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	<title>Observer &#187; March 13 &#8211; March 19, 2002 Dave Stays in Imperfect Marriage With CBS</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; March 13 &#8211; March 19, 2002 Dave Stays in Imperfect Marriage With CBS</title>
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		<title>March 13 &#8211; March 19, 2002 Dave Stays in Imperfect Marriage With CBS</title>

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		<pubDate>Mon, 18 Mar 2002 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2002/03/march-13-march-19-2002-dave-stays-in-imperfect-marriage-with-cbs/</link>
			<dc:creator>Jason Gay</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Not long</p>
<p>ago, Rob Burnett, the president of Worldwide Pants, David Letterman's</p>
<p>production company, was watching an episode of the NBC hit The West Wing when a little NBC peacock logo fluttered across the</p>
<p>screen, revealing an advertisement for The</p>
<p>Tonight Show with Jay Leno .</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett was impressed. "You look at that and you go, 'Wow, these people are</p>
<p>really looking after The Tonight Show ,'"</p>
<p>he said, speaking of NBC.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said he didn't mean to imply the Late</p>
<p>Show needed a CBS version of the flying peacock. But talking late on the</p>
<p>night of Monday, March 11-several hours after Mr. Letterman agreed to eschew a</p>
<p>$31-million-a-year offer from ABC and stay at CBS for about a half-million</p>
<p>more-Mr. Burnett said the fluttering peacock was an example of the kind of care</p>
<p>and innovation the Late Show wanted</p>
<p>from its own network.</p>
<p> "You</p>
<p>just want to get the feeling that the network is looking out for you to the</p>
<p>same extent that the competition is looking out for our competition," Mr. Burnett</p>
<p>said.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman had agreed to remain with CBS after assurances that they, too, would</p>
<p>energetically promote and attend to his show. But the marriage between CBS and</p>
<p>star still felt-as it always has-slightly uncomfortable. Mr. Letterman had been</p>
<p>aggressively courted by Disney to go to ABC, and promised lavish attention and</p>
<p>promotion. The affection was not without consequence-Disney had alienated its</p>
<p>news division and one of its own stars, Ted Koppel-but it had been exciting.</p>
<p> So, as</p>
<p>much as it settled the roiling media controversy of the past week and a half,</p>
<p>Mr. Letterman's announcement had a melancholy, risk-averse feel to it. The</p>
<p>devil Dave knew, the old theory went, was better than the one he didn't.</p>
<p> Still,</p>
<p>Mr. Burnett was in a good mood about the decision, saying he was happy that CBS</p>
<p>won out by "stepping up." He downplayed the squabbling on both sides, in</p>
<p>particular reports of a rift between Mr. Letterman and CBS president Leslie</p>
<p>Moonves. And yet he acknowledged the network and the Late Show remained an odd pairing.</p>
<p> "Is it a</p>
<p>perfect fit?" Mr. Burnett asked. "Not exactly all the time. But the fit is</p>
<p>getting better and better. I think CBS is a different network now under Les</p>
<p>than it was five or six years ago."</p>
<p> Under</p>
<p>Mr. Moonves, CBS has indeed grown significantly in prime time. Mr. Burnett was</p>
<p>quick to credit the network's improving prime-time lineup for the Late Show 's own ratings gains over the</p>
<p>past year. "The 12 percent gain we had in our demo last year-give it all to</p>
<p>Les," Mr. Burnett said. "He's the reason-100 percent Les. It had nothing to do</p>
<p>with us."</p>
<p> Still,</p>
<p>Mr. Burnett and Mr. Letterman feel the network can do more to lift its</p>
<p>late-night franchise. Mr. Burnett, who also produces the prime-time show Ed for NBC, believes that neither CBS's</p>
