So this is the week that Conan O’Brien loses The Tonight Show. I’ve been particularly struck by this ordeal not only because I enjoy Conan O’Brien’s comedy and have followed him for years, but even more because of the tenet his firing represents: Money trumps Creativity.
As the world mourns the lives lost in Haiti and sends assistance after the devastation of the massive earthquakes it experienced last week, one puts life into perspective. How mad can I be about jobs being lost when lives are being lost? Well, I can be upset about both, because while I’d like to think that human lives are what we care about, I have the slightly sinking feeling it is really another resource we value.
As 2010 commences and the US economy experiences the economic aftershocks of the fiscal earthquake that was 2008 and 2009, I see fellow employees being let go from our company and others being retired left and right. It is a scary prospect to go out into this job market sans emploi, but even more to not understand the reasoning for which one was let go.
Conan O’Brien is vastly superior to Jay Leno in comedic writing, timing, creativity and overall entertainment capacity. While I think his humor is more irreverent and not everyone’s cup of tea, no one can argue that Leno is vanilla and dim-witted on his best night. I honestly can’t remember the last time I laughed while watching Leno’s Tonight Show. His jokes are obvious, and Happy Meal caliber at best.
It’s scary though to think that an inferior employee stays with the company while a talented one gets let go, merely because of the bottom line. NBC executives made Conan and his staff pack up after 17 years of service, move cross-country, uproot children from their schools, pack up things, sell homes, and relocate. For what? Only to change their minds 7 months later and now turn these people away. Poor management makes for miserable lives. NBC is not alone. So many companies spout out that employees are their number one asset, but when it’s all said and done, cash is. Or at least that’s how executives behind big desks behave.
I made a small video mash-up that takes Scent of a Woman scenes with Al Pacino and says to executives what I wish we could all stand up and say. I hope you enjoy “Pacino Defends Conan.”
I hope it all works out for Conan, and for the rest of us.




























