Arikah Map

The Tonight Show with Jay Leno

The Tonight Show
with Jay Leno
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno:Jaytitle
Title shot

</small>

Genre Talk show
Variety show
Picture format 16:9 1080i HDTV
Running time 01:02:00
Starring Jay Leno
ANNOUNCER:
Edd Hall (1992-2004)
John Melendez (2004-present)
BANDLEADER:
Branford Marsalis (1992-1995)
Kevin Eubanks (1995-present)
BAND:
Tonight Show Band
Country of origin United States
Original channel NBC
Original run May 25, 1992
No. of episodes 3,086 (as of January 27, 2006)
IMDb profile

The Tonight Show with Jay Leno is the full name of NBC's The Tonight Show hosted by Jay Leno, debuting on May 25, 1992. The show takes over from The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, after the retirement of Johnny Carson on May 22, 1992. Under Leno, the show has won four Emmy Awards and another forty-one nominations. The show is taped in Burbank, California, near Los Angeles.

On April 26, 1999, the show began broadcasting in 1080i HDTV, becoming the first American nightly talk show to be shot in high definition. The show is shot in 16:9 aspect ratio with a 4:3 center-cut for standard definition television sets.

On September 27, 2004, the 50th anniversary of the show's premiere, NBC announced that Jay Leno will be succeeded by Conan O'Brien in 2009. Leno explained that he did not want to see a repeat of the hard feelings and controversy that occurred when he was given the show over David Letterman following Carson's retirement.[1][2]


Contents

Recurring Segments

The Tonight Show with Jay Leno:May 26, 2006 opening monologue of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno
Enlarge
May 26, 2006 opening monologue of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno

Notable Episodes

Ratings

On September 22, 2006, Variety reported that The Tonight Show led in ratings for the 11th consecutive season, with a nightly average of 5.7 million viewers – 31% of the total audience in that time slot – compared to 4.2 million viewers for The Late Show with David Letterman, 3.4 million for Nightline and 1.6 million for Jimmy Kimmel Live. Letterman initially lead in ratings, however the turning episode was when Hugh Grant appeared on Leno. Leno asked Grant "what the hell were you thinking", referring to Grant's arrest for hiring a prostitute.

References

Categories


1990s TV shows in the United States | 2000s TV shows in the United States | NBC network shows | Citytv network shows | Variety television series | Television talk shows | Tonight Show

Find

Find

Find