"John Morressy - Last Jerry Fagin Show" - читать интересную книгу автора (Morressy John)VERSION 1.0 DTD 040600
THE LAST JERRY FAGIN SHOW By John Morressy The other networks were wiped out, and they knew it. After this there would be no more "Big Three." There would be only a single network, and Jerry Fagin would rule it like a king. The others tried to put up a fight, of course. There are no good losers in this business. One network threw together a nude musical version of the Kama Sutra. Another did a live eighthour report on torture and execution of political prisoners around the world. The PBS stations had the best solution: They reran the Fischer-Spassky match. But only the Jerry Fagin show could offer a real live honest-to-H. G. Wells alien from outer space as a guest. The projected audience was 99.3 percent of all potential viewers. It was figured that 0.4 percent would tune in to the other networks purely out of habit, and the remaining 0.3 percent would be watching their own canned reruns of The Lawrence Welk Show. Given Jerry's personality and the nature of the television industry, the wipeout was inevitable. A cage of tigers can be pretty impressive, but if you drop a gigantic dinosaur into the cage, the tigers all of a sudden turn into had been one all along, but he kept the fact hidden. Most people thought he was a pussycat. Those of us who knew better said nothing-and kept our jobs. Jerry Fagin was a funny man, as everybody knows. He had half a dozen foolproof comic characters, but he didn't really need any of them. He could stand in front of a camera deadpan, hands in his pockets, looking up at the ceiling, and reel off a monologue that had everybody helpless with laughter. He was born with pure comic instinct. At a party I've seen him zero in on the one person out of, maybe, two hundred total strangers who could feed him perfect straight lines. Jerry was probably the funniest man I ever worked for, and I've worked for them all. Along with all the funny he had a streak of pure killer. But Jerry had talent, and, more important, he had luck; so the killer side hardly ever showed. He always seemed to be on the scene at the right time or to know just the right person and have something on him. So he wound up, at twenty-nine, hosting Late Night Live. At thirty, he was the hottest thing in the industry. The Late Night Live title was forgotten. Everybody called it The Jerry Fagin Show. Jerry could play an audience like Horowitz playing the fiddle, or the piano, or whatever the hell Horowitz plays. You know what I mean. He took small-town talent-show winners and made them into stars of their own. Just by holding up a book, he could turn a piece of schlock by an unknown hack into a best-seller. He could take a clubhouse errand boy and make him into a |
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