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JAY LENO




James Douglas Muir "Jay" Leno (/ˈlɛnoʊ/; born April 28, 1950)[1] is an American stand-up comedian, actor, voice actor, writer, producer and television host.
Leno was the host of NBC's The Tonight Show with Jay Leno from 1992 to 2009. Beginning in September 2009, Leno started a primetime talk show, titled The Jay Leno Show, which aired weeknights at 10:00 p.m. (Eastern Time, UTC-5), also on NBC. After The Jay Leno Show was canceled in January 2010 amid a host controversy, Leno returned to host The Tonight Show with Jay Leno on March 1, 2010.[4] On April 3, 2013, NBC announced that Jimmy Fallon will replace Leno as host of The Tonight Show at the conclusion of the 2014 Winter Olympics.[5]
Contents  [hide]
1 Early life
2 Career
2.1 Film
2.2 The Tonight Show
2.2.1 Michael Jackson trial
2.3 Succession by Conan O'Brien and The Jay Leno Show
2.4 Timeslot conflict and return to The Tonight Show
2.5 Announcement of successor
3 Public image
3.1 Criticism of Leno
3.2 Support for Leno
4 Personal life
4.1 Charity

4.2 Love Ride
4.3 Vehicle collection
5 References
6 External links
Early life[edit source | editbeta]

James "Jay" Leno was born in New Rochelle, New York, in 1950. His homemaker mother, Catherine (née Muir; 1911–1993), was born in Greenock, Scotland, and came to the United States at age 11. Leno's father, Angelo (1910–1994), who worked as an insurance salesman, was born in New York, to immigrants from Flumeri, Italy.[6] Leno grew up in Andover, Massachusetts, and although his high school guidance counselor recommended that he drop out of school, he later obtained a Bachelor's degree in speech therapy from Emerson College, where he started a comedy club in 1973.[7] Leno's siblings include his late older brother, Patrick, who was a Vietnam veteran[8] and a lawyer.[7]
Career[edit source | editbeta]

Leno made his first appearance on The Tonight Show on March 2, 1977, performing a comedy routine.[9][10] During the 1970s, Leno appeared in minor roles in several television series and films, first in the 1976 episode "J.J. in Trouble" of Good Times and the same year in the pilot of Holmes & Yo-Yo. After an uncredited appearance in the 1977 film Fun with Dick and Jane, he played more prominent parts in 1978 in American Hot Wax and Silver Bears. Other films and television series from that period include Almost Heaven (1978), "Going Nowhere" (1979) from One Day at a Time, Americathon (1979), Polyester (1981), "The Wild One" (1981) from Alice, "Feminine Mistake" (1979) and "Do the Carmine" (1983) from Laverne & Shirley. Leno's only starring film role was the 1989 direct-to-video Collision Course, opposite Pat Morita. He also appeared numerous times on "Late Night with David Letterman."
Film[edit source | editbeta]
Year Film Role Notes
1977 Fun with Dick and Jane Carpenter (uncredited)
1978 Almost Heaven Danny
Silver Bears Albert Fiore
American Hot Wax Mookie
1979 Americathon Larry Miller (Poopy Butt)
1981 Polyester Journalist on TV News (uncredited)
1983 What's Up, Hideous Sun Demon Ishmael Pivnik (voice)
1989 Collision Course Detective Tony Costas First Lead Role, filmed in 1989, released in 1992
1993 We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story Vorb (voice)
1994 The Flintstones Bedrock's Most Wanted Host
2000 Space Cowboys Jay Leno
2003 Stuck on You Jay Leno
2005 Robots Fire Hydrant (voice)
2006 The Jimmy Timmy Power Hour 3: The Jerkinators! Nega-Chin (voice)
Cars Jay Limo (voice)
Ice Age: The Meltdown Fast Tony (voice)
2007 Christmas Is Here Again The Narrator (voice)
2008 Scooby-Doo and the Goblin King Jack O'Lantern (voice)
Igor King Malbert (voice)
Unstable Fables: Tortoise vs. Hare Murray Hare (voice)
The Tonight Show[edit source | editbeta]


