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The Arsenio Hall Show is an Emmy Award winning variety/talk show that aired late weeknights in syndication and aired from January 3, 1989 to May 27, 1994. The show was created and hosted by comedian/actor Arsenio Hall.
[edit] BackgroundHall had been a host on The Late Show, another talk show on Fox, after the dismissal of Joan Rivers. He was given a 13-week run, during which he became unexpectedly popular. During the monologue of his final appearance as host, Hall stated that the reason he had agreed to only do 13 weeks was because that was as long as he was able to stay, as he had plans "to do other things."[1] He subsequently began working on the Eddie Murphy vehicle Coming to America. He ultimately signed with Paramount Television before Fox finally decided, too late, that they wanted to keep him. [edit] Recurrent gagsOne of the show's recurrent gags was affixing a humorous label to a specific section of the audience at stage left of the band, called the "dogpound."[2] The labeling was a staple of Hall's opening monologue and almost always began with the phrase "People who..." In one variation of the gag, Hall designated this section as "People who are currently in a Witness Protection Plan," at which point the camera panned over to that section to reveal a digitally pixillated view of the audience that made it impossible to identify them. Although not an actual "gag," Burton Richardson's long intro of the show's host (in which he would hold the "O" in "Arsenio" for as long as ten seconds right before Hall came out onto the stage, then finally announce "HALL!" all in the same breath) became a staple of the show. In the intro to the final episode, Richardson held out his one-breath introduction for exactly twenty seconds, one of the few times he had done so. A frequent gag in Hall's opening monologue suggested that he still lived in Cleveland, and drove himself to Los Angeles every day to host the show, despite it being an impossibility to traverse the 2300 mile trip. While on these alleged long drives, Hall would ponder certain thoughts, referring to them as "things that make you go hmmm..." This running gag inspired a 1990 C+C Music Factory song by that very title. "Things That Make You Go Hmmm..." reached #1 on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart, and #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. [edit] PopularityHall's show was aimed at the younger urban audience, with Eddie Murphy (a personal friend of Hall's) and other performers often featured. The show quickly appealed to young people of all races and began to attract a wide variety of guests. It became the show for entertainers to go to in order to reach the "MTV Generation." The show was known for the audience's chant of "Woof! Woof! Woof!" while pumping their fists in a circular motion. Some say this was appropriated from the fan chants at Cleveland Browns games, and others say that it came from the chant of Black Greek Letter Organization Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Incorporated. In any case, it quickly became associated with Hall's show. Hall would often have friend MC Hammer as an interview and musical guest. He also interviewed "Jason Voorhees", the main character from the popular Friday the 13th series of films around the time of the release of Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan.[3] [edit] Bill ClintonThen-presidential candidate Bill Clinton was a guest on the show in June 1992, playing "Heartbreak Hotel" on the saxophone (causing Arsenio to quip, "It's nice to see a Democrat blow something besides the election"). The appearance is often considered[by whom?] an important moment in Clinton's political career, helping build his popularity among minority and young voters; Clinton went on to win the election in November 1992. [edit] Controversial moments
[edit] The set
[edit] Awards and nominations
[edit] See also[edit] References[edit] External links
Categories: 1989 television series debuts | 1994 television series endings | 1980s American television series | 1990s American television series | First-run syndicated television programs in the United States | Television series by CBS Paramount Television | American television talk shows | American variety television series | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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