She looked HOT!!! What a dress! This is her third appearance on Letterman, and it is ALWAYS like this, extremely entertaining. "Scare them with what? Your Big Nick?" LOLOL
I like Letterman, a lot of times he uses the same skits and stuff over and over again, sort of gets annoying though, but i still like it. Nothing tops Conan O'Brian though.
I missed it, so anyone have any pictures?? And please, Letterman sucks! Jay Leno is the late-night God. NO WAY!!! I had no idea those guys get paid anything like that! OMG! That's insane!
Hell yea, Conan rocks. He's ten times better than any other late show host. BTW John Mayer was great on Letterman, and so was Gary Jules on Leno. I had to cut short the Mayer bit, to catch Jules.
Actually, it isn't. Both Letterman and Leno are licenses to print money. Last year, the Tonight show brought in $200 million, with profirs of over $100 million going directly to NBC. To the topic... http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/03/18/entertainment/main607221.shtml "Oh Jesus" may be a bit sacriligous, but I see no reason for the network to edit/bleep it.
Personally I like Leno over Letterman. I love when he does Headlines and Jaywalking. I also love watching Jimmy Kimmel.
Yea, Conan is the best, but Leno gets brownie pts for having Kevin Smith's Roadside Attractions. John Mayer's performance was great, he needs another single out though, Clairty is the only song I see him sing whenever he is a guest. His performance at the Rodeo earlier this month was amazing.
Sex and more sex on new Jackson album By MICHAEL D. CLARK Copyright 2004 Houston Chronicle Janet Jackson probably didn't intend to rile the public and the FCC during her Super Bowl halftime show. She more likely was setting the mood for the sexual escapades that drip from her new album, Damita Jo. With her eighth album (and the first in three years), the 37-year-old Jackson completes a lifelong transformation in the spotlight, from chubby-cheeked innocent to cleavage-flaunting embodiment of sex. Sexhibition, I Want You, Moist -- these are a few of the titles on Damita Jo, in stores today. The joining of sex and music is hardly new, but Jackson's tone may be. While many artists use sexuality to objectify or shock, she treats it almost as a form of meditation. "We're vulnerable, we're sensitive and we're complicated people, too," she whispers on the opening track, Looking For Love. "So many people rolled into one ... all looking for love." At the end of Sexhibition, she sums it up: "Relax, it's just sex." Jackson spends more than an hour -- and 22 tracks -- revisiting previous incarnations. Fans will recognize the kicky dance queen on R&B Junkie and I Want You, elaborate clones of early breakthrough hits like Control and Nasty. Others will take to soulful ensemble pieces, like the title track and Spending My Time With You, which recall '90s singles like That's the Way Love Goes. Sexhibition has a title, groove and funky flute loop reminiscent of Prince at his kinkiest. The xylophone hop and "La La La La" bop of Strawberry Bounce makes it sound like a theme song for a children's TV show, but curse words and tawdry images fill out the song. A half-dozen between-song narratives like The Islands and Country are unnecessary and give Damita Jo a sense of insecurity. If Jackson had confidence in the songs, she wouldn't feel the need to explain them first. The album's best work -- the gentle build of My Baby (featuring Kanye West) and the electric guitar blasts of the first single, Just a Little While -- need no prelude. The sexual content of songs like All Nite (Don't Stop) and Moist is nothing that the ladies of Sex and the City haven't already covered on HBO. If anything, Jackson's boudoir peek-a-boo sometimes distracts from the music -- and surely that's not her intent at all. Grade: B-