<p>performance in prime time at the 10 p.m. hour nor the performance of its local</p>
<p>news affiliates at 11 p.m. is what it should be.</p>
<p> Such</p>
<p>impediments, Mr. Burnett said, prevent the Late</p>
<p>Show from topping the ratings of Mr. Leno and the Tonight Show . Mr. Burnett theorized that if Mr. Letterman's show</p>
<p>appeared on NBC in Mr. Leno's current slot, the Late Show 's ratings performance would improve drastically.</p>
<p> "Without</p>
<p>insulting CBS as we sit here and launch into going into business with them for</p>
<p>another great many years, hopefully, I do believe that if the Late Show were plucked off of CBS and</p>
<p>put on NBC, for example, I believe the numbers would near double, frankly," Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said. He added: "That's O.K."</p>
<p> To be</p>
<p>sure, there is lingering frustration at Worldwide Pants because the Late Show regularly loses in the ratings</p>
<p>to the Tonight Show. Though Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said the Late Show 's staffers</p>
<p>do not focus on the ratings, clearly he and his colleagues are not satisfied</p>
<p>with finishing a respectable second, winning Emmy Awards and polishing Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman's reputation as a late-night giant.</p>
<p> "You</p>
<p>have a show that generates $225 million of income for the network, so there is</p>
<p>a difference from being a sort of little cult show," Mr. Burnett said. "This is</p>
<p>a big-time network show, so now that you're a big-time network show, do you</p>
<p>want to be No. 1 in your time slot? Sure you do."</p>
<p> That is</p>
<p>partly why Disney's bid for Mr. Letterman felt so enticing. Though its</p>
<p>prime-time lineup is in tatters, ABC's affiliates are stronger at the 11 p.m.</p>
<p>local news hour, and Disney was promising mega-promotion</p>
<p>on a multitude of properties, including the ESPN sports network.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said there were several times during the negotiations that he thought</p>
<p>Mr. Letterman would go to ABC. "There were points during that decision-making</p>
<p>process that I believed, if I had to bet my money, I would have bet we were</p>
<p>going," Mr. Burnett said. But he added: "And there were other times where I</p>
<p>would have bet we were staying."</p>
<p> Still,</p>
<p>Mr. Burnett said he arrived at Worldwide Pants and the Late Show 's headquarters on West 53rd Street on March 11 not</p>
<p>knowing what Mr. Letterman's final decision would be. He had spoken several</p>
<p>times to Mr. Letterman during the latter's vacation in St. Barts the previous</p>
<p>week, mostly to talk about media coverage of the tug of war, and he knew that</p>
<p>Mr. Letterman wanted to resolve the issue by Monday or, at the latest, Tuesday.</p>
<p> It would</p>
<p>only take one day. After both the ABC and CBS offers were reevaluated, Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman decided by the afternoon to stay at CBS. Both networks were called</p>
<p>and told the news. Not long afterwards, Mr. Moonves arrived at the Late Show offices, and congratulations</p>
<p>and thanks were extended from both sides.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said that conflicts between Mr. Moonves and his network and the Late Show had been overstated. "It's a</p>
<p>nine-year relationship," he said of the Late</p>
<p>Show , which moved to CBS in 1993. "It's an intense relationship. There's</p>
<p>going to be tussles, there are going to be some arguments, there is even going</p>
<p>to be some screaming here and there. Any time you have a bunch of smart people</p>
<p>that care in a room, you are going to have some tussles. But that's all they</p>
<p>were."</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said that Viacom-owned CBS had made a recent, vigorous bid to secure</p>
<p>the Late Show with its own</p>
<p>multi-property promotion plan. In the end, he said, "there was nothing in the</p>
