Late night talk shows were a staple of my
viewing habits until several years ago when the appeal faded. I’m not entirely
sure of the reason for the fade. Perhaps the increased politicization on
display has something to do with it in an era when plenty of that is available…
well… everywhere else. Then again, maybe I just like getting to sleep an hour
earlier nowadays. As that may be the last late night talk show I made a point
of watching was The Late Late Show hosted
by Craig Ferguson. It was rarely intellectually taxing but at one o’clock in
the morning one rarely wants something that is. It was pleasant silliness,
which was a good way to end a day full of much harsher realities.
No one plans a career as a television talk
show host – or, if anyone does, he or she almost certainly will be
disappointed. The gig goes to someone who has made enough of a mark somewhere
else in entertainment to catch the attention of a producer in search of a host.
Craig Ferguson, raised in the post-war housing projects in Glasgow Scotland, tried
his hand with varying degrees of success as a drummer, actor, stand-up
comedian, novelist, and screenwriter (The
Big Tease). He caught the attention of producers at CBS and was offered the
chair of The Late Late Show in 2005.
He sat in it until 2015. The show aired 12:35 to 1:35 a.m. weeknights just
after David Letterman. The show contained reliably enjoyable low budget humor plus
casual banter with guests.
I tend to be suspicious of memoirs and
autobiographies. An author’s all-too-human impulse to self-justification all
too frequently muddies the waters of truth. I sometimes read them anyway while
keeping a saltshaker handy. The better ones still contain insights not
obtainable from third parties. Riding the
Elephant by Craig Ferguson is one of the better ones. Very little about The Late Late Show is in the book. In
fact, very little about the substance of any of his show business career is in
it. It is a more personal memoir than that. It deals with his childhood, his youth,
his battle with alcohol, his marriages, his move to Los Angeles, his kids, tattoos,
the experience of aging, and the acquisition of aspects of wisdom a bit too
late (which is so much better than never). Naturally his career history intersected
with all of that, but it isn’t at the center of the book.
Ferguson retired from the show by his own wishes
– and even extended his stay by six months to give CBS more time to find a
replacement – but he does express some satisfaction that he doesn’t have to
deal with the current walk-on-eggshells environment in which so many folks seek
out ways to be offended. In a format where most of the dialogue is
extemporaneous and intended to keep an audience amused, there is always a risk
of a random quip that doesn’t land well. There was some of that even during his
stint, of course. “Occasionally I’d find myself in the doghouse for some stupid
comment I’d made the night before. I once had to apologize to the entire
country of Australia for calling their capital city a shithole… I should not
have said that Canberra was a shithole, I should have said it was allegedly a
shithole.” Youtube clips are forever, however, so he still gets flak for old silly
banter that is by any reasonable standard harmless.
He recounts the change of perspective that
occurs to anyone with a few decades in the rear view mirror. Example: “One of
the interesting quirks of the aging process is that events that seemed to have
little or no impact at the time resonate with thunderous importance later on,
like an expertly constructed detective novel. I thought it was the relationship
with Gillian that was important, but at this point in my life, the half-hour
conversation with Allison seems much more significant.” Allison was a young
woman he met in the 1970s who died six months after that conversation.
The book ends with a sentimental fictional short
story about an old woman named Margret in Glasgow. It seems out of place until
one recalls his memory in an earlier chapter of an “old lady who died alone in
a Glasgow tenement. What was her name? Margret, probably. Who will write her
story? I will. I’ll make it up and it’ll be true, like a lot of stories.”
Upshot: Thumbs up for a more or less true life
story by a natural raconteur.
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson: clip from 2009 with Shirley Manson
The book sounds better to me than his talk show. I was never a fan of his show, and I wasn't a very big fan of Letterman either unless he had someone on I was interested in. I think for me anyway, late night talk shows have become too formula and scripted. There's little chance in them, and most are just vehicles for the guest to promote their newest effort whether it's a movie, or whatever (boring). As much as Tom Snyder was a oddball jerk at times, I liked him and somewhere on the opposite end of him, Dick Cavett. By today's standards, Cavett's show was low key and conversational. If it was about politics it was kept fairly convivial as much as possible. But I liked when the older talk shows would keep their guest on to more or less add to the conversation too.
ReplyDeleteFerguson didn’t try to be more than light entertainment, it is true, but he usually succeeded at being at least that. I watched both Cavett and Snyder and liked them both, too. I have Cavett on DVD and still spin up episodes on my player occasionally. By design they tried to dig a little deeper even when their guests were entertainers promoting a film. Yes, the guests generally were more respectful of each other than is commonplace today even when they had radically different political or social positions. Not always, of course. The fierce exchanges (not shouted, but still fierce) between Norman Mailer and Gore Vidal on Cavett come to mind.
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