Thursday, November 26, 2009

Opinion

Robert Schlesinger

Barack Obama on Leno's "Tonight Show": He'll Beat Even JFK to the Late Night Circuit

March 19, 2009 11:00 AM ET | Robert Schlesinger | Permanent Link | Print

By Robert Schlesinger, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

Despite what you may have heard, JFK did not, as a sitting president, beat Barack Obama to the late night television talk show circuit. So far as I can tell (with the help of the invaluable Internet Movie DataBase), Obama's Tonight Show appearance will indeed make him the first sitting president to appear on such a television show.

While Kennedy did appear on Jack Paar's Tonight Show, he did so as a candidate in 1960, not as president. (We can rely not only on IMDB for this—my colleague Andrew Burt checked in with historian Robert Dallek and the JFK Library.)

That's not to say that sitting presidents have not appeared on television shows. Dwight Eisenhower is listed as being one of many people appearing in a variety show called Producers' Showcase in December 1954; the following year he appeared on The Colgate Comedy Hour, kicking off Armed Forces Week along with other guests like Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. In 1958, he made a pre-filmed appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show, appealing for contributions to the United Fund. In all of these cases the shows were prime time, not late night. And if you think Ike was on TV a lot, consider that he is the only president to have won an Emmy (in 1956, for his use and encouragement of television).

In addition to appearing on Paar's show during the campaign, JFK appeared in his wife's famous "Tour of the White House" and in a one-hour taped salute to cancer research.

Richard Nixon was of course on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In as a candidate in 1968 and scored points with the public for delivering the show's trademark "sock it to me" line. But while Tricky is listed on IMDB as having appeared on Laugh-In twice as president and Johnny Carson's Tonight Show once, these listings appear spurious. "It seems to be one of those Nixon urban myths, but we have no evidence that he was ever on the Tonight Show," said Greg Cumming, the supervisory archivist at the Nixon Library out in California. "And the appearance on Laugh-In was in the 1968 presidential campaign."

Gerald Ford was the first president skewered by Saturday Night Live—but had the good humor to tape a couple of spots lampooning himself for the show.

Subsequent presidents wised up. As my colleague Mary Kate Cary notes, candidates have made appearances on like shows, but Obama will be blazing a more or less new trail.

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Tags: President | television | Barack Obama | Jay Leno

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Reader Comments

Obama on Leno

Oh my gosh...he's in town doing his town hall meetings, like he has done since in office, and agrees to stop in to just spend a few minutes talking to Americans in a relaxed and personal way. Guess he could have paced back and forth on the White House lawn. Do you REALLY think he could have done more for Americans for those few hours back in Washington? Like he doesn't know what's going on???

OH MY GOSH, HE'S HUMAN!!! Plus, it's nice to hear his brief explanation on bailing out AIG, as well as his disgust with the bonuses.He made a mistake with his reference to Special Olympics. Once he realized his mistake, did he come out with a statement for all to see? NO, he called the Chair of the Association, personally apologized and admitted his mistake.

Be glad we have someone in office we can trust and doesn't have an elitist attitude. I was a republican...until I realized how selfish, self centered, untrustworthy, sexist & raciest so many of the men have been. They did a hell of a job leaving as much of the country as they could in shambles and get as much $$ as they could for themselves before turning over the country.

Obama wants to restore so much of what a government is supposed to be, not just take care of his buddies & personal interests, make enemies throughout the world. How about support and help on getting things done!

Great Show

I Really enjoyed seeing Pres.Obama on Leno last night. I don't always watch the Tonight Show, but last night I made it a point to watch it. Great show! President Obama is a cool guy, and so is Jay.

Clinton on Letterman

According to:

http://www.tv.com/bill-clinton/person/45279/appearances.html

his first Letterman show was after he left office.

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Robert Schlesinger is a deputy editor at U.S. News and World Report and oversees all opinion editorial content. He is the author of White House Ghosts: Presidents and Their Speechwriters.

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