<p>CBS relationship alone that warranted us leaving the network."</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said that Worldwide Pants had not, as has been suggested, made a</p>
<p>contractual demand to retain control of the 11:30 p.m. time slot once Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman retired. However, he said, Worldwide Pants hoped it would get first</p>
<p>crack at developing that hour when Mr. Letterman decided to leave.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman walked onstage at the Ed Sullivan Theater that night and cracked that</p>
<p>things had gotten so strange, NBC had offered him the Tonight Show . He then went to his desk and, in a speech that Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said was expected but unscripted, announced he had decided to stay at</p>
<p>CBS.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman also spoke fondly of Ted Koppel, saying the ABC newscaster-whom the Late Show had almost displaced-"deserved</p>
<p>the right to determine his own professional future."</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman, of course, had at least decided where his own professional future</p>
<p>would be. Now it was time to see if everyone could make it work.</p>
<p> Tonight,</p>
<p>the Late</p>
<p>Show with David Letterman . [WCBS,</p>
<p>2, 11:35 p.m.]</p>
<p> Thursday, Mar. 14</p>
<p> The real beneficiary of the Letterman dispute</p>
<p>was probably The Daily Show 's Jon Stewart, who did jack nothing and saw his boiling</p>
<p>stock rise amid the ABC-CBS late-night showdown. Mr. Stewart's name was</p>
<p>repeatedly mentioned as a Plan B if Mr. Letterman departed CBS-or chose to</p>
<p>stay, forcing ABC to consider different late-night options.</p>
<p> This</p>
<p>attention is a mixed blessing for Mr. Stewart's current employer, Comedy</p>
<p>Central. The cable network is pleased that their guy is so coveted by broadcast</p>
<p>executives, but knows that the attention will only make negotiations for Mr.</p>
<p>Stewart's services more competitive-read: expensive-as the expiration of his</p>
<p>contract approaches, in January 2003.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Stewart is currently one of the cheaper hosts in late-night television, at</p>
<p>about $2 million per year. That's not exactly minimum wage-especially for</p>
<p>cable, where the audiences and revenue are significantly smaller than</p>
<p>broadcast-but it's a fraction of Mr. Letterman's $31.5 million haul, or Conan</p>
<p>O'Brien's new $8-million-a-year deal with NBC.</p>
<p> Comedy</p>
<p>Central has been in the midst of trying to renegotiate Mr. Stewart's deal for</p>
<p>nearly a year. Bill Hilary, Comedy Central's general manager, said he is eager</p>
<p>to keep Mr. Stewart, calling him a "huge asset" for the network.</p>
<p> "Jon</p>
<p>will stay at Comedy Central for as long as Jon wants to stay," Mr. Hilary said.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Hilary rejected speculation that Mr. Stewart could leave and take the Daily Show with him. Before Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman opted to stay at CBS, there was talk that if the Late Show left, Viacom, CBS's parent and a half-owner of Comedy</p>
<p>Central, might slide the Daily Show to</p>
<p>its late-night broadcast operation, in an act of corporate synergy.</p>
<p> But Mr.</p>
<p>Hilary said such a maneuver would be highly unlikely. First, he said, AOL Time</p>
<p>Warner owns the other half of Comedy Central, and would probably be resistant</p>
<p>to Viacom, a rival, moving the Daily Show</p>
<p>to CBS. The same would be true of Viacom if AOL Time Warner tried to move the Daily Show to one of its networks, such</p>
<p>as HBO, Mr. Hilary said.</p>
<p> Further,</p>
<p>Mr. Hilary said that Comedy Central regards the Daily Show as a prized network property-one it would not easily</p>
<p>part with. The Daily Show has</p>