Leno in 1993, in the year after becoming host of The Tonight Show
Starting in 1987, Leno was a regular substitute host for Johnny Carson on The Tonight Show. In 1992, he replaced Carson as host[11] amid controversy with David Letterman, who had been hosting Late Night with David Letterman since 1982 (aired after The Tonight Show), and who many had expected to be Carson's successor. The story of this turbulent transition was later turned into a book and a movie. Leno continued to perform as a stand-up comedian throughout his tenure on The Tonight Show.
In 2004, Leno signed a contract extension with NBC which would keep him as host of The Tonight Show until 2009.[12] Later in 2004, Conan O'Brien signed a contract with NBC under which O'Brien would become the host of The Tonight Show in 2009, replacing Leno at that time.[13]
During the 2007–08 Writers Guild of America strike, Leno was accused of violating WGA guidelines by writing his own monologue for The Tonight Show. While NBC and Leno claim there were private meetings with the WGA where there was a secret agreement allowing this, the WGA denied such a meeting.[14] Leno answered questions in front of the Writers Guild of America, West trial committee in February 2009 and June 2009, and when the WGAW published its list of strike-breakers on 11 August 2009, Leno was not on the list.[15][16]
In 1998, Leno competed in a tag-team match at the WCW's Road Wild pay-per-view. Since 2001, he has voiced The Crimson Chin, a recurring superhero in the Nickelodeon animated series The Fairly OddParents.
Leno said in 2008, that he was saving all of his income from The Tonight Show and living solely off his income from stand-up comedy.[17]
On April 23, 2009, Leno checked himself into a hospital with an undisclosed illness.[18] He was released the following day and returned to work on Monday, April 27. The two subsequently cancelled Tonight Show episodes for April 23 and April 24 were Leno's first in 17 years as host.[19][20] Initially, the illness that caused the absence was not disclosed, but later Leno told People magazine that the ailment was exhaustion.[20][21]
Michael Jackson trial[edit source | editbeta]
In the 2005 trial of Michael Jackson over allegations of child molestation, Leno was one of few celebrities who appeared as a defense witness. In his testimony regarding a call by the accuser, Leno testified that he never called the police, that no money was asked for, and there was no coaching — but that the calls seemed unusual and scripted.[22]


