Friday, 7 February 2014

Jay Leno An Emotional Jay Leno Bids Goodbye to ‘Tonight’

Johnny Carson’s departure from the “Tonight” show was an abdication. Jay Leno’s last show, on Thursday, was closer to a retirement party -- a bittersweet send-off for a loyal executive pushed out after 22 years.

“It’s fun to kind of be the old guy and sit back here and see where the next generation takes this great institution,” Mr. Leno said about his successor, Jimmy Fallon. More gamely than convincingly, he added, “But it really is time to go and hand it off to the next guy, it really is.”

Ratings in the last week soared, but it wasn’t that audiences were anticipating a train wreck or a cultural milestone. Many viewers weren’t feeling loss so much as pinpricks of projected anxiety: Mr. Leno’s emotional last bow was poignant not because he is a legendary figure who can never be replaced, but because he is the nice guy who worked really hard, did a great job and will barely be missed come Monday morning.

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Jay Leno, who will leave the “Tonight” show on Thursday after 22 years, with Jimmy Fallon, who will take over his desk.Subdued Send-Off, but Jay Leno Is Exiting on TopFEB. 5, 2014
Newer viewers were like the younger employees down the hall who barely know the retiree, but are still drawn to the drama of a forced exit, and also the free champagne and cake. For his older, longtime fans — his audience’s median age is 57.8 — there was a there-but-for-the-grace-of God frisson: Mr. Leno, 63, is such a familiar fixture of network television that his last hurrah became a dreaded rite of passage, an acting out of people’s deepest fears about their own obsolescence. (That could be the reason David Letterman, 66, of CBS put aside his longstanding grudge against Mr. Leno and congratulated his rival on “a wonderful run.”)

It happens to almost everyone. Thursday night, it was Mr. Leno’s turn. He tapped Billy Crystal, his very first guest in 1992, to be his last, and asked his favorite singer, country star Garth Brooks, to perform. And he smiled through skits and cameos by the likes of Oprah Winfrey, Carol Burnett and Kim Kardashian about his departure. (President Obama paid his respects in a taped message.) Mr. Crystal led what he called the Shut Your Von Trapp Family Singers in a parody of a “Sound of Music “song reworded in his honor.

“There a sad sort of clanging

From the clock in the hall

And the bells in the steeple too

And all the executives that run NBC

Are popping in to say you’re through.”

Mr. Leno let his feelings flow only at the very end, and this time, he didn’t make any of the kinds of jokes about NBC that dotted his last week at the network. “I didn’t know anybody over there,” he said, explaining why he never went to Fox or ABC. Choking up, he added, “These are the only people I’ve ever known.”

Onstage, Mr. Leno was the most accessible talk show host, the kind of comedian who will always do another set or pose for one more snapshot with fans. He started his show every night by wading into a crowd of audience members and shaking hands – or rather pulling hands like a Swiss bell ringer. His jokes weren’t cutting edge, and his references were sometimes dated: in his last days he made cracks about O.J. Simpson and Kathie Lee Gifford in her Carnival cruise days.

He was unfailingly gracious to Mr. Fallon, who was his guest on Monday night and and made a cameo again on Thursday, inviting Mr. Leno to come back to “Tonight” anytime. (Mr. Fallon takes over Feb. 17.) But in the run-up to Mr. Leno’s last show, he didn’t let up on NBC, which replaced him with Conan O’Brien in 2009, and had to reinstate him a year later after Mr. O’Brien flopped. “I read today that NBC said they would like me to be just like Bob Hope: dead,” he joked earlier this week.

Some in the studio audience, taken aback, moaned. “I don’t care, I like that joke,” Mr. Leno replied.

Throughout his tenure, Mr. Leno was both friendly and oddly impersonal: he was a skilled joke teller who didn’t let down his guard or his hair. He wore dark suits and delivered his monologue framed by somber wood paneling and potted plants, a décor better suited to a personal injury law firm.

So when that veneer of blithe professional bonhomie finally dissolved, it was touching and disconcerting to see him shakily say, “This has been the greatest 22 years of my life.” Mr. Crystal noted, “More than anyone I know, you love being a comedian.” And certainly, few have pursued the career so single-mindedly. Mr. Crystal reminded his host than when he was an aspiring comedian in the 1970s, the only decorative touch in his apartment was a poster of comedian Robert Klein over Mr. Leno’s bed.

A farewell tribute on television has its advantages: the honoree gets to listen in on eulogies and witness a preview of the funeral. But there is also a cost: Mr. Leno will be around the next day to see how quickly the mourners mop their tears and the cortege moves on.

That’s perhaps why he chose to quote his predecessor Johnny Carson, who left his audience with the words, “I bid you all a heartfelt goodnight.” It’s not as unnervingly final as goodbye.





Olympic charter Rainbow Google doodle links to Olympic charter as Sochi kicks off

Google has nailed its colours to the mast over Russia's gay rights record in a new Google doodle, which is dedicated to the Olympic charter.
The internet company's logo was presented in the colours of the rainbow flag and also featured images of Winter Games events. The build-up to the Sochi Games, the opening ceremony of which takes place on Friday, has been disrupted by a debate over the apparent conflict between the central principles of the Games and anti-gay laws in Russia.
The doodle linked to search results for "Olympic charter" and quoted from it: "The practice of sport is a human right. Every individual must have the possibility of practicing sport, without discrimination of any kind and in the Olympic spirit, which requires mutual understanding with a spirit of friendship, solidarity and fair play."
There have been widespread protests over the decision to hold the Games in Russia, which bans providing information on homosexuality to under-18s by law. Gay rights activists in 19 cities across the world spoke out earlier this week.
And, in a speech to the International Olympic Committee on Thursday, the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, spoke out against attacks on the LGBT community. He said that "many professional athletes, gay and straight, are speaking out against prejudice".

Dakota Johnson on "Fifty Shades of Grey": "The secret is I have no shame"

Dakota Johnson, who plays Anastasia Steele in the upcoming film adaptation of "Fifty Shades of Grey," will be heating up the big screen alongside Jamie Dornan as Christian Grey when the film comes out next year.

Now, the 24-year-old daughter of Melanie Griffith and Don Johnson has posed for a sultry shoot for the March issue of Elle magazine, and is opening up about taking on the role.

"Reading the book, I found myself more interested in the ways they were breaking each other down emotionally than the sex scenes. I think there's a part of a woman that wants to be the thing that breaks a man down," she told the magazine of reading "Fifty Shades."

And she doesn't plan on holding back when it comes to playing Ana.

"I don't have any problem doing anything," she said. "The secret is I have no shame."

The March issue of Elle, with Johnson's full interview and fashion shoot, hits newsstands Feb. 18. Check out an additional photo below:

Amber Alert Pa. children reported taken from Pa. home found

LANCASTER, Pa. (AP) — Two young children were found safe Friday after they were taken from a central Pennsylvania home by two suspects who were taken into custody, police said.
State police said the 3-year-old girl and 4-year-old boy were taken by two men at gunpoint after an altercation at a Lancaster home at about 7:30 p.m. Thursday, triggering an Amber Alert.
Police said the abductors fled in a black vehicle and could be traveling to Massachusetts but said later that the vehicle was believed to be returning to the commonwealth from New Jersey.
Authorities said the vehicle being sought was stopped at about 7:30 a.m. Friday on Interstate 76 in Philadelphia and two men, ages 23 and 47, were arrested without incident.
‘‘The two children were asleep in the back seat in good health,’’ police said in a statement.