<p>established itself as a flexible format, succeeding with two stylistically</p>
<p>different hosts: the self-deprecating Mr. Stewart and his cocky-boy</p>
<p>predecessor, Craig Kilborn. Mr. Hilary said he could see the show continuing on</p>
<p>with a new host when and if Mr. Stewart leaves.</p>
<p> "I think</p>
<p>the Daily Show is with Comedy Central</p>
<p>to stay for a long time," he said.</p>
<p> Though</p>
<p>others at Comedy Central said Mr. Stewart's popularity had magnified concern</p>
<p>about keeping him, Mr. Hilary said the affection of competing network</p>
<p>executives had not made Comedy Central more aggressive about reworking his</p>
<p>deal.</p>
<p> "Let's</p>
<p>put it this way: As soon as the press sort of got this story two weeks ago, I</p>
<p>didn't all of a sudden go, 'Let's renegotiate Jon's contract,'" Mr. Hilary</p>
<p>said. "We're always talking to him."</p>
<p> But Mr.</p>
<p>Hilary acknowledged he had considered his options should Mr. Stewart leave</p>
<p>sooner rather than later. "That's my job," he said. "Do I want Jon Stewart to</p>
<p>leave? Absolutely not. He is a brilliant star, and he has done a lot for the</p>
<p>network. Do I have a secondary plan? Of course."</p>
<p> Ladies</p>
<p>and gentlemen, the Daily Show with David</p>
<p>Brenner ! A representative for Mr. Stewart did not return a request for comment</p>
<p>by press time. Mr. Stewart, however, did joke about his belle-of-the-ball</p>
<p>status when he hosted Saturday Night Live</p>
<p>on March 9.</p>
<p> "I would</p>
<p>do anything," he said. "I would do Dave, Leno, Conan-anybody who wants to</p>
<p>leave. Willard Scott, you tired of waving at old people? I'll take that. I work</p>
<p>on basic cable."</p>
<p> Tonight on the Daily Show , Mr.</p>
<p>Stewart dishes out Smuckers to geezers. [COM,</p>
<p>46, 11 p.m.]</p>
<p> Friday, Mar. 15</p>
<p> The</p>
<p>other Big TV Kahuna who decided to stay this week was Oprah Winfrey, who</p>
<p>announced that she would continue to host her daytime yapfest until 2006, when</p>
<p>Jonathan Franzen's favorite talk show will turn a sprightly 20.</p>
<p> Ms.</p>
<p>Winfrey's status had been giving some television executives heart palpitations,</p>
<p>especially those in local news. While Mr. Letterman's handlers groaned that</p>
<p>poor local news performance at 11 p.m. was hurting their ratings, Ms. Winfrey's</p>
<p>show remains a powerful lead-in for local news, helping many early-evening</p>
<p>newscasts win their markets. Such is the case here in New York City, where WABC</p>
<p>has Oprah,</p>
<p>and its Eyewitness News dominates the</p>
<p>early news time period.</p>
<p> WABC</p>
<p>news director Dan Forman was tickled that Ms. Winfrey decided to stay for</p>
<p>another four years, calling it "great news." He said he'd been worried that she</p>
<p>might leave after next season.</p>
<p> The only</p>
<p>competitor in recent years that has managed to mount a serious challenge to Oprah is Judge Judy , which runs on WNBC. A newer entrant is a game-show</p>
<p>pairing on WCBS, which runs a new version of The Weakest Link and, soon, Who</p>
<p>Wants to Be a Millionaire . But Mr. Forman didn't sound like he was shaking</p>
<p>in his shoes about that line-up.</p>
<p> "That</p>
<p>doesn't really concern me," he said.</p>
<p> What</p>
<p>about the Joker's Wild – Press Your Luck double bill? That'll</p>
<p>shoot shivers up your spine. Today on Oprah,</p>
<p>someone hugs pillow, offers inane profundities, gets whopping book deal. [WABC, 7, 4 p.m.]</p>
<p> Saturday, Mar. 16</p>
<p> Tonight on Saturday Night Live , that old wizard Ian McKellen. [WNBC, 4, 11:35 p.m.]</p>
<p> Sunday, Mar. 17</p>
<p> VH1's got a new show called Ultimate Albums , and tonight they</p>
<p>examine- Pet Sounds , Blonde on Blonde , 3 Feet High and Rising</p>
<p>Shoot Out the Lights Talking Book - Dookie , by Green Day. Cripes,</p>
<p>VH1. [VH1, 19, 9 p.m.]</p>
<p> Monday, Mar. 18</p>
