The first reviews are in on Jimmy Fallon's late night debut and he kind of blew it. We still can't get over the reality that a great hiphop group like the Roots is stuck as a house band. How many times can Jimmy Fallon say Saturday Night Live and "I can't believe I have a talk show"? If it's any consolation to Jimmy Fallon maybe he should remember Jimmy Kimmel's disastrous unscripted talk show debut with Snoop Dogg and George Clooney on the couch.
Deadline Hollywood:
He looked like a deer caught in headlights during his first Late Night show. But it was a far better start than Conan O'Brien (who broke out in nerves-induced acne). But NBC once again is too lame to figure out how to freshen this stale formula. source
You have to give Jimmy Fallon credit for one thing: He has pretty great taste in music.
The house band for "Late Night with Jimmy Fallon," which premiered Monday night on NBC, is the outstanding Philadelphia hip-hop/R&B band the Roots. Closing out Fallon's jittery first show was the legendary Van Morrison. And guest Justin Timberlake provided comic relief by imitating John Mayer, Barry Gibb and Michael McDonald during his stint on Fallon's couch.
Apparently NBC doesn't want to give the Roots their own show (more's the pity). And on talk shows and "Saturday Night Live," Timberlake always seems completely at ease -- no doubt any network would give him a show in a heartbeat.
But, well, for now, we've got Jimmy Fallon. At one point during his opening interview with Robert DeNiro, Fallon was sweating profusely. Sweaty, tense, uptight, nervous, wound-up, keyed up -- pick an adjective. Any one of them would describe Fallon's demeanor on opening night.
"I'm very nervous," he said to DeNiro. There was need to point it out -- we could tell.
Of course, it isn't fair to judge a late-night host by his first outing. We'll have to see if, in a few weeks, Fallon still looks like he's had four too many double-espressos before the show.
But it is still valid to wonder if Fallon is suited to this gig. On a late-night show, either the non-interview comedic bits have to be inspired, or the interviews have to be smooth (in a perfect world, both halves of the late-night formula succeed). But, with a few exceptions, neither worked all that well during Fallon's first show. The comedy frequently fell flat, and as a host, Fallon is underwhelming at the moment.
One thing that did work: A bit in which Fallon sang a "slow jam" version of the news succeeded, in large part, thanks to Roots' typically taut playing and singer Tariq "Black Thought" Trotter's impeccable voice and surprisingly good comic timing.
Timberlake's musical impressions were funny, but, this being the we-shill-anything-anytime era at NBC, one of the singer's impression involved a pitch for a beer. The uncomfortable-looking DeNiro isn't a great late-night guest, but at least Fallon had the sense to draw attention to the actor's reticence. He even said he'd devised a series of questions that required one-word answers, but DeNiro occasionally was generous enough to give Fallon four-word answers. The minutes flew by like hours.
At least the show opened on a humorous note, with Fallon finding Conan O'Brien, the previous "Late Night" host, in his dressing room. Fallon asked if O'Brien would be taking over Jay Leno's old dressing room when Leno steps down from "The Tonight Show," which O'Brien is taking over. source
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