43 PM EDT
In New Zealand David Letterman Show has been on for years. We like him mocking the stupid and pompous. We like the music. I don't recall Jay Leno shows being on our tv, probably because the tv people didn't think we would understand his humour. Lots of our people have been in the audience of Letterman and say the band is awesome during the ad breaks. Lettermans retirement featured on the 3 free to air news channels and radio in our country. I don't recall any fuss when Leno retired, he may be good too but not important here. Do you really thing the Rock is a legend because hes in a big grossing movie and Robert DeNiro is not?
Gildersleeve
5/23/2015 1:50 PM EDT
The reason Leno beat Letterman is because Leno did not play politics. Leno played both sides and both sides laughed at him. Letterman was a leftest liberal and went after adults, children and pets. Letterman had a political mean streak that turned many off and I believe that had a lot to do with him being 2nd best.
counterww1
5/24/2015 8:50 PM EDT
Absolutely. Letterman could not keep his politics to himself. Kissed Obama's a$$ and critiqued Republicans often and with vile. Sorry, he really blew it with me when he did that stuff. Used to like him. When I found out about his affairs , that really did it for me. He is a jerk.
flippancy
12:06 AM EDT
He was never second best, he was THE best. Leno was telling old tired 1940s jokes basically and as a stand up he sucks. Perhaps you just don't understand intelligent repartee and true humor.
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