<p> Tonight on NBC, after idiots munch on pig innards on Fear Factor , leave it to Colin Quinn to try and restore some</p>
<p>dignity to the network on The Colin Quinn Show . [WNBC, 4, 9:30 p.m.]</p>
<p> Tuesday, Mar. 19</p>
<p> Tonight E! has the confidently titled Russell Crowe: Road to the Red Carpet . Of course, now everyone would like to</p>
<p>see Mr. Crowe trip on said carpet. [E!</p>
<p>24, 10 p.m.] </p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Not long</p>
<p>ago, Rob Burnett, the president of Worldwide Pants, David Letterman's</p>
<p>production company, was watching an episode of the NBC hit The West Wing when a little NBC peacock logo fluttered across the</p>
<p>screen, revealing an advertisement for The</p>
<p>Tonight Show with Jay Leno .</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett was impressed. "You look at that and you go, 'Wow, these people are</p>
<p>really looking after The Tonight Show ,'"</p>
<p>he said, speaking of NBC.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said he didn't mean to imply the Late</p>
<p>Show needed a CBS version of the flying peacock. But talking late on the</p>
<p>night of Monday, March 11-several hours after Mr. Letterman agreed to eschew a</p>
<p>$31-million-a-year offer from ABC and stay at CBS for about a half-million</p>
<p>more-Mr. Burnett said the fluttering peacock was an example of the kind of care</p>
<p>and innovation the Late Show wanted</p>
<p>from its own network.</p>
<p> "You</p>
<p>just want to get the feeling that the network is looking out for you to the</p>
<p>same extent that the competition is looking out for our competition," Mr. Burnett</p>
<p>said.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman had agreed to remain with CBS after assurances that they, too, would</p>
<p>energetically promote and attend to his show. But the marriage between CBS and</p>
<p>star still felt-as it always has-slightly uncomfortable. Mr. Letterman had been</p>
<p>aggressively courted by Disney to go to ABC, and promised lavish attention and</p>
<p>promotion. The affection was not without consequence-Disney had alienated its</p>
<p>news division and one of its own stars, Ted Koppel-but it had been exciting.</p>
<p> So, as</p>
<p>much as it settled the roiling media controversy of the past week and a half,</p>
<p>Mr. Letterman's announcement had a melancholy, risk-averse feel to it. The</p>
<p>devil Dave knew, the old theory went, was better than the one he didn't.</p>
<p> Still,</p>
<p>Mr. Burnett was in a good mood about the decision, saying he was happy that CBS</p>
<p>won out by "stepping up." He downplayed the squabbling on both sides, in</p>
<p>particular reports of a rift between Mr. Letterman and CBS president Leslie</p>
<p>Moonves. And yet he acknowledged the network and the Late Show remained an odd pairing.</p>
<p> "Is it a</p>
<p>perfect fit?" Mr. Burnett asked. "Not exactly all the time. But the fit is</p>
<p>getting better and better. I think CBS is a different network now under Les</p>
<p>than it was five or six years ago."</p>
<p> Under</p>
<p>Mr. Moonves, CBS has indeed grown significantly in prime time. Mr. Burnett was</p>
<p>quick to credit the network's improving prime-time lineup for the Late Show 's own ratings gains over the</p>
<p>past year. "The 12 percent gain we had in our demo last year-give it all to</p>
<p>Les," Mr. Burnett said. "He's the reason-100 percent Les. It had nothing to do</p>
<p>with us."</p>
<p> Still,</p>
<p>Mr. Burnett and Mr. Letterman feel the network can do more to lift its</p>
<p>late-night franchise. Mr. Burnett, who also produces the prime-time show Ed for NBC, believes that neither CBS's</p>
<p>performance in prime time at the 10 p.m. hour nor the performance of its local</p>
<p>news affiliates at 11 p.m. is what it should be.</p>
<p> Such</p>
<p>impediments, Mr. Burnett said, prevent the Late</p>
<p>Show from topping the ratings of Mr. Leno and the Tonight Show . Mr. Burnett theorized that if Mr. Letterman's show</p>
