The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. - Thursday, October 21, 1993 - Late night more than a b: By JOHN R. RYBOCK My grandfather served on a ship in the Second World War, and my father patched up marines during the Vietnam conflict. Me? I am a veteran of the late-night talk show wars. All right, it is an old clich6, but it is a battle out there - a battle for advertising dollars, for our dollars. And the war has already had its first casualty. On Sunday, Fox cried "Medic!" and replaced Chevy Chase with "In Living Color" reruns. And then there were four. Call me old-fashioned, call me sentimental, call me just plain old, but I remember a time when there were only two late night talk shows (and only one daytime one), and NBC held the mo- nopoly. It was a perfect arrangement - the old folks (my grandparents) would catch Carson, with his golf swing and Ed's Santa impersonation. Then it was time for them to go to bed, and youth controlled the night. Letterman was a young person's rebel of a talk show host. Like a little kid with something he can'tbelieve is real, Letterman's main way to entertain us was by pushing the boundaries of the talk show format, just'cause he could. Now, Carson is gone and Letterman is older and at a new time. Letterman, though, made the smart move on the first "Late Show" by proving his was as wacked out as ever. And it now seems that the rebel is the example, as every schmuck with a talk show tries to imitate dangerous Dave's nature (all, that is, except Conan O'Brian, who not only seems naturally weird, but has the "Late Night with Dave Letterman" shadow to break out of). It's like Kylie Minogue in a leather jacket. Leno, who is trying to break out of The Great One's mold, spent last Friday calling up the Psy- chic Friends Network to find out who would win the Series (Jays take the first game, Phillies sweep the rest). Maybe soon, he'll strap a camera to a primate. And the late Chevy regularly did a video Q & A with people from around the country called "Talk to Chevy." A high-tech viewer mail, with- out the laughs or breaking glass. You've heard it before, and you'll hear it again, but Conan O'Brian was the unknown fac- tor. Though with little TV experience (he showed Letterman a tape from "Saturday Night Live," with skits he was in, as in playing the drum in the I remember a time when there were only two late night talk shows , and NBC held the monopoly...the old folks (my grandparents) would catch Carson... Then It was time for them to go to bed, and youth controlled the night. Letterman was a young person's rebel of a talk show host. Like a little kid with something he can't believe is real, Letterman's main way to entertain us was by pushing the boundaries of the talk show format, just 'cause he could. background during a Gretzky / Hawaii sketch), he was let in with the big boys. O'Brian's wackiness is noticeably different from Dave's, which can probably be attributed to the fact thatLetterman had subbed for Carson, and finally got his break, while O'Brian was thrown into a completely new situation. Though hismono- logue is still a bit labored, Conan is improving, attle ground something Chevy failed to do. With bits such as "In the Year 2000," which offers glimpses of the future such as "Corn holders will be outlawed, but there will be more of them than ever," Conan seems a bit strange, but he's adapting. The man who may be doing the real losing in the late night talk show shake-up is Arsenio Hall, whose show has been pushed back by CBS and Fox affiliates carrying network shows (In Detroit, he's back to 1 a.m., behind Letterman and "Cheers"). As his show dwindles, Arsenio must be getting nervous, having gone through cancella- tion years ago when he took over Fox's original, and ill-fated, late show after Joan Rivers. And the big winner? Garry Shandling /1"Larry Sanders." With truth being stranger than fiction after prime-time, "The Larry Sanders Show"'s behind-the-scenes look at a late night talk show hits it right on the mark, well enough to draw Letterman and Leno to make appearances. Some will ask, where is Rush? ("I knew it, it's a liberal conspiracy not to name him.") I will say that all the talk shows mentioned share a basic formula -- a band, guests, monologue, etc...., things seemingly set in stone when Steve Allen did the "Tonight Show." Rush's monologues do not fit in that category, and neither does his show. (Rush fans can say that he's in a class by himself.) Where is late night going? Don't ask me. Fox is looking for something to replace Chevy in time for Sweeps Week, though it may not be a talk show. Believe it or not, there are more corpses in the late-night wake than there are actual talk shows. Chevy, Joan, Sajak, Dennis (something about those "Weekend Update" people - beware of "Up Late with Charles Rocket"). The market is currently overflowing, and some will perish. Prob- ably Arsenio. Leno may survive. With little com- petition at that time, so may Conan. And of course, Letterman will remain. After