8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Only the First 2 years were Good, 29 dicembre 2001
Author:
Bats_Breath da Phoenix, AZ
I remember watching Arsenio Hall when the show first came on in 1989. Lots
of kids these days probably don't remember Arsenio and this show, but back
in '89 when I was 13, this was considered the coolest show EVER. People
would talk about nearly every show the next day. I remember how everyone
in
my school were talking about his verbal sparring with Madonna(which always
seemed staged to me) back in early 1990.
Unfortunately, only 1989 and 1990 were good to poor Arsenio. The guy and
his show stayed true to the old adage, "the quicker you burn, the faster
you
fade away". The blush went off the rose very quickly, and from 1991-'94,
Arsenio limped along with his lame jokes and Eddie Murphy wannabe routines.
I remember I stopped watching when I was 15 or 16 sometime in 1991 anyway.
During the shows run during the rest of the '90s, people wondered when
Arsenio would finally get cancelled, instead of talking about each show
like
it was an event. I'm not sure, but I think that like M.C. Hammer, Arsenio
became very "1989". When the show finally went off the air in 1994, I
don't
think anyone even cared. I also think this show only receiving only 3 or 4
comments speaks volumes about Arsenio and his show, people have forgotten
completely about him. Nevertheless, during 1989 and 1990, Arsenio Hall was
a household name.
8 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Hiphop killed Arsenio? No!, 17 gennaio 2004
Author:
ApexWonderKid da Detroit, MI
I just finished reading some of the comments here about Arsenio's
show...and
while I agree with some, I heavily disagree with others. First of all,
there was no "hiphop backlash" around the time that grundge rock became
popular. If you remember, that was also the same time that hiphop began
to
reach it's commercial peak as well. So that is NOT what killed Arsenio's
show. Arsenio HAD grundge and rock performers on his show ALL THE TIME.
From Poison to Nirvana to Red Hot Chili Peppers to Radiohead. They were
very well featured. His musical guests were a mixed bag from urban to
country to rock to pop. Everyone wants to associate Arsenio's show with
hiphop simply because he is a black man and was the first to have the
nerve
to showcase it, but that's NOT all he ever had on.
What killed Arsenio was that he over time just simply wore thin. It is
very
true that Arsenio's show, in retrospect, was very "1989" stylistically and
he had a hard time moving forward from that. His interviewing skills were
often lacking, and his opening monologues were terrible. Everything wrong
with the show starting out that people dismissed because he was young, hip
and someone *new* to watch on latenight continued to haunt him and over
time
people started to not dismiss it anymore. Toward 1993-94, his show became
dreadfully stale, painfully slow moving, and he became annoyingly unfunny.
And all the controversy over the very public Jay/Dave fight over the
Tonight
Show didn't help matters because it led late night audiences and sponsors
to
focus on them rather than Arsenio.
6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- Arsenio who?, 29 luglio 2004
Author:
IrockGswift (IrockGswift@aol.com) da east orange, new jersey
The generation today probably doesn't know who this man is. Though
everybody remembers him as Eddie Murphy's sidekick in the 1988 movie "Coming
to America". A few months later he had his own late night talk show. The
first 2 years Arsenio was at his best and after that the show became boring
and dry. He started having the same usual guest like Bill Cosby,MC
Hammer,and Eddie Murphy to name a few. In 1994 maybe a week before his show
was canceled he interviewed Minister Louis Farrakhan,and the plug was
pulled. Recently he been the host of the newly Star Search,but today many
people think this man's show never existed. This is probably because he
didn't leave the audience when some interesting and overwhelming interviews
with his guest and everything was sugar-coated and a** kissing. Naturally
Arsenio Hall seem like a warm-hearted man who just can't cut staying in the
limelight.
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- Eddie Murphy's best friend was Good for a while, 15 febbraio 2004
Author:
AshKaboo da Los Angeles, CA
It seems that no one can talk about The Arsenio Hall Show without talking
about how quickly the American public lost interest in the program, and
even
making several jokes about the said talkshow host. I guess it's because a
lot of it is true. Arsenio did die a sudden death, that is something
everyone can agree on. One night he became the hottest thing the world
had
seen, then before you knew it he became yesterday's news.
People are right about the good years for this show, it was 1989 and 1990.