<p>appeared on NBC in Mr. Leno's current slot, the Late Show 's ratings performance would improve drastically.</p>
<p> "Without</p>
<p>insulting CBS as we sit here and launch into going into business with them for</p>
<p>another great many years, hopefully, I do believe that if the Late Show were plucked off of CBS and</p>
<p>put on NBC, for example, I believe the numbers would near double, frankly," Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said. He added: "That's O.K."</p>
<p> To be</p>
<p>sure, there is lingering frustration at Worldwide Pants because the Late Show regularly loses in the ratings</p>
<p>to the Tonight Show. Though Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said the Late Show 's staffers</p>
<p>do not focus on the ratings, clearly he and his colleagues are not satisfied</p>
<p>with finishing a respectable second, winning Emmy Awards and polishing Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman's reputation as a late-night giant.</p>
<p> "You</p>
<p>have a show that generates $225 million of income for the network, so there is</p>
<p>a difference from being a sort of little cult show," Mr. Burnett said. "This is</p>
<p>a big-time network show, so now that you're a big-time network show, do you</p>
<p>want to be No. 1 in your time slot? Sure you do."</p>
<p> That is</p>
<p>partly why Disney's bid for Mr. Letterman felt so enticing. Though its</p>
<p>prime-time lineup is in tatters, ABC's affiliates are stronger at the 11 p.m.</p>
<p>local news hour, and Disney was promising mega-promotion</p>
<p>on a multitude of properties, including the ESPN sports network.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said there were several times during the negotiations that he thought</p>
<p>Mr. Letterman would go to ABC. "There were points during that decision-making</p>
<p>process that I believed, if I had to bet my money, I would have bet we were</p>
<p>going," Mr. Burnett said. But he added: "And there were other times where I</p>
<p>would have bet we were staying."</p>
<p> Still,</p>
<p>Mr. Burnett said he arrived at Worldwide Pants and the Late Show 's headquarters on West 53rd Street on March 11 not</p>
<p>knowing what Mr. Letterman's final decision would be. He had spoken several</p>
<p>times to Mr. Letterman during the latter's vacation in St. Barts the previous</p>
<p>week, mostly to talk about media coverage of the tug of war, and he knew that</p>
<p>Mr. Letterman wanted to resolve the issue by Monday or, at the latest, Tuesday.</p>
<p> It would</p>
<p>only take one day. After both the ABC and CBS offers were reevaluated, Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman decided by the afternoon to stay at CBS. Both networks were called</p>
<p>and told the news. Not long afterwards, Mr. Moonves arrived at the Late Show offices, and congratulations</p>
<p>and thanks were extended from both sides.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said that conflicts between Mr. Moonves and his network and the Late Show had been overstated. "It's a</p>
<p>nine-year relationship," he said of the Late</p>
<p>Show , which moved to CBS in 1993. "It's an intense relationship. There's</p>
<p>going to be tussles, there are going to be some arguments, there is even going</p>
<p>to be some screaming here and there. Any time you have a bunch of smart people</p>
<p>that care in a room, you are going to have some tussles. But that's all they</p>
<p>were."</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said that Viacom-owned CBS had made a recent, vigorous bid to secure</p>
<p>the Late Show with its own</p>
<p>multi-property promotion plan. In the end, he said, "there was nothing in the</p>
<p>CBS relationship alone that warranted us leaving the network."</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said that Worldwide Pants had not, as has been suggested, made a</p>
<p>contractual demand to retain control of the 11:30 p.m. time slot once Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman retired. However, he said, Worldwide Pants hoped it would get first</p>