Leno in 2006.
As a result, Leno was initially not allowed to continue telling jokes about Jackson or the case, which had been a fixture of The Tonight Show's opening monologue in particular. But he and his show's writers used a legal loophole by having Leno briefly step aside while stand-in comedians took the stage and told jokes about the trial. Stand-ins included Roseanne Barr, Drew Carey, Brad Garrett, and Dennis Miller among others.[23]
Succession by Conan O'Brien and The Jay Leno Show[edit source | editbeta]
Main article: The Jay Leno Show
Because Leno's show continued to lead all late-night programming in the Nielsen ratings, the pending expiration of Leno's contract led to speculation about whether he would become a late-night host for another network after his commitment to NBC expired.[24] Leno left The Tonight Show on Friday May 29, 2009,[25][26] and Conan O'Brien took over on June 1, 2009.
On December 8, 2008, it was reported that Leno would remain on NBC and move to a new hour-long show at 10 p.m. Eastern Time (9 p.m. Central Time) five nights a week.[27] This show followed a similar format to The Tonight Show, was filmed in the same studio and retained many of Leno's most popular segments. Late Night host Conan O'Brien was his successor on The Tonight Show.[28]
Jay Leno's new show, titled The Jay Leno Show, debuted on September 14, 2009. It was announced at the Television Critics Association summer press tour that it would feature one or two celebrities, the occasional musical guest, and keep the popular "Headlines" segments, which would air near the end of the show. First guests included Jerry Seinfeld, Oprah Winfrey (via satellite), and a short sit-down with Kanye West discussing his controversy at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, which had occurred the night before.[29]
Timeslot conflict and return to The Tonight Show[edit source | editbeta]
Wikinews has related news: US TV host Conan O'Brien rejects NBC's offer to switch his show's time slot
Main article: 2010 Tonight Show conflict
In their new roles, neither O'Brien nor Leno succeeded in delivering the viewing audiences the network anticipated. On January 7, 2010, multiple media outlets reported that beginning March 1, 2010, Jay Leno would move from his 10pm weeknight time slot to 11:35pm, due to a combination of pressure from local affiliates whose newscasts were suffering, and both Leno's and O'Brien's poor ratings.[30][31] Leno's show would be shortened from an hour to 30 minutes. All NBC late night programming would be preempted by the 2010 Winter Olympics between February 15 and February 26. This would move The Tonight Show to 12:05am, a post-midnight timeslot for the first time in its history. O'Brien's contract stipulated that NBC could move the show back to 12:05 a.m. without penalty (a clause put in primarily to accommodate sports preemptions).[32]
On January 10, NBC confirmed that they would move Jay Leno out of primetime as of February 12 and intended to move him to late night as soon as possible.[33][34] TMZ reported that O'Brien was given no advance notice of this change, and that NBC offered him two choices: an hour-long 12:05am time slot, or the option to leave the network.[35] On January 12, O'Brien issued a press release that stated he would not continue with Tonight if it moved to a 12:05am time slot,[36] saying, "I believe that delaying The Tonight Show into the next day to accommodate another comedy program will seriously damage what I consider to be the greatest franchise in the history of broadcasting. The Tonight Show at 12:05 simply isn’t The Tonight Show."
On January 21, it was announced that NBC had struck a deal with O'Brien. It was decided that O'Brien would leave The Tonight Show. The deal was made that O'Brien would receive a $33 million payout and that his staff of almost 200 would receive $12 million in the departure. O'Brien's final episode aired on Friday, January 22.[37][38][39] Leno returned as host of The Tonight Show following the 2010 Winter Olympics on March 1, 2010.
On July 1, 2010, Variety reported that total viewership for Jay Leno's Tonight Show had dropped from 5 million to 4 million for the second quarter of 2010, compared to the same period in 2009. Although this represented the lowest second-quarter ratings for the show since 1992, Tonight was still the most-watched late night program, ahead of ABC's Nightline (3.7 million) and David Letterman's Late Show (3.3 million).[40] Ratings over the following summer, when compared to the same period in 2009 with O'Brien hosting The Tonight Show (including O'Brien's highly rated debut), showed that while total viewership was 12% higher for Leno, viewership in the important "adults aged 18–49" demographic was 23% lower.[41] NBC ratings specialist Tom Bierbaum commented that due to the host being out of late night television for a period of time and the subsequent 2010 Tonight Show conflict, Leno's ratings fall was "not a surprise at all".[42]
Announcement of successor[edit source | editbeta]
On April 3, 2013, NBC announced that Leno would leave The Tonight Show in Spring 2014, with Jimmy Fallon his designated successor.[43]
Public image[edit source | editbeta]

Criticism of Leno[edit source | editbeta]