Although Arsenio and many of his ardent defenders may accuse The Tonight
Show's Helen Kushnick of threatening a boycott on Arsenio's potential
guests
if they turned up on his show before Jay Leno's, that was just part of the
reason he faded away like he did. The man was just a downright terrible
interviewer, possessing next to zero skills on how to correctly and
intelligently interview a guest. And too many times his opening monologue
seemed like a rip off of one of Eddie Murphy's early 80's Saturday Night
Live sketches. Arsenio tended to pander to White society's expectations
of
a Black man, i.e. always trash talkingly funny and smart-mouthed. But
he's
not the only one guilty of picking up the mantle of Richard Pryor and
Eddie
Murphy and looking like a one note joke. Chris Rock, Chris Tucker, and
Bernie Mac have all fallen into this trap.
During the 1991-'94 part of the show, it was never the same and the pop
culture was changing, leaving Arsenio behind. I think the bulk of the
problem is what others have already said here, Arsenio Hall was firmly
grounded in a late 80's style, but he was trying to do his show in the
1990's. He could get away with it in 1990, but the further he got into
the
90's, the more he seemed like yesterday's news and just a total has been
what with him still talking about Paula Abdul and the New Kids on the
Block.
But Arsenio's reign in 1989 and 1990 was cool while it lasted, too bad he
couldn't keep up with the changing times.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Woof! Woof! Woof!, 12 gennaio 2004
Author:
Pat McCurry (acehighpat@aol.com) da Wilton, NH
I have to agree with everyone else that the first two years (1989 & 1990)
were Arsenio's prime years. I used to watch it when I was younger and got a
huge kick out of it. I actually have many of the wrestling interviews on
tape he did (The ones with Ted DiBiase and Bobby Heenan stick out in my
mind). But of course there was the constant brownnosing on the guests.
Arsenio had a great interview technique, he just did too much kissing up.
It's a bad habit that has followed him into other shows. It only appealed to
a certain populi of the United States (Older people watched Carson, college
kids watched Dave, people in the know watched Nightline, etc.). Then came
1992 when New Jack Swing was dying down and grunge was being to take form.
Jay Leno took over The Tonight Show and made it hipper (and of course you
had his agent, Helen Kushnick underbooking Arsenio's guests). Times were
just changing and people started to forget about Arsenio.
There were a couple of positives that stood out though. His house band was
really kickin'. He would always center certain members of the band out
(There was Michael Wolfe of course, You had the "John B. Williams Poetry
Moment", and Starr Parodi's one woman band jams). He was funny some of the
time. And there is also the fact that a syndicated talk show went as long it
did without network backing. But it was only a matter of time when the show
got the death knell.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- A Product Of The Times, 23 aprile 2008
Author:
Camelot_2000 da Canada
I admit I have fond memories of the Arsenio Hall show and was a devout
viewer, but that was when he first came out and skyrocketed to instant
popularity. He was a major hype of the times, an icon for bringing a
new, hip and refreshing format to the talk show industry, and checking
out his show seemed like the "in" thing to do.
There were funny and memorable moments, like the time Kurt Russell was
a guest and a song from an album he recorded as a child star suddenly
started blaring on the studio speakers. There were also Arsenio's
merciless digs at Roseanne Barr during his opening monologue, most of
which were pretty funny. There was also Madonna's hyped up and much
publicized appearance (back when she was at a superstar zenith), and
after the applause died down and the 'talk' began, all she basically
did was throw questions back at him about his alleged romance with
Paula Abdul.
Arsenio seemed to revel in his own success too, like showing a clip
from "Ghost" where Whoopi Goldberg mentions to two co-stars that his
show was on. Or taking note of the news item where a guy got outraged
and violent after other people in his household wouldn't let him watch
the show.
Yeah, The Arsenio Hall show was a product of the times, unfortunately
time wasn't too kind and before long, the fad started to wear out. My
interest started to wane in '91 when things weren't making such an
impact anymore. Even another appearance from Madonna didn't liven
things up. She, looking pale and curiously waxen faced, merely sat
quietly while her then-friend Rosie O'Donnell obnoxiously hogged up all
the attention.
Yes, Arsenio was a great show, but only at the beginning, afterwards,
it became a passing fancy, much like the "Help, I've fallen and can't
get up!" commercial and the "Twin Peaks" TV series.