<p>crack at developing that hour when Mr. Letterman decided to leave.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman walked onstage at the Ed Sullivan Theater that night and cracked that</p>
<p>things had gotten so strange, NBC had offered him the Tonight Show . He then went to his desk and, in a speech that Mr.</p>
<p>Burnett said was expected but unscripted, announced he had decided to stay at</p>
<p>CBS.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman also spoke fondly of Ted Koppel, saying the ABC newscaster-whom the Late Show had almost displaced-"deserved</p>
<p>the right to determine his own professional future."</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman, of course, had at least decided where his own professional future</p>
<p>would be. Now it was time to see if everyone could make it work.</p>
<p> Tonight,</p>
<p>the Late</p>
<p>Show with David Letterman . [WCBS,</p>
<p>2, 11:35 p.m.]</p>
<p> Thursday, Mar. 14</p>
<p> The real beneficiary of the Letterman dispute</p>
<p>was probably The Daily Show 's Jon Stewart, who did jack nothing and saw his boiling</p>
<p>stock rise amid the ABC-CBS late-night showdown. Mr. Stewart's name was</p>
<p>repeatedly mentioned as a Plan B if Mr. Letterman departed CBS-or chose to</p>
<p>stay, forcing ABC to consider different late-night options.</p>
<p> This</p>
<p>attention is a mixed blessing for Mr. Stewart's current employer, Comedy</p>
<p>Central. The cable network is pleased that their guy is so coveted by broadcast</p>
<p>executives, but knows that the attention will only make negotiations for Mr.</p>
<p>Stewart's services more competitive-read: expensive-as the expiration of his</p>
<p>contract approaches, in January 2003.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Stewart is currently one of the cheaper hosts in late-night television, at</p>
<p>about $2 million per year. That's not exactly minimum wage-especially for</p>
<p>cable, where the audiences and revenue are significantly smaller than</p>
<p>broadcast-but it's a fraction of Mr. Letterman's $31.5 million haul, or Conan</p>
<p>O'Brien's new $8-million-a-year deal with NBC.</p>
<p> Comedy</p>
<p>Central has been in the midst of trying to renegotiate Mr. Stewart's deal for</p>
<p>nearly a year. Bill Hilary, Comedy Central's general manager, said he is eager</p>
<p>to keep Mr. Stewart, calling him a "huge asset" for the network.</p>
<p> "Jon</p>
<p>will stay at Comedy Central for as long as Jon wants to stay," Mr. Hilary said.</p>
<p> Mr.</p>
<p>Hilary rejected speculation that Mr. Stewart could leave and take the Daily Show with him. Before Mr.</p>
<p>Letterman opted to stay at CBS, there was talk that if the Late Show left, Viacom, CBS's parent and a half-owner of Comedy</p>
<p>Central, might slide the Daily Show to</p>
<p>its late-night broadcast operation, in an act of corporate synergy.</p>
<p> But Mr.</p>
<p>Hilary said such a maneuver would be highly unlikely. First, he said, AOL Time</p>
<p>Warner owns the other half of Comedy Central, and would probably be resistant</p>
<p>to Viacom, a rival, moving the Daily Show</p>
<p>to CBS. The same would be true of Viacom if AOL Time Warner tried to move the Daily Show to one of its networks, such</p>
<p>as HBO, Mr. Hilary said.</p>
<p> Further,</p>
<p>Mr. Hilary said that Comedy Central regards the Daily Show as a prized network property-one it would not easily</p>
<p>part with. The Daily Show has</p>
<p>established itself as a flexible format, succeeding with two stylistically</p>
<p>different hosts: the self-deprecating Mr. Stewart and his cocky-boy</p>
<p>predecessor, Craig Kilborn. Mr. Hilary said he could see the show continuing on</p>
<p>with a new host when and if Mr. Stewart leaves.</p>
<p> "I think</p>
<p>the Daily Show is with Comedy Central</p>
<p>to stay for a long time," he said.</p>
<p> Though</p>
