Earlier this month some 25 million people watched David Letterman celebrate his 10th anniversary as NBC's cranky czar of late night in a 90-minute prime- time special. But beneath the show's celebratory mood was a persistent strain of dissatisfaction. Since NBC passed him over as Johnny Carson's successor in favor of Jay Leno, Letterman has embarked on an unusually public campaign of vitriol, and most of the vintage whine has been poured over the network and its parent company, General Electric. Letterman has been everywhere lately cordially griping on The Tonight Show, detailing his winter of discontent to Barbara Walters, and articulating annoyance in The New York Times and The Washington Post.
With Late Night a solid ratings success, and with NBC Entertainment president Warren Littlefield courting him to renew his contract (expiring in April 1993), Letterman should be on top of the world. So why isn't he? Here's our report on some current theories:
1. He's complaining in order to extract a better deal from NBC.
Nobody denies that Letterman's reportedly $10 million salary is
already hefty. ''I think Dave's amused when he reads articles that
underestimate his salary,'' says Late Night head writer Steve
O'Donnell. ''He gets to lean back in his chair and have a good, hearty
laugh.'' But more than money may be at issue. Letterman has long
voiced his impatience with GE's scrimp-and-save policies. ''It's one
strange outrage after another,'' says O'Donnell. ''It's use of the
studio. It's audience ticket problems. It's everything that makes it
seem that the program's not being treated the way it deserves.''
''There's a whole laundry list of things that were irritating,'' says Letterman's manager, Jack Rollins, who adds that 1992 is not too soon to negotiate. ''Why is it early? If the complaints are there, they're made when we feel put out. When else are you gonna make 'em?''
2. He's fishing for an offer from ABC.
Rumor has it that Letterman is
interested in the larger audience that ABC's midnight slot could
offer. ''ABC would love to do it as a blocking measure (against NBC's
late-night schedule),'' says Paul Schulman, president of a company
that buys network time for advertisers. But ABC's very young audience
might not match Letterman's aging baby-boomer constituency. ''It's
probable that (Letterman) is exactly where he should be,'' says
Schulman. ''Often, a performer will work very well on one network and
not another.''
3. He's genuinely angry
Letterman's grievances may go far beyond
the Tonight Show flap to include a roster of real and perceived
slights. Chief among them was NBC's recent sale of Late Night reruns
to the Arts & Entertainment Network, a deal in which Letterman was
not invited to participate. ''Dave wished he could have been involved
with the A&E deal more,'' says O'Donnell. ''It's not so much what
happened as how it happened, without consulting or asking.''
4. He's just being Dave.
Some suggest that Letterman's public
irritability is just show biz a deft extension of his
crankiest-man-alive style into the realm of publicity. ''The
contract stuff is part of his public persona,'' insists NBC weatherman
Al Roker, who recently interviewed Letterman. In fact, Letterman's
grumpiness has taken on a somewhat traditional air; in interviews as
far back as 1986, he can be heard vowing never to do another
anniversary special. These days, even GE executives are said to look
benignly on his constant jabs (''From what I understand, they kind of
enjoy it,'' says one insider). And head writer O'Donnell says
Letterman will carry the contract routine only so far: ''We've written
jokes where there's a spilled coffee and he takes his NBC contract
and mops it up, or there's a small electrical fire backstage that he
beats out with his contract. He's rejected all those. He's not going
to use that in a formal way.''
At least, not this year. But if Letterman's negotiations don't proceed smoothly, Stupid Contract Tricks could become Late Night's last, best running gag.
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