4 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Good Premise, Bad Results, 15 luglio 2002
Author:
John da Southfield, MI
Arsenio Hall's show contained a wide range of ups and downs during its five
and a half-year history. There is much to comment, so LET'S GET
BUSY!
Firstly, let's focus on the good.
1) This show had a Black person with his own late night talk
show.
2) While Carson and Letterman appealed to Whites, Arsenio appealed to the
urban sector.
3) Arsenio dressed really well.
4) Arsenio would have guests on his show that appealed to urban culture, but
were not considered mainstream enough to appear on Carson or
Letterman.
5) Arsenio had an ethnically diverse band.
6) There were several memorable moments in the guest category:
· Muhammad Ali was on the show and Sugar Ray Leonard and Mike Tyson made a
surprise visit.
· Miles Davis' appearance.
· Sammy Davis JR's appearance.
· Louis Farrakhan's appearance (memorable only because of all the
controversy it created).
· His shows after the Rodney King acquittals, and riots.
· The video collages commemorating highlights of the show.
· Bill Clinton playing the saxophone.
· Andrew Dice Clay weeping openly to the sympathetic public.
· MC Hammer (or Hammer depending on your mindset) and his
performances.
There are other moments to recognize, but I have to stop here due to space
constraints.
Now, let's focus on the bad, which led to its premature
cancellation:
1) The constant ass kissing while giving interviews. No one liked
that.
2) More often than not, he would have guests on the show that appeared so
frequently that they became stale and boring to watch. One popular example
was George Wallace.
3) The monologues were terrible. Naturally, some jokes don't work at times.
When Arsenio delivered jokes that died, he would attempt to keep it going
to make it funny. It didn't work. The material was poorly written, and
poorly delivered.
4) The perpetuation of ethnic stereotypes associated with hip-hop culture.
Many times, he overdid it to the point that it looked clownish.
5) The fact that he had to maintain his "high-top fade" to let people know
that he was still "Black" appeared to be very plastic after
awhile.
6) His filler guests. For a little while, there was a show which came on
right after Arsenio called "The Party Machine", hosted by Nia Peeples. Why
do you need to have Nia Peeples as a guest on Arsenio (at the end of the
hour program, in fact), when she is hosting the next program?
Filler!
7) The "Master Impressionist" routine. It got old after the first time!
Some you could not figure out.
The program got so bad that his guest stars were of greater interest than he
was. Towards the end of the series run, I would only watch the beginning of
the telecast to see who his guests were and what he was wearing. I would
then either turn the channel or turn the TV off.
His timing was very lacking. The audience hollering "WOOF WOOF WOOF" was
going to get played out eventually. Though Johnny Carson's approach was
conservative, it remained lively enough to last 30 years. Arsenio was not
going to last a third of that. He did not keep up. He thought that the
same antics were going to keep him on the air. It didn't.
Arsenio originally had a 6-year contract to do his show. That means that
his 6 year anniversary would have come in December, 1994. However, his show
ended in May, 1994. His show ended 6 months early. Why is that? It's
because Paramount wanted to pull the plug. They probably bought out the
last 6 months of his contract and ended it. Thank goodness. Thank goodness
for Arsenio's sake.
Arsenio's style and format led to an attempt at shows that tried to
duplicate his formula: "Vibe", "The Keenan Ivory Wayans Show". "The Chris
Rock Show" on HBO was the best.
Arsenio was extremely overrated as a comedian, as a celebrity. There has to
be more to him than being a former friend of Eddie Murphy to have a career.
Too bad his career is gone. See you in 5,000 hours!
2 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- Decent talk show, hurt by the backlash of Americans against hip-hop culture., 10 ottobre 1999
Author:
Robert Morgan da Indianapolis
Arsenio Hall's talk show debuted after Joan Rivers' talk show failed-
though
syndicated, the show was carried mostly by Fox affiliates who had the
empty
time slot left by Joan Rivers. Riding the wave of popularity of "safe"
hip-hop culture (represented by such things as the comedian Sinbad, Young
MC, and DJ Jazzy Jeff & Fresh Prince), Arsenio struck a chord with a
fairly
large percentage of America's youth and wanna-be-hip; instead of the
boring
antics of Carson and the "establishment" Letterman, here was someone who
represented the new popular element in American culture.