<p>others at Comedy Central said Mr. Stewart's popularity had magnified concern</p>
<p>about keeping him, Mr. Hilary said the affection of competing network</p>
<p>executives had not made Comedy Central more aggressive about reworking his</p>
<p>deal.</p>
<p> "Let's</p>
<p>put it this way: As soon as the press sort of got this story two weeks ago, I</p>
<p>didn't all of a sudden go, 'Let's renegotiate Jon's contract,'" Mr. Hilary</p>
<p>said. "We're always talking to him."</p>
<p> But Mr.</p>
<p>Hilary acknowledged he had considered his options should Mr. Stewart leave</p>
<p>sooner rather than later. "That's my job," he said. "Do I want Jon Stewart to</p>
<p>leave? Absolutely not. He is a brilliant star, and he has done a lot for the</p>
<p>network. Do I have a secondary plan? Of course."</p>
<p> Ladies</p>
<p>and gentlemen, the Daily Show with David</p>
<p>Brenner ! A representative for Mr. Stewart did not return a request for comment</p>
<p>by press time. Mr. Stewart, however, did joke about his belle-of-the-ball</p>
<p>status when he hosted Saturday Night Live</p>
<p>on March 9.</p>
<p> "I would</p>
<p>do anything," he said. "I would do Dave, Leno, Conan-anybody who wants to</p>
<p>leave. Willard Scott, you tired of waving at old people? I'll take that. I work</p>
<p>on basic cable."</p>
<p> Tonight on the Daily Show , Mr.</p>
<p>Stewart dishes out Smuckers to geezers. [COM,</p>
<p>46, 11 p.m.]</p>
<p> Friday, Mar. 15</p>
<p> The</p>
<p>other Big TV Kahuna who decided to stay this week was Oprah Winfrey, who</p>
<p>announced that she would continue to host her daytime yapfest until 2006, when</p>
<p>Jonathan Franzen's favorite talk show will turn a sprightly 20.</p>
<p> Ms.</p>
<p>Winfrey's status had been giving some television executives heart palpitations,</p>
<p>especially those in local news. While Mr. Letterman's handlers groaned that</p>
<p>poor local news performance at 11 p.m. was hurting their ratings, Ms. Winfrey's</p>
<p>show remains a powerful lead-in for local news, helping many early-evening</p>
<p>newscasts win their markets. Such is the case here in New York City, where WABC</p>
<p>has Oprah,</p>
<p>and its Eyewitness News dominates the</p>
<p>early news time period.</p>
<p> WABC</p>
<p>news director Dan Forman was tickled that Ms. Winfrey decided to stay for</p>
<p>another four years, calling it "great news." He said he'd been worried that she</p>
<p>might leave after next season.</p>
<p> The only</p>
<p>competitor in recent years that has managed to mount a serious challenge to Oprah is Judge Judy , which runs on WNBC. A newer entrant is a game-show</p>
<p>pairing on WCBS, which runs a new version of The Weakest Link and, soon, Who</p>
<p>Wants to Be a Millionaire . But Mr. Forman didn't sound like he was shaking</p>
<p>in his shoes about that line-up.</p>
<p> "That</p>
<p>doesn't really concern me," he said.</p>
<p> What</p>
<p>about the Joker's Wild – Press Your Luck double bill? That'll</p>
<p>shoot shivers up your spine. Today on Oprah,</p>
<p>someone hugs pillow, offers inane profundities, gets whopping book deal. [WABC, 7, 4 p.m.]</p>
<p> Saturday, Mar. 16</p>
<p> Tonight on Saturday Night Live , that old wizard Ian McKellen. [WNBC, 4, 11:35 p.m.]</p>
<p> Sunday, Mar. 17</p>
<p> VH1's got a new show called Ultimate Albums , and tonight they</p>
<p>examine- Pet Sounds , Blonde on Blonde , 3 Feet High and Rising</p>
<p>Shoot Out the Lights Talking Book - Dookie , by Green Day. Cripes,</p>
<p>VH1. [VH1, 19, 9 p.m.]</p>
<p> Monday, Mar. 18</p>
<p> Tonight on NBC, after idiots munch on pig innards on Fear Factor , leave it to Colin Quinn to try and restore some</p>
<p>dignity to the network on The Colin Quinn Show . [WNBC, 4, 9:30 p.m.]</p>
<p> Tuesday, Mar. 19</p>
<p> Tonight E! has the confidently titled Russell Crowe: Road to the Red Carpet . Of course, now everyone would like to</p>
<p>see Mr. Crowe trip on said carpet. [E!</p>
<p>24, 10 p.m.] </p>
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