all, someone has to set the proper example. Take a look at this waterfall. Now don't you see Vermont in a new light? VacatioRni in Vermont By WILL MATTHEWS Vermont is a state that is often forgotten. Tucked in between New York, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Quebec, it is isolated geographically, feeling like a tiny country all its own with under 600,000 residents. Central and southern Vermont consist of a dense area of mountains, scattered with rustic villages in valleys, complete with church steeples rising above the trees. Waterbury, a beautiful small town in the central area 26 miles southeast of Burlington, is the fabled home of Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream, perched on a mountainside on Route 100. Between mid-June and late-October, up to 4,000 visitors a day crowd into Waterbury to eat ice cream and take the factory tour, making it Vermont's largest tourist attraction. Central Vermont is also home to much of the states dairy industry, the common joke being that there are more cows in Vermont than there are people. * Northern Vermont, known somewhat sarcastically (but with definite affection) as the Northeast Kingdom, consists of a less-crowded landscape with broader mountains and lush valleys - it is the most rural region of a rural state. Bustling general stores serve as a post offices and centers of local gossip in towns like Danville or Eden, fitting the stereotype of intimate rural life. Burlington is Vermont's largest city with a population of about 40,000 residents (about 100,000 in the metropolitan area). Often called "The Queen City" because it is larger than the state capital of Montpelier, Burlington is home to the University of Vermont and several small colleges, bringing not only some 15,000 students to the city, but also creating a cosmopolitan * community that is the state's cultural center. Situated at Lake Champlain's widest point, Burlington is also a popular tourist area. Chic and expensive restaurants, shops and galleries fill both sides of Church Street, testifying to the importance of tourism's role in local commerce. Aside from its tourism, Burlington is regarded as a hippie-town that beckons artists, intellectuals and tired city-dwellers who want a life away from it all, though not too far away from it all. Street performers and musicians are a common sight on Church St. in summer and fall, and a summer jazz festival, among many festivals, recently featured Tito Puente. The local and regional band scene is a big industry in Burlington, its most famous product being the tie-dye phenomenon of Phish, whose local followers delight in the fact that the band is listed in the Burlington phone directory. Nectar's, the club where Phish started, is one of many clubs and bars on Main Street. Burlington, in accordance with its alternative image, also houses the nation's only library created specifically for unpublished manuscripts, the Brautigan Library. The fact that Burlington had a socialist mayor for most of the 1980s, as well as its comprehensive recycling system, attest to a progres- sive attitude in the earthiest and most environmentally conscious of states. Despite the increasing marketability of Ben and Jerry's, maple syrup and the endless cow merchandising, it is the mountains, lakes, camping and hiking that draw visitors by the thousands to Vermont. Hikers and climbers scramble 0 to the peak of Mount Mansfield, Vermont's highest peak at over 4,000 feet, overlooking a state park on one side and the Stowe valley on the other. Boaters from all over New England fish and sail on Lake Champlain and inland lakes. Campsites are numerous and secluded. And of course, with winter comes Vermont skiing. Vermont, incidentally, has some of the finest swimming spots in the country. Swimming holes and slow-moving rivers are popular hangouts, where on hot summer days numerous locals and occasional travelers spend an afternoon swimming beneath waterfalls and jumping off cliffs into quarries. Ben and Jerry's employees who work at the Waterbury factory are known to frequent the Waterbury Reservoir or the Bolton "Pot Holes" after a hot day of 0making or scooping ice cream. Tales abound of the Barre quarries (near Montpelier), where bathers jump from 70-foot-high cliffs into the deepest of water-filled quarries. It might be too much to say that Vermont has it all, but like many of the quieter states, it has many secrets and much to offer to visitors and residents alike. Some might say be weary of star Denis Leary By CHRIS LEPLEY Denis Leary is one of the few stars who deserves the attention he gets. His fame, spawned from the primor- dial ooze of a few MTV commercials, has grown in the past year, moving Leary from the pop oddity category to full-fledged reserve-seat-at-Spago's movie star status. Well, almost. Leary is the man whose manic ravings are more responsible for Cindy Crawford's popularity than the be- moled, tone-deaf girl herself. Leary's first brief spots on MTV - him pac- ing frantically, chewing