Martha Stewart going for the OE on Conan

johmbolayajohmbolaya 4,472 Posts
edited February 2009 in Strut Central
This was on last night, Martha Stewart shared some Taco Bell and a 40 with Conan O'Brien. Screenshot taken from the Hulu feed:If you haven't seen it, it happens right before the second break:http://www.hulu.com/watch/58365/late-night-with-conan-obrien-wed-feb-18-2009#x-0,vepisode,1

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  • thropethrope 750 Posts
    pretty sure this was a throwback, she had an OE on conan like 10 years ago maybe?

  • dukeofdelridgedukeofdelridge urgent.monkey.mice 2,453 Posts
    word

    wtldecade holmz where you been JEEZ

  • pretty sure this was a throwback, she had an OE on conan like 10 years ago maybe?

    Maybe, but this appearance was her saying goodbye to him before he moves to L.A.

  • thropethrope 750 Posts
    all the last week or so of conan has done is make me sad the show hasn't been as good over the last 2-3 years as it was from like 98-04

  • What does drinkin OE mean anymore.

    It has absolutely no street status anymore, and hasnt since the mid 90's.

  • yeah- i def remember this episode.....actually i've seen her down shots with him and chow on a burger......so maybe it is newer...

  • erewhonerewhon 1,123 Posts
    pretty sure this was a throwback, she had an OE on conan like 10 years ago maybe?

    Yeah, they definately did the OE and Taco Bell bit with her about 10 years ago.

  • thropethrope 750 Posts
    so fallon is taking over for conan fairly soon but conan isnt taking over for leno for like 6 months?

  • pretty sure this was a throwback, she had an OE on conan like 10 years ago maybe?

    Yeah, they definately did the OE and Taco Bell bit with her about 10 years ago.

    I didn't know, I haven't watched Conan in years.

  • thropethrope 750 Posts
    fallon on march 2nd conan on june 1st

    i hope conan doesnt pull a letterman like nosedive when moving up an hour (impossible to avoid)

  • spivyspivy 866 Posts
    What does drinkin OE mean anymore.

    It has absolutely no street status anymore, and hasnt since the mid 90's.
    i'm pretty sure conan wasn't going for the hiphop/da streets angle. i think it has more to do with uppercrust/highbrow martha going the lowbrow/trashy route.

  • erewhonerewhon 1,123 Posts
    pretty sure this was a throwback, she had an OE on conan like 10 years ago maybe?

    Yeah, they definately did the OE and Taco Bell bit with her about 10 years ago.

    I didn't know, I haven't watched Conan in years.

    Me neither. This was probably one of the last episodes I saw from when I was watching almost nightly.

  • fallon on march 2nd conan on june 1st

    The Fallon news has been a hot topic on OKP since ?uest had announced it.

    I guess the group (The Roots) now have permission to play other people's songs only[/b] when a guest walks onto the set. From yahoo:


    By JAKE COYLE, AP Entertainment Writer Jake Coyle, Ap Entertainment Writer ??? Thu Feb 19, 12:50 pm ET
    Hip hop band The Roots rehearse at NBC Studios, Thursday, Feb. 19, 2009, in New AP ??? Hip hop band The Roots rehearse at NBC Studios, Thursday, Feb. 19, 2009, in New York. The Roots are the ???

    NEW YORK ??? The Roots are making sandwiches.

    The band is holed-up in a Manhattan studio, preparing for their new gig as the house band on "Late Night With Jimmy Fallon," the NBC show that will take Conan O'Brien's place when O'Brien moves to "The Tonight Show."

    They're working long days to create 200 "sandwiches" or "beds" ??? the intro and outros that will buffer each segment on the show.

    "Right now, my whole life is this show," said drummer Ahmir Thompson, better known as ?uestlove, in a recent interview as he lazily adjusted his fro pick in his trademark Afro, slightly exhausted in between rehearsals.

    Since forming in Philadelphia in the early 1990s, the Roots have been one of the best regarded bands in hip-hop and music, altogether. They were one of the first hip-hop bands to take up instruments and under the steady pounding of Thompson they've been an acclaimed act for nearly two decades, with respectable (though not huge) album sales.

    So when word got out that the Roots would be following in the tradition of Paul Shaffer and Kevin Eubanks, the blogosphere and much of the music world erupted in say-it-ain't-so shock.

    Echoing the comments of many, Gawker.com wrote that the band "opening up for Jimmy Fallon every night is the cultural equivalent of Miles Davis playing his horn on the subway platform."

