Thursday, October 8, 2009

Confessions of a Letterman Intern

Chris Stigall, Big Hollywood, writes a revealing piece about David Letterman.

As a college student, Stigall interned for Letterman at CBS.

It was a disillusioning experience for him.

David Letterman inspired my broadcasting career. Twenty years ago (when Letterman was at NBC), he was an awkward, self-deprecating guy who wore tennis shoes with his blazer and tie. He was edgy, silly, and unconventional compared to the traditions of variety television at that time. He resonated with an awkward high school kid watching at home in Missouri.

...It took only a few months of my internship to learn a thing about the business of comedy, at least as it relates to Letterman. It was not an epicenter of fun and creativity. Rather, it was an atmosphere of employees who worked for a man many of them never saw and seldom, if ever talked to. Many of his employees seemed to resent his cold distance. He was most certainly guarded and unapproachable. This was not the irreverent showman I came to adore. The wide-eyed enthusiasm I arrived with in New York was quickly dashed.

To be clear, I never witnessed anything inappropriate as it relates to Mr. Letterman. I was not mistreated nor was there any juicy gossip overheard during my stay. The knowledge I came home with regarding Letterman was purely observational. Honest students of “Late Show” and comedy in general have certainly come to the same conclusion. Letterman, we must sadly confess, is seldom funny anymore.

...Letterman’s personal politics have become so strident and hostile in just the last two years, any conservative feels unwelcome to watch. He would regularly pontificate about the war in Iraq. “George Bush is a dumb guy” jokes were told with such frequency it became rote. When candidate John McCain had the “audacity” to cancel a scheduled appearance in 2008, Letterman blasted McCain with both barrels until Election Day. A tasteless shot aimed at Sarah Palin’s daughter seemed to be the joke that broke the audiences’ back. Letterman, after much public outrage, eventually apologized for the remark. Then, the recent hour-long sit down with Barack Obama. It seemed to be the host’s final admission. Dave’s a pundit, not a comic. He’s not interested in entertaining the masses any longer. Just the partisans.

Letterman’s admission of sex with members of his staff and stories of sex in the office dominated his show in the last week. News of his personal life, his humiliated and injured wife, his six year old son, and his beleaguered employees made a once entertaining show of comedy and variety nothing more than a television tabloid. Ratings, while high, weren’t due to the quality of show being produced by the legendary host. America is tuning in to see a famous man’s life crash and burn around him.

David Letterman has, in fact taught this intern something. He is a cautionary tale of the ultimate success story. Success can be achieved through hard work, tenacity, and staying true to your style. Success can also breed complacency. Success can breed arrogance and narcissism that places your personal needs, wants, beliefs, and desires ahead of all others. Success can ultimately be your undoing.

I wish I could have interned for that edgy, Midwestern underdog at NBC.

Stigall makes some insightful conclusions about Letterman's demise.

Letterman may be enjoying high ratings at the moment, but I think those numbers will be fleeting.

Why?

Letterman's not funny.

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