on the butt of a cigarette, running his hands through his short blonde hair and snarling into the camera, giving us his treatises on everything from racism to hypocriti- cal rock star politics - gave him almost instantcult status among young people. And unlike MTV's latest media sensations, the infamous Beavis and Butt-Head, Leary has a brain. A sarcastic, insensitive, meat- loving, chain-smoking brain, but nonetheless, a brain. Leary's first comedy album/1 book / one-man-show, "No Cure For Can- cer" is a demented treatise on PC oppressions delivered at 90 miles an hour, braking only to relight a ciga- Leary's first brief spots on MTV - him pacing frantically, chewing on the butt of a cigarette and snarling into the camera, giving us his treatises on everything from racism to hypocritical rock star politics - gave him almost instant cult status among young people. And unlike MTV's latest media sensations, Beavis and Butt-Head, Leary has a brain. rette ("the butts are the best part... that's where they put the heroin. Only the really good smokers know that"). Leary defends the right to destroy his own body if he so chooses, by what- ever method he deems best. Through smoking, which he does constantly, or through the consumption of red meat, drugs and / or alcohol. Not that Leary doesn't consider these sub- stances dangerous - he does - he just looks at the picture logically. "They say smoking takes years off of your life. Well it's the years at the end, right? The adult-diaper wearing years." The success of Leary's comedy album led to the inevitable "MTV Unplugged" session (although no "Unplugged" EP is available yet). Leary does the singing, ably backed by two of his buddies on guitar. "The Asshole Song" from "No Cure For Cancer" leads off the set with its joy- ous chorus "I'm an asshole-e-o-e-o- e-o-e-o." Another song from the al- bum, "Traditional Irish Folksong" is included, along with a wicket rendi- tion of Led Zeppelin's "Immigrant Song" which teaches Leary the folly of taking requests from the audience. From MTV, Leary made an in- spired leap into films, stopping briefly along the way to host a few episodes of Comedy Central's "London Un- derground," appearing in the seriously lame "National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon 1" alongside Emilio Estevez and William Shatner. Leary's part was small (but not as small as his part in "Strictly Business," which deserves no mention here), but his trademark sneer made him memorable enough to whet the appetite for his next per- formance. Unfortunately, Leary was again limited to a bit-part in the rap movie "Who's The Man." In a film full of cameos, it's difficult to stand out, but Leary manages it. Playing the police captain who's shackled with Ed Lover and Dr. Dre as recruits, Leary rants and raves and does his entire schtick, breaking several podiums along the way. Leary's opportunity to break out of the comedic box in which he was placed came with a part in Sylvester Stallone's "Demolition Man." As Edgar Friendly, a reluctant leader of the future's underground population, Leary abandons the angry, straight- into-the-camera speaking style of his comedy routines and early movie roles and actually displays some acting tal- ent (as well he should, since Leary was once a member of the Boston Shakespeare Company. Not that Shakespeare necessarily prepares you for a role in an action-adventure film, but look how much it's helped Patrick Stewart). Oh, sure he spends a few seconds describing the need for the freedom to run through the streets naked covered in green jello and read- ing Playboy magazine, but for the most part he plays it straight, stalking through the sewers covered in grime with a scruffy beard, looking uncan- nily like the Roman Catholic ideal of Jesus. Leary finally has the chance to7 play a major role in a motion picture with theopening of "JudgmentNight." Leary is reunited with Emilio Estevez (and, oddly enough, with House of Pain frontman Erik Schrody, also known as Everlast, who makes his feature film debut in "Judgment Night.") for this action-packed test- osterone-laden film. Leary plays Fallon, aChicago "businessman" who enforceshisrules with a9mm Beretta. Leary plays the villain with sneering contempt for his antagonists and their suburban backgrounds. He stalks the streets, long black leather trenchcoat flaring out behind him, backed by - three henchmen. Nothing adds to a spectacular villain more than a few good henchmen, and Fallon certainly has them, from the sadistic Sykes (Peter Greene) to Erik Schrody's thick-as-a-post Rhodes. Denis Leary makes a truly sinister villain, and brings one of the only glimmers of talent to most of the films he's in. We can only hope that he finds more opportunities to flex his acting muscles, and that he doesn't get cancer and die before he wins an Oscar. Leary Thinking about applying to Graduate School at the University of Michigan School of Education? If YES, come to a meeting TOfnAV 6 n m :>(04k P-erfectLy wa meet aS1 " ton Tn l t r