For a couple of years, the hype and excitement surrounding the show was
akin
to that of Saturday Night Live's first years. People stopped what they
were
doing to watch- there were parties centered around the show. The
excitement
carried through to the show, where the audience would be boisterous-
catcalling, yelling at guests and Arsenio... meanwhile Arsenio played the
genial, hip host. Jokes more risque than Carson, none of the
self-deprecating humor or embarrassing stunts Letterman.
Unfortunately, within a few years, the party was over. White America
decided they were tired of the hip-hop culture (probably because the very
thing that made hip-hop exciting was sanitized by businessmen to appeal to
white youth), and many others began seeing Arsenio as a sell-out- someone
who pandered more to whites than blacks. Almost as quickly as the show's
popularity flared up, it waned...
In retrospect the show isn't that bad. Arsenio was too genial to guests-
much was made over his fawning- but the show was a breath of fresh air for
an audience used to, and sick of, NBC's offerings.
1 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- carson fans need to get over it, 26 ottobre 2003
Author:
the_urban_prince da The Mighty Mighty Dark Urban Empire!!!!!
face it he's gone,and its not really arsenio's fault.and yeah i agree with
the first poster what killed arsenio was the backlash against
hip-hop,especially after the LA riots.so arsenio was forced to somewhat
change formats.wich caused another backlash amung the urban audiences.and
he
honestly never recovered.
everybody seems to be convinced that grunge killed arsenio but thats also
false. it had absolutley nothing to do with arsenio's ratings.either way
this show is sorley missed
2 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- The Arsenio Hall Show-Starring Arsenio Hall, 13 febbraio 2006
Author:
rcj5365 da Durham,North Carolina
If someone were to come up to you on the street and asked you this
question.......Who is Arsenio Hall?
At one time this man had one of the hippest and brightest talk show in
the history of late night television and also to make a point here that
he was the ONLY African-American entertainer to accomplished such a
feat during a period between the 1980's and 1990's when Johnny Carson
was the undisputed ruler of the "late night talk-show circuit",and to
put in this same category David Lettermen and also Ted Koppel,who had a
news magazine show during the late-night hour.
Say what you want about Arsenio Hall,since his show was a not to be
missed and for one "The Arsenio Hall Show"(Syndicated:1989-1994)was the
coolest show ever made,and righteously so. I remember watching Arsenio
Hall when it first premiered in 1989 and from the first episode it
really took off since at the time "The Arsenio Hall Show" debuted after
"The Joan Rivers Show",and "Late Night Starring Chevy Chase" were
dismal failures. For the six years that it ran in syndication,Arsenio
Hall was riding the wave of popularity and the explosion of "hip-hop"
culture and "trends" was about to follow. He did however struck a chord
with the youth of America since Arsenio show was just about as good as
it got and then some. However,a large percentage that were watching the
show were younger people since for the first two seasons(between the
years 1989 and 1991),"The Arsenio Hall Show" was the hottest show on
the planet and within its first season(1989-1990)it dethroned Johnny
Carson off the top spot of the late night supermacy. It was during the
first two seasons the show was akin to that of the first years of
Saturday Night Live. People stopped everything to what they were doing
and watch--there were parties centered around the show and there was
excitement in the air as well since the next day people would gather
around the water cooler to discuss about last night's show and to
eventually think about what Arsenio will do next or for matter
something in between. A prime example of one episode I do recall was
when Arsenio had a special guest or mystery guest to surprise the crowd
and then something else would come in and really get the crowd jumping!
It was between the years of 1989 and 1991 that were the best Arsenio
Hall had since he was the Number One late night talk show in America.
Then the unexpected happen. Let's face it,Arsenio Hall did what Johnny
Carson,David Lettermen,Jay Leno,and even Conan O'Brien couldn't
do...bring a hip audience with hip appeal to the youth of America! And
secondly,history was being made too since Arsenio Hall became the ONLY
black entertainer to successfully host his own weekly late-night talk
show,and his own program which was something other African-Americans
did as well like Keenan Ivory-Wayans,Flip Wilson or to an lesser extent
Nat King Cole!
The show took chances that NO ONE else dared to do but Arsenio Hall!