    ?uestlove has heard the warnings about the Roots becoming a late-show band. He says his friend saxophonist Branford Marsalis ??? who abruptly quit his gig as Jay Leno's musical foil in the early 1990s ??? cautioned against the move: "You'll be neutered!"

    But ?uestlove says the band's new job has "enabled us to survive.

    "This would basically match or surpass what we would make touring 200-plus days out of the year. And, two, this allows us to be home," he said.

    It's a welcome respite from the road for a band that has always toured extensively. The band ??? most in their late 30s ??? are looking forward to living like "normal men," as ?uestlove says.

    "Initially I was a little leery," said the Roots' MC, Tariq Trotter, or Black Thought. "I initially was thinking, `Is this just going to be ammo for some other rapper to try to dis me for?' Like, `Your career is so over now/ You're a house band for ...' You have to be that many steps ahead of whatever move you're going to make."

    The idea gradually sunk in, though, Black Thought says, "the further we were sinking into economic disaster." When the economy went into recession, ticket sales ??? their chief source of income ??? started to slow.

    And with album sales tanking and the industry in tatters, acts throughout music are considering different ways to make money.

    "It was just sounding better and better as the months went on," said Black Thought. "The pros outweighed the cons."

    But the job is already more than the Roots bargained for. NBC isn't paying for publishing rights ??? not even for the Roots own material ??? so the band is left having to create a new TV-ready repertoire.

    "It's going to be a major challenge," said ?uestlove. "Right now, we're writing about 25 a day. I'm surprised we're not running on fumes."

    Fallon, the former "Saturday Night Live" cast member, has repeatedly touted having "the best band in late-night." The idea came from Fallon's friend Neal Brennan, who had worked with ?uestlove when ?uestlove was music director of "Chappelle's Show" on Comedy Central.

    Fallon described pitching the band while they gathered in the office of Lorne Michaels, the executive producer of "Late Night":

    "Number one, you will raise the bar of what a house band is, because you're the Roots and you're amazing. ... Number two, I don't know who to compare you to. You can play with Tony Bennett and on a separate occasion play with Jay-Z and it works. ... Third, you live in Philly, so it's an hour on the Acela train."

    There are other upsides, too. The Roots will certainly raise their profile and attract new audiences. They will hold a residency at New York's Highline Ballroom playing weekly shows and will continue working on a new album.

    They'll still have ten weeks off to tour further afield than the New York metro area. And being based in New York will help ?uestlove, a frequent producer of acts like Al Green, D'Angelo and Common, to get back in the studio.

    Seeing hip-hop regularly on a late show will be revolutionary in itself, but the Roots are more than a hip-hop band. Their debut "Do You Want More?!!!??!" had obvious jazz influence. The group may be best known for their Grammy-winning collaboration with Erykah Badu, "You Got Me"; Their hit off their 2002 disc "Phrenology," performed with Cody Chesnutt ??? "The Seed (2.0)" ??? is one of the best rock songs of the decade.

    They've toured with the Dave Matthews Band, joined "The Colbert Report" in Philadelphia and played backing band for the concert film "Dave Chappelle's Block Party."

    "We're going to cover every genre, though I doubt we'll do bluegrass," said ?uestlove. "This is a chance to really show people how diverse we are."

    The gig is most awkward for Black Thought, the band's frontman. He'll mostly spit a quick rhyme or sing a couple lines, but that will be it. And anything that he sings or raps on air ??? as well as any music played ??? will immediately be owned by NBC Universal.

    "I didn't realize how difficult it was going to be until yesterday," said Black Thought. "It's not the blind cakewalk that I originally foresaw this gig being."

    Practicing, the band slips easily from one style to the next and appears to be relishing being such sonic chameleons. In one sandwich ??? a poppy one, or as the band calls it, "a Subway sandwich" ??? you could close your eyes and think you're listening to a more soulful U2.

    One more bumper wrapped and ready for TV's newest sandwich-makers.

  • thropethrope 750 Posts
    mehhh over/under on how long black thought lasts? he's just gonna sit there the whole show and rap 2 bars heading into every break?

    bizarre

  • erewhonerewhon 1,123 Posts
    They were one of the first hip-hop bands to take up instruments



  • verb606verb606 2,518 Posts

    "Initially I was a little leery," said the Roots' MC, Tariq Trotter, or Black Thought. "I initially was thinking, `Is this just going to be ammo for some other rapper to try to dis me for?' Like, `Your career is so over now/ You're a house band for ...'


    Do rappers today care enough about the Roots to take the time to dis Black Thought about being on the Jimmy Fallon show? Like that's going to make their track hot?


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