Times Colonist

Leno gambles on You Bet Your Life

Revival of 1950s game show gives late-night star a new daily outlet as broadcast TV sees the genre take off

- STEPHEN BATTAGLIO Los Angeles Times

There are not many questions Jay Leno can’t answer with a joke. Are there any health protocols when he plays a comedy club? (“Wear a condom.”) Is he vaccinated? (“I got the Pfizer with Moderna drizzle on it and a chocolate almond biscotti — that’s how they do it in Beverly Hills.”) Is there humour to be mined from the COVID-19 pandemic? (“A lot of mom-andpop restaurant­s went under. Here’s how bad it is — I saw a Mafia don getting dinner to go at an Olive Garden.”).

Leno, 71, remains a gag machine seven years after leaving NBC’s late-night franchise The Tonight Show, where he was host for 21 years and No. 1 in the ratings for most of them.

The indefatiga­ble stand-up comic will have a new daily outlet to practise his craft starting Sept. 13 when he fronts an updated version of the classic game show You Bet Your Life,

syndicated in the U.S. by Fox First Run, a division of Fox Television Stations.

The show’s return comes during a major revival for game shows in recent years. Broadcast TV has been turning to the genre with greater frequency as a costeffect­ive, low-risk alternativ­e to the expensive scripted programs that viewers are now more likely to seek out on streaming services.

Since 2016, ABC alone has brought back Press Your Luck, $100,000 Pyramid, Match Game, To Tell The Truth and a celebrity edition of The Dating Game.

The network soon will add special editions of Jeopardy! to its prime-time lineup.

Stephen Brown, executive vice-president for programmin­g and developmen­t at Fox Television Stations, said the breezy entertainm­ent that game shows provide makes them an escapist sanctuary in the current TV landscape.

“Streaming programs tend to be a little darker and edgy,” Brown said. “Game shows are people winning money. They are usually brighter and lighter. They are feelgood experience­s. I think America in particular craves that right now.”

In the years since Leno left his late-night perch, many veteran comedians say their business has become more challengin­g, with the fear of “cancel culture” constricti­ng their creative freedom.

But Leno is not among the complainer­s, having always taken a service-oriented approach to his work.

During a Zoom call from his Los Angeles home, Leno said: “When I do a gig in Utah and they’ll go: ‘Look, we don’t want any drug jokes, we don’t want any sex jokes,’ I go: ‘OK, I’ll take those out,’ and I do something else. With the MeToo movement, all of a sudden the sexist jokes everybody used to do, you can’t do anymore. So you either change with the times or you die. You adapt to the circumstan­ces.”

In March, Leno apologized to the Asian-American community for the many gags he has made about Koreans eating dogs. His penchant for the jokes drew him into a controvers­y at NBC’s reality competitio­n series America’s Got Talent, where one of the judges, Gabrielle Union, complained of a toxic work environmen­t and racist behaviour that was investigat­ed by the company in 2019. Among her issues was a dog-eating joke made by Leno that was cut from the program.

Leno said he is willing to own up to his mistakes.

“If I see somebody who’s really hurt by something I did, that’s not my job,” he said. “The idea is to get them to laugh.”

But it did take a while to get that apology. Guy Aoki, founding member of the Asian Pacific Media Coalition, had been after Leno to drop such jokes from his act for years. The demands became more intense over the past year as former president Donald Trump’s descriptio­n of COVID-19 as “the China virus” instigated hatred and even violence against the AsianAmeri­can community.

Aoki told the Los Angeles Times that he wrote a letter to You Bet Your Life producers Tom Werner and David Hurwitz, saying his organizati­on would launch a boycott of the show’s advertiser­s unless Leno put a stop to the jokes.

Aoki got what he wanted when Leno called him directly to address the matter, leading to an unequivoca­lly contrite statement in which the comedian said he knew the jokes were wrong.

“After the Zoom meeting, Jay called me back and said: ‘I want to do whatever I can to get back the respect you once had for me,’ ” Aoki said in an interview. “And that meant a lot to me. And then he ended up calling me back 20 times. We had a lot of time to talk about stuff.”

The discussion made Leno think of his own father’s reaction to the old TV series The Untouchabl­es and its crude portrayals of Italian-American organized-crime figures.

“The Italians always had their wife-beater shirt with the salami and the bottle of wine,” he said. “Everything was the Mafia and mob, and all Italians are crooks. It would just make my dad furious.”

But Leno noted the public’s response to his apology reflects the divided state of the U.S.

While dining in a West Hollywood restaurant, he was warmly thanked by a group of gay men. Around the same time, a profanity-laced letter came in from a fan in Long Island, New York, chastising him for his statement.

The letter writer was so agitated that Leno called him.

“He goes: ‘I’m still a fan but when you said you apologized for the joke, I thought, man, you’re just being chickens —,’ ” Leno recalled. “I said: ‘What do you do?’ He goes: ‘I’m a teacher.’ I said: ‘What do you teach?’ He goes: ‘High school English.’ I said: ‘High school English? You sent me a letter and it’s all f— you.’ It just made me laugh.”

Leno said he has purged political humour in his act, as the polarizati­on in the U.S. means he loses half the audience when he pokes fun at one side.

On his version of You Bet Your Life, contestant­s with different social, cultural and ethnic background­s work together in answering questions for cash prizes.

“We’ll pair a rapper from Chicago with an Ohio farmer lady, and they work as a team, and it’s quite funny to watch,” Leno said. “There’s no politics, there’s no Trump jokes, there’s no Biden jokes. There are jokes about Congress in that generic sort of ‘they’re idiots’ type of thing.”

The original You Bet Your Life was hosted by comedy film star Groucho Marx from 1950 to 1961 and was so popular that repeats of it ran for years under the title The Best of Groucho. (Leno will have former Tonight bandleader Kevin Eubanks as a sidekick, a role filled by George Fenneman on the original show.)

After taping more than 70 episodes, Brown believes You Bet Your Life can provide some relief from these contentiou­s times.

“There are high fives and hugs and they are absolute strangers,” he said. “It’s a reminder of what we are. When we need to, we work together.”

 ?? FOX ?? Jay Leno teams up with bandleader Kevin Eubanks as his sidekick on the game show You Bet Your LIfe, starting Sept. 13.
FOX Jay Leno teams up with bandleader Kevin Eubanks as his sidekick on the game show You Bet Your LIfe, starting Sept. 13.

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