The Michigan Daily - 'W"4,/ , c4. - Thursday, March 14, 1996 - 7B Conan O'B By Ryan Posly Daily Arts Writer "The perfect world would be where 'The Conan O'Brien Show' would be o, I am not kissing up to anyone. CMI it determined ambition or crazed reo6nition, but this is how Conan O'Brien himself predicted his ideal future way back in 1985, during an ititerview for the Harvard Crimson's commencement issue. Little did young Conan know how true his prediction wvould become. Amid'all the hoopla over David Letterman's migration from NBC to S in early 1993, a new late-night tender emerged. Tall, handsome and- noticeably nervous, Conan O'Brien stepped into the spotlight from virtual obscurity and has been climbing the stairway of success ever since. Given the impossible task of filling Letterman's big shoes, "Late Night with Conan O'Brien" has far sur- passed reven the most optimistic of ectations at the time. According most critics, O'Brien was destined to fail alongside the likes of Chevy Chase and Rick Dees. But NBC stood by its new host ... barely. With time, O'Brien found his footing, and the public found his humor. yNow O'Brien is enjoying his well- deserved success and "Late Night"'s newfound popularity. It has found a sort of cult following on college cam- puses across the country and now con- tently bests its main competition, *4S's"The Late Late Show with Tom Snyder," in the ratings. Even televi- sion super-critic Tom Shales of The Washington Post proclaims that O'Brien "has gone from being a joke to being truly funny, one of the great- est examples of a self-makeover in television history." Sb who exactly is this guy? Speak- on the telephone from New York, Brien is friendly, funny and gra- cious, though less rehearsed and pol- ished than his television persona. He is also a little tired, having just fin- ished taping a show. "We got through ifen's quick wit marks him as NBC's new late night king T----- . ... ... 21ibe'~ it," he half-groans. "We got through it without a lawsuit." Don't let that fool you, though: O'Brien, at 32, is far from burned- out. Born in Brookline, Mass., ("Birth- place of John F. Kennedy and Aerosmith. I'm the coming together of those two."), O'Brien grew up in a large Irish-Catholic family of six chil- dren. He is a little touchy about the notion of his family's wealth. "The big misconception is that, people think, 'Oh, if his father's a doctor and his mother's a lawyer, he must be rich,"'O'Brien said. "But my dad's in academic medicine and my mother didn't go back into law until I was in high school. So we kind of had a crappy station wagon, and there were a lot of us ... It felt kind of real middle class. We weren't real pam- pered or anything, and I got hand-me- downs for a big chunk of my youth. I started to be able to get my own pair of pants around the time bell-bottoms were coming in, so I was screwed either way." O'Brien went to Harvard, where he studied American history and litera- ture and became heavily involved with the infamous Harvard Lampoon. He wrote for the Lampoon for his entire stay at Harvard and served as presi- dent of it for two consecutive years. He seems nostalgic about his col- lege years and, when pressed, has this to offer: "When you're in college, you have no idea what a good deal it is ... You get to hang around with people your own age, and someone has made sure that there are as many girls as there are boys, and you get to sit around and read books, choose what courses you want to take, you eat a lot of fried food ... It's a great thing, and I always look back on it like, 'Why was I so anxious?'. "In college you have no idea what a good deal it is.. Things have gone well, but I wish I had thrown more kegs off rooftops, and things like that5" - Conan O'Brien Talk show host O'Brien hasn't let his new celeb- rity go to his head or interfere with his personal life. Having been a drummer in a band in high school and college, he later switched to guitar because of lack of rehearsal space for drums. So in his free time he likes to play self- taught rockabilly guitar and spend time with his girlfriend of two years. "It's no one famous or anything, al- though if you want you can say it's Vendela. But it's not." It's actually "Late Night" talent booker Lynn Kaplan. When asked how much of his true personality comes off on screen, O'Brien claims that it's all real. "You can't act that much, and I'm not a particularly good actor, so kind of what you see is what you get," he said. "There are variations, like in life. There are some nights where I'm more manic than others; there are some nights where I just babble more; there are some nights where I'm more pro- fessional and just sort of move things along; and there are some nights