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The Pat Sajak Show

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The Pat Sajak Show
StarringPat Sajak
Dan Miller
Country of originUnited States
Production
ProducerPaul Gilbert [1]
Production locationCBS Television City
Running time90/60 minutes
Original release
NetworkCBS
ReleaseJanuary 9, 1989 (1989-01-09) –
April 13, 1990 (1990-04-13)
Related
Pat Sajak Weekend

The Pat Sajak Show is an American late-night television talk show which aired on CBS from January 9, 1989 to April 13, 1990.

Cast

The show was hosted by Pat Sajak, best known as host of the game show Wheel of Fortune. In order to do the talk show, Sajak left the NBC daytime version of Wheel, but remained the host of the syndicated nighttime version.

Sajak's announcer and sidekick on the show was Dan Miller, his friend and former colleague from their time working together on weekend newscasts at WSM-TV in Nashville, Tennessee, in the mid-1970s. The in-studio band was led by jazz musician Tom Scott.

Pre-production

Sajak was hired by Michael Brockman, the CBS vice-president for daytime, children's and late-night programming, who wanted to have a late-night talk show established when Johnny Carson eventually announced his retirement.[1] Brockman had known Sajak since the two worked for NBC in the late 1970s. At that time, Brockman had approached Sajak, a weatherman, about doing a game show, but Sajak rejected the idea, saying what he really wanted to do was get a talk show. Brockman kept him in mind over the years, and at a lunch in 1986 he reminded Sajak about the conversation. Sajak confirmed his interest in a talk show, and Brockman went to work getting approvals from his management for the plan and getting network affiliates to commit to the show.

CBS spent more than $4 million for a new sound stage for the show at its Television City studios.[1] A staff of more than 30 was hired, and Sajak signed a guaranteed two-year contract for what was reportedly $60,000 a week.[1]

In an interview held a month before the show premiered, Sajak said he was "not looking to raise the level of TV"; he summarized the elements planned for the show, a plan that "steal[s] liberally" from talk shows past and present.[1]

Premiere

Chevy Chase was the show's first guest; his interview was followed by one with Joan Van Ark, a performance by and brief interview with The Judds, an interview with the outgoing commissioner of baseball, Peter Ueberroth (interrupted briefly when Chase, who followed late-night talk show conventions of the time and remained seated on stage during the show's other guest appearances, raised his hand and asked if he could go to the bathroom).[2] There was an interview (with Michael Gross), and then the show ended with a performance by stand-up comic Dennis Wolfberg.

Format

The show's set was similar to that of The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. Its format emulated Johnny Carson's model, featuring a monologue, comedy bits, interviews with celebrities, and performances by musicians and comedians. The Pat Sajak Show began as a ninety-minute talk show, but was reduced to sixty minutes in October 1989. CBS executives said the show was shortened because the late-night talk show format was better suited for a sixty-minute time slot.Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). }} </ref>

Rush Limbaugh

Two weeks before The Pat Sajak Show was canceled, on March 30, 1990, radio host Rush Limbaugh made headlines when he guest hosted the program, and, in a departure from its regular format, entered the audience to get a positive response about the veto of a bill in Idaho allowing for abortion on which he had just commented. Directly after announcing that the bill was vetoed, Limbaugh went to the first woman who stood up and was cheering the loudest. Limbaugh was surprised and unprepared when the woman denounced Limbaugh's anti-abortion statements earlier in the show, stating "women's lives are more important than any potato" and "You don't know what it's about. You'll never have a baby, you'll never be pregnant. You'll never have an abortion." After a verbal confrontation with the angry woman in the audience, followed by an angry man shouting, "We are gonna be wherever you are and we're gonna denounce and expose you," Limbaugh addressed the camera and stated that he went into the audience in an attempt to show the viewing public that there was an underlying prejudice against him. Due to heckling, Limbaugh decided to conduct his interview with Sydney Biddle Barrows in another studio.

After a commercial break, Limbaugh attempted to address the topic of affirmative action, but was heckled again by several male audience members calling him a "murderer" before he could make a point. Limbaugh sat silently with the camera focused on him for nearly a minute while audience members continued shouting phrases such as "You want people to die!" Limbaugh responded with, "I am not responsible for your behavior."

After another break, Limbaugh returned and conducted the final segment after the audience had been cleared. He stated that the audience was not "evicted from the studio" or "forcibly restrained from doing anything they did" and gave CBS credit for handling the situation in the manner it did.[3]

Limbaugh later claimed the dissident audience members were planted by the show's producers as a publicity stunt.[4]

Cancellation

During its final weeks, Sajak worked four days per week, while guest hosts took the reins on Fridays. Sajak, while interviewing Limbaugh a decade later on Larry King Live, said the show "was going so well that they actually auditioned replacements for me on the air."[4] Limbaugh all but confirmed Sajak's suspicion when he responded with, "I don't know if it was necessarily an audition for that slot, by the way, but I know that they were auditioning talent for various things."[4]

On April 9, 1990, CBS announced the cancellation due to low ratings, which were generally half the level of Carson's,[5] and were further divided by The Arsenio Hall Show, which had been launched in syndication the same month as Sajak's show. The final show was hosted by comedian Paul Rodríguez. Some affiliates delayed the show or never carried the program at all, choosing to air sitcom reruns or syndicated shows.

CBS restored its CBS Late Night block of movies and reruns, which The Pat Sajak Show replaced earlier, and would not program another late-night talk show until the Late Show with David Letterman debuted in August 1993.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "THE GOOD FORTUNES OF PAT SAJAK". The New York Times. December 11, 1988. Retrieved November 19, 2010.
  2. ^ "Review/Television; Late-Night Chitchat Additions: Pat Sajak and Arsenio Hall". The New York Times. January 11, 1989. Retrieved November 19, 2010.
  3. ^ The Pat Sajak Show, March 30, 1990
  4. ^ a b c May 3, 2001 Transcript of Larry King Live guest host Pat Sajak interviewing Rush Limbaugh
  5. ^ "CBS Television Cancels 'The Pat Sajak Show'". New York Times. April 10, 1990. Retrieved November 20, 2010.