Leno on The Tonight Show in 2005
Leno has faced heated criticism and some negative publicity for his perceived role in the 2010 Tonight Show timeslot conflict.[44][45] Critics have pointed to a 2004 Tonight Show clip, in which Leno said he would allow O'Brien to take over without incident.[45][46] At the time, Leno stated he did not want O'Brien to leave for a competing network, adding, "I'll be 59 when [the switch occurs], that's five years from now. There's really only one person who could have done this into his 60s, and that was Johnny Carson; I think it's fair to say I'm no Johnny Carson."[46] Leno also described The Tonight Show as a dynasty, saying "you hold it and hand it off to the next person. And I don't want to see all the fighting." At the end of the segment, he said, "Conan, it's yours! See you in five years, buddy!"[47]
Actor and comedian Patton Oswalt was among the celebrities who openly voiced disappointment with Leno, saying, "Comedians who don't like Jay Leno now, and I'm one of them, we're not like, 'Jay Leno sucks'; it's that we're so hurt and disappointed that one of the best comedians of our generation... willfully has shut the switch off."[48] Rosie O'Donnell was among O'Brien's most vocal and vehement supporters,[49][50] calling Leno a "bully" and his actions "classless and kind of career-defining".[51]
Bill Zehme, the co-author of Leno's autobiography Leading with My Chin, told the Los Angeles Times, "The thing Leno should do is walk, period. He's got everything to lose in terms of public popularity by going back. People will look at him differently. He'll be viewed as the bad guy."[52]
Support for Leno[edit source | editbeta]
NBC Sports chairman and former Saturday Night Live producer Dick Ebersol spoke out against all who had recently mocked Leno, calling them "chicken-hearted and gutless".[53]
Jeff Gaspin also defended Leno, saying, "This has definitely crossed the line. Jay Leno is the consummate professional and one of the hardest-working people in television. It's a shame that he's being pulled into this."[52]
Paul Reiser and Jerry Seinfeld also voiced support for Leno.[54][55]
Responding to the mounting criticism, Leno said that NBC had assured him that O'Brien was willing to accept the proposed arrangement and that they would not let either host out of his contract.[56] Leno also said that the situation was "all business".[56] He appeared on the January 28 episode of The Oprah Winfrey Show in an attempt to repair some of the damage done to his public image.[57]
Personal life[edit source | editbeta]



Leno with President Barack Obama in March 2009
Leno has been married since 1980 to Mavis Leno; they have no children, by mutual agreement.[58]
He is known for his prominent jaw, which has been described as mandibular prognathism.[59] In the book Leading with My Chin he stated that he is aware of surgery that could reset his mandible, but does not wish to endure a prolonged healing period with his jaws wired shut.
Leno is dyslexic.[7] He claims to only need four to five hours of sleep each night.[60] Leno does not drink or smoke, nor does he gamble.[61] He spends most of his free time visiting car collections or working in his private garage.[61]
Leno reported that he does not spend a penny of his money that he earns from The Tonight Show. Instead, he lives off his money from his stand-up routines.[62]
Leno reportedly earns $32 million each year.[63]
Charity[edit source | editbeta]
In 2001, along with his wife, he donated $100,000 to the Feminist Majority's campaign to stop gender apartheid in Afghanistan, to educate the public regarding the plight of women in Afghanistan under Taliban rule. Mavis Leno is on the board of the Feminist Majority.[64][65]
In 2009, he donated $100,000 to a scholarship fund at Salem State College in honor of Lennie Sogoloff, who gave Leno his start at his jazz club, Lennie's-on-the-Turnpike.[66]
In August 2012, Leno auctioned his Fiat 500 which was sold for $385,000 with all the proceeds going to a charity that helps wounded war veterans recover by providing them temporary housing.[67]
Love Ride[edit source | editbeta]
Since 1985[68] Jay Leno has been the grand marshal for the Love Ride, a motorcycle charity event which since its founding in 1984 has raised nearly $14 million for charities benefiting muscular dystrophy research, Autism Speaks,[69] and in 2001, the September 11 attacks recovery.[70]


Leno arriving at the 45th Primetime Emmy Awards in his Hispano-Suiza Aero[71]
Vehicle collection[edit source | editbeta]
Leno owns approximately 190 vehicles, about 90 of which are motorcycles.[72] He also has a website called "Jay Leno's Garage," which contains video clips and photos of his automobiles in detail.[73] Among his collection are two Doble steam cars, a sedan and a roadster that was owned by Howard Hughes.
He has a regular column in Popular Mechanics which showcases his car collection and gives advice about various automotive topics, including restoration and unique models, such as his jet-powered motorcycle and solar-powered hybrid. Leno also writes occasional "Motormouth" articles for The Sunday Times,[74] reviewing high-end sports cars and giving his humorous take on automotive matters.
Leno opened his garage to Team Bondi, the team that developed the critically acclaimed video-game L. A. Noire, which is set in the late 1940s Los Angeles, in order to be able to recreate a vast choice of almost 100 cars from this period as accurately as possible
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