Several moments were excellent here including a daring saxophone player
who was the governor of Arkansas who went on to become the President Of
The United States(William Jefferson Clinton). Bill Clinton won the
presidency in 1992 because he dethroned Bush and kept it real and
keeping in touch with the youth of America thanks to Arsenio Hall!!!
The other? When The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan,Leader Of The
Nation Of Islam came on Arsenio's show when no one else dared to get
him for an interview and eventually appeared on national television!!
The same can be said for Reverend Jesse Jackson and also for Reverend
and activist Al Sharpton. The show was a launching pad for up and
coming comedians as well including George Wallace and Bernie Mac not to
mention Chris Rock and others that became famous thanks to Arsenio
Hall! Not to mention on the same category aspiring actors and actresses
who would go on to much bigger and better thanks to Arsenio Hall! There
were some funny moments as well too.
As far as music was concerned,it was so much that "The Arsenio Hall
Show" did for entertainers on a URBAN scale and it featured some of the
best R&B acts and not to mention "hip-hop" acts of all time! He also
had other acts as well that consisted of many musical fields including
several bands that made their appearances of his show when the "grunge"
era of rock music was about to explode upon the youth of America. Many
of these performers were on Arsenio Hall's show when NO ONE else like
The Tonight Show,David Lettermen or Conan O'Brien wouldn't let them in
the door! Nor for that manner wouldn't have them!
During the years 1991 to 1994,the show suffered a decline and in the
ratings as well since the pop culture was changing at a rapid pace
leaving Arsenio Hall behind. America quickly lost interest in the
program and other shows of the time were making jokes about Arsenio
which to this day he doesn't like. The show was also a political hotbed
for topics and issues which killed the show's good ratings. The ratings
really started to slip during the O.J. Simpson trial and not to mention
the wake of the riots that engulf Los Angeles,California during the
show's 1992-1993 season. During that time Arsenio turned his show into
a "Phil Donahue" type forum on inner city problems,and I do recalled
that one episode of his show during an discussing of this got really
ugly and it was during a taping with a live audience. This is when the
show got worst and from their his audience was deserting him. Because
of this,the show was pushed back into a later time slot and from there
the final episode of "The Arsenio Hall Show" came to an end in May of
1994,after an astounding six year run in syndication.
Own the rights?

Buy it at AmazonMore at IMDb Pro Discuss in Boards Add to My Movies Update Data
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videoscast e troupe completicuriositàofficial sitesfrasi memorabiliOverview
Info principalidettagli combinaticast e troupe completiProduzione/Distribuzioneepisode listepisodes castepisode ratings... by rating... by votestv schedulePremi & e recensioni
Recensioni utenticommento/recensioneRecensioni dai NewsgroupawardsVotialtri film raccomandatimessage boardTrama & Frasi
riassunto della tramaparole chiaveRecensione Amazon.comfrasi memorabiliInfo divertenti
curiositàerroricolonna sonoratitoli pazziversioni alternativeCollegamenti ad altri filmFAQIncassi & e altre info
acquisto di prodottibox office/businessdate di uscitaluoghi delle ripresespecifiche tecnicheversione laserdiscversione DVDinformazioni bibliograficheNewsDeskMateriale promozionale
slogan trailers and videos poster e link Galleria fotograficaLink esterni
link di cinemaofficial sitesvariefotografiesound clipsvideo clipsIMDb user comments for
"The Arsenio Hall Show" (1989) More at IMDb Pro »
8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
Only the First 2 years were Good, 29 dicembre 2001
Author: Bats_Breath da Phoenix, AZ
I remember watching Arsenio Hall when the show first came on in 1989. Lots of kids these days probably don't remember Arsenio and this show, but back in '89 when I was 13, this was considered the coolest show EVER. People would talk about nearly every show the next day. I remember how everyone in my school were talking about his verbal sparring with Madonna(which always seemed staged to me) back in early 1990.
Unfortunately, only 1989 and 1990 were good to poor Arsenio. The guy and his show stayed true to the old adage, "the quicker you burn, the faster you fade away". The blush went off the rose very quickly, and from 1991-'94, Arsenio limped along with his lame jokes and Eddie Murphy wannabe routines. I remember I stopped watching when I was 15 or 16 sometime in 1991 anyway. During the shows run during the rest of the '90s, people wondered when Arsenio would finally get cancelled, instead of talking about each show like it was an event. I'm not sure, but I think that like M.C. Hammer, Arsenio became very "1989". When the show finally went off the air in 1994, I don't think anyone even cared. I also think this show only receiving only 3 or 4 comments speaks volumes about Arsenio and his show, people have forgotten completely about him. Nevertheless, during 1989 and 1990, Arsenio Hall was a household name.
8 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
Hiphop killed Arsenio? No!, 17 gennaio 2004
Author: ApexWonderKid da Detroit, MI
I just finished reading some of the comments here about Arsenio's show...and while I agree with some, I heavily disagree with others. First of all, there was no "hiphop backlash" around the time that grundge rock became popular. If you remember, that was also the same time that hiphop began to reach it's commercial peak as well. So that is NOT what killed Arsenio's show. Arsenio HAD grundge and rock performers on his show ALL THE TIME. From Poison to Nirvana to Red Hot Chili Peppers to Radiohead. They were very well featured. His musical guests were a mixed bag from urban to country to rock to pop. Everyone wants to associate Arsenio's show with hiphop simply because he is a black man and was the first to have the nerve to showcase it, but that's NOT all he ever had on.
What killed Arsenio was that he over time just simply wore thin. It is very true that Arsenio's show, in retrospect, was very "1989" stylistically and he had a hard time moving forward from that. His interviewing skills were often lacking, and his opening monologues were terrible. Everything wrong with the show starting out that people dismissed because he was young, hip and someone *new* to watch on latenight continued to haunt him and over time people started to not dismiss it anymore. Toward 1993-94, his show became dreadfully stale, painfully slow moving, and he became annoyingly unfunny. And all the controversy over the very public Jay/Dave fight over the Tonight Show didn't help matters because it led late night audiences and sponsors to focus on them rather than Arsenio.
6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-
Arsenio who?, 29 luglio 2004
Author: IrockGswift (IrockGswift@aol.com) da east orange, new jersey
The generation today probably doesn't know who this man is. Though everybody remembers him as Eddie Murphy's sidekick in the 1988 movie "Coming to America". A few months later he had his own late night talk show. The first 2 years Arsenio was at his best and after that the show became boring and dry. He started having the same usual guest like Bill Cosby,MC Hammer,and Eddie Murphy to name a few. In 1994 maybe a week before his show was canceled he interviewed Minister Louis Farrakhan,and the plug was pulled. Recently he been the host of the newly Star Search,but today many people think this man's show never existed. This is probably because he didn't leave the audience when some interesting and overwhelming interviews with his guest and everything was sugar-coated and a** kissing. Naturally Arsenio Hall seem like a warm-hearted man who just can't cut staying in the limelight.
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-
Eddie Murphy's best friend was Good for a while, 15 febbraio 2004
Author: AshKaboo da Los Angeles, CA
It seems that no one can talk about The Arsenio Hall Show without talking about how quickly the American public lost interest in the program, and even making several jokes about the said talkshow host. I guess it's because a lot of it is true. Arsenio did die a sudden death, that is something everyone can agree on. One night he became the hottest thing the world had seen, then before you knew it he became yesterday's news.
People are right about the good years for this show, it was 1989 and 1990. Although Arsenio and many of his ardent defenders may accuse The Tonight Show's Helen Kushnick of threatening a boycott on Arsenio's potential guests if they turned up on his show before Jay Leno's, that was just part of the reason he faded away like he did. The man was just a downright terrible interviewer, possessing next to zero skills on how to correctly and intelligently interview a guest. And too many times his opening monologue seemed like a rip off of one of Eddie Murphy's early 80's Saturday Night Live sketches. Arsenio tended to pander to White society's expectations of a Black man, i.e. always trash talkingly funny and smart-mouthed. But he's not the only one guilty of picking up the mantle of Richard Pryor and Eddie Murphy and looking like a one note joke. Chris Rock, Chris Tucker, and Bernie Mac have all fallen into this trap.
During the 1991-'94 part of the show, it was never the same and the pop culture was changing, leaving Arsenio behind. I think the bulk of the problem is what others have already said here, Arsenio Hall was firmly grounded in a late 80's style, but he was trying to do his show in the 1990's. He could get away with it in 1990, but the further he got into the 90's, the more he seemed like yesterday's news and