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However, for New Year’s 2003-04, Tonight was given the night off, and Carson Daly (host of NBC’s other late night series, Last Call with Carson Daly began hosting his own more conventional coverage. The special has aired annually ever since, even on years that New Year’s falls on a weekend, and during the 2007-2008 Writers Guild of America strike. Though the Late Night specials lasted until 2004-05, after three years of weekend New Years and the writers’ strike, Late Night never returned to live specials and has aired a repeat after Daly’s program ever since.
The special played a very important role in the 2010 Tonight Show conflict. To accommodate New Year’s Eve with Carson Daly, NBC inserted a contract clause into Conan O’Brien’s contract that allowed The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien to be postponed to as late as 12:05 a.m. so that specials such as this could be aired.
A celebrity correspondent (always female) reports to Seacrest from within the crowds in Times Square; each year there has been a different correspondent (past correspondents include Marysol Castro, Hilary Duff, Kellie Pickler, and Melissa Rycroft).
After the ball drops, the focus of the program switches to pre-taped musical segments taped in Hollywood (December 31, 1972-December 31, 2008) or the America’s Party in Las Vegas (December 31, 2009). The segments from Times Square are broadcast live in the Eastern Standard Time zone, and it is delayed for the other time zones so that they can ring in the new year with Clark when midnight strikes in their area. Since December 31, 2006, singer Stacy “Fergie” Ferguson of The Black Eyed Peas has hosted the West Coast segments.
It first aired on NBC in 1972 and 1973, then it moved to ABC in 1974 and has aired there every year since, except on New Year’s Eve 1999 into New Year’s Day of 2000, due to ABC 2000 Today. However, because it was such a tradition, ABC had Dick Clark help ring in 2000 as part of their ABC 2000 programming. In the three and a half decades it has been on the air, the show has become a mainstay in American New Year’s celebrations. Watching the ball drop on Clark’s show is considered an annual cultural tradition for the New Year’s holiday.
Since Sunday, December 31, 2000, a pre-show, Dick Clark’s Primetime New Year’s Rockin’ Eve has aired live from 10:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. The hour-long program features live reports on the festivities in Times Square, as well as various performances. From 11:00 to 11:35 p.m. ET/PT, the show pauses for local newscasts from ABC’s affiliates (stations in Central and Mountain Time Zones may have additional local programming before the show resumes at 11:30 p.m. local time).
Before Dick Clark, the best-known New Year’s Eve shows on radio and then television were hosted by bandleader Guy Lombardo, who hosted 21 consecutive New Year’s Eve shows from 1956 to 1976 on CBS, and for a time in syndication. Lombardo’s first radio broadcast on New Year’s Eve was heard on December 31, 1928 over CBS Radio, and for a time he even split hosting duties by broadcasting on CBS Radio before 12 Midnight EST and on NBC Radio after Midnight. Lombardo would host 48 straight New Year’s Eve broadcasts until his death in 1977, and famously performed “Auld Lang Syne” by his Royal Canadians as the clock struck 12 Midnight, ushering in the start of a New Year.
Unless New Year’s Eve fell on a weekend, NBC would carry a special New Year’s version of “The Tonight Show” each year beginning in 1954, including coverage of the arrival of the New Year in Times Square. Dick Clark himself had actually emceed one New Year’s Eve TV special prior to 1972; on December 31, 1959, he emceed a 90-minute New Year’s special on ABC from 11 P.M. to 12:30 A.M. EST. One of the guests was Frankie Avalon. But it would be the last time Clark would do a New Year’s Eve television special for the next thirteen years.
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