where I'll just be yammering on about some- thing that I'm obsessed with that night, or getting off on tangents, or a little hyperactive. But that's pretty much who I am, you know, you can't really fake it. After a while ... you probably get a pretty good idea of what I'm like." True enough, O'Brien is just as affable when he's not in front of the camera - quick to joke and always thinking in terms of comedy skits. For instance, when asked if he hangs out with his wry sidekick Andy Richter, O'Brien says that he would if they didn't spend so much time together on the job. "And he's married, so it would be a little creepy if on his weekends, when his wife and he are going to kiss or something, my head comes in between them: 'Hey guys! This is agreatmovie, isn't it?! Most critics point to "Late Night"'s inventive comedy sketches as the rea- son for its continued success with the hard-to-please college-age audience. The most prominent of the unortho- dox bits include a stand by Emer- gency Guest in a glass case and the recurring Carl "Oldy" Olson, a frail, ancient-looking man with "raw sex appeal." "Women seem to respond to him, so it's just something that took off. ... He's very well-paid, he's the brains behind the show (and) I'm his puppet." So what could a guy who seem- ingly has everything want now? He has achieved the improbable, taking over "Late Night" with aplomb to become the new king of the 12:30 a.m. time slot. He has realized his' prediction of over 10 years ago. But there's still something missing: "Someday I'd like to have an entou- rage. Maybe if there's some guys at the University of Michigan that are interested. The pay isn't great, it's not what Oldy gets, but right now it's like Andy and Oldy Olson are my entou- rage." Surely you jest, Conan. But seri- ously, having come this far, what's next? "Mostly it's just to do weirder and weirder things with the show that will confuse and alienate the baby- boom. That's kind of sort of what 1 feel like I'm here for." And that's kind of sort of what will keep him there for a while to come. "Late Night with Conan 0"Brien" took the place of "Late Night with David Letterman" on NBC at 12:30 a.m. And he's done a pretty good job. Things have gone well, but I wish I had thrown more kegs off of rooftops, and things like that." After graduation, O'Brien began writing for "Not Necessarily the News" and performing with improv groups. He was discovered by Lorne Michaels, creator and executive pro- ducer of "Saturday Night Live," who gave him a job as a writer for "SNL," where his talents flourished. He was writing for "The Simpsons" when Michaels again summoned him, this time for his shot at "Late Night" fame. It would seem that O'Brien has fi- nally hit the big time, with his new contract giving him reportedly up- wards of $1 million a year and allow- ing him to tape only four shows a week, but his schedule has not slack- ened. "More work goes into (the shows) than you'd think, watching them. So despite their appearance, you spend a lot of time working on them, so we're here a lot late at night and everything." And even though he's not taping, Mondays are not a day off for O'Brien either, although "I think one of these days I'm just gonna take it off, you know, occasionally, and say, 'Screw everybody."' Life in the Hootie zone: Have American audiences gone insane? * Tyler Brubaker iy Arts Writer Be afraid. Be very afraid. No one is safe. Turn on the radio- Hootie. Flip to MTV- Hootie. Read Rolling Stone - Hootie. Don't start questioning your sanity just yet. It's not your imagination. It's real. As your life becomes one big blur of all Hootie all the time, stop and ask yourself, why? -Being a cynical college student and #t a junior-high kid who hangs on every word of John Sencio, you prob- eably scratch your noggin at the thought of'Hootie. Especially if you are the type of person that automatically passes off something as crap if it's popular. To many of us, Hootie is all the proof we need to say "Just because something is popular, doesn't mean it's good." Yet, too often people blur the line between quality and public *proval, usually swinging the pen- ulum to whatever side they need to uphold an argument. First things first, though. Why Blootie and why now? Chances are, everybody just got sick and tired of mass-produced grunge rock. It gets ~hard to keep track of MTV's flavor of the week after a while. Distorted gui- tars, flannel shirts and a gimmick will ly get you so far. If that's all you ot, then you're destined for'90s com- pilation heaven. How long can it be before we see the Offspring on "Liv- ing in the '90s Grunge Rock Forever?" Andthen along comes Hootie. Nice, easy-listening, simple songsthat make you wish you never broke up with your high school sweetheart. Even if you think Hootie is the biggest bunch of no-talent musicians to ever sell a Jbazillion records, their popularity makes sense. By this point you may be saying to yourself, "Hey man, it's all just a matter of individual taste. People just get adamant about it because they can't understand what people see in certain bands." OK, you have a point, but it's much deeper than that. Answer this question: the differ- ence between Hootie and the Blow- fish and The Eagles is: A. The name "Hootie" sounds goofy compared to "The Eagles." B. Don Henley never had a frat boy image C. 1976 vs. 1996 D. All of the above. Of course D is right, but the point is that the only real difference is the timing. Both are radio-friendly bands that put out palatable music meant to be danced to and played in the back- ground while drinking large amounts of alcohol. Yet, a lot of people who own "The Eagles' Greatest Hits" take the Lord's name in vain when you mention Hootie. It's not that hard to figure out. It's all timing. Maybe you danced for the first time to "Hotel California." Maybe you were listening to "Take it Easy" the first time you got drunk with your friends. It's all about memo- ries, baby. You grew up with The Eagles. Your musical tastes didn't go all that deep. It made you tap your feet and you could remember the words, that was all that was important. Then you got older, you learned what it meant to be cynical. All of a sudden, you just couldn't relate to guys like Jon Bon Jovi anymore. Sure you loved "Slippery When Wet," but you just couldn't get into "New Jersey." You needed more. All of this brings us to the "Hootie Factor": Simply dividing the line be- tween what is "quality" and what just happens to be popular. Too many people either whine and say that ev- erything that's popular today is crap, or justify something as good by not- ing its popularity. So if you think that Hootie and the Blowfish are high-caliber musicians who won their fame by making one of the most original and important al- bums in a decade, then don't call it the "Hootie Factor." Use the name of any band that you feel is unworthy of the recognition they've received. Call it the "Bush Factor," or "Silverchair Factor" or "Insert the name of a shitty popular band here Factor." So the next time your friend says, "Hey man, Metallica rules 'cause they like, sold a lot of records and stuff," be sure and cite the Hootie Factor. When they say, "Dude, Pearl Jam's totally commercial and all they do is sell lots of albums," ask them if they like the Eagles or even Steve Miller, and cite the Hootie Factor. This idea is good for almost any argument in any situation. Before you know it, it'll be sweeping college cam- puses across the nation. People will stop watching "Quantum l eap" late at night and watch the "Hootie Factor Infomercial" instead. Darius Rucker, lead singer of the Blowfish, will come on the show and I'll ask him, "So how'd you get the name Hootie any- way?" and he'll say, "My name's not Hootie, it's Darius," and proceed to beat the living hell out of me. It could happen. So now that we've discussed why Hootie exists and what the "Hootie Factor" is, what do we do with this new found information? First of all, realizing that the popularity ofHootie Barbers 615 E.Liberty "near State St." AI *T No WAITING "My name is DARIUS, not Hootiel This is my Blowfish posse, and we are taking over America (per instructions from Don Henley). Give us your brains!" and the Blowfish can be explained in some form or another should help you1 sleep a little easier, but even better than that, you can go forth and preach the word of the Hootie Factor. Remind your friends and family that too often, popularity and merit do not go hand in hand. Tell your little brother that just because the public is infatuated with something does not necessarily mean that it is a quality work of art. Tell your roommate that not every band that is played on Top 40 radio is putting out mindless gar- bage. People will be more tolerant and understanding, the world will be a better place, and we'll all live ... well it'll make for good conversation for about a week, anyway, and I guess that'll have to be enough. rPs B-day is Mach 13th so we're having a I BIRTHDAY V SALE!! 25Db1 ANY ONE ITEM WITH THIS 1 COUPON 1 Marcha13th thru March 31st I PXS RECORDS &I I USED CDs I I 617 Packard I Upstairs I I from Subway I not valid wlother discounts or coupons L 44 SUN., MON. & TUES. Co ollege Night -Contests' $1 Pitchers. No cover w/student ID 21+ Free billiards. Satellite sports. Food & drink specials. April 12 and the 2nd Friday of every month. 89X DJ Kelly Brown, contests, giveaways & more! .._ .. . 1 \ ST. PATRICK'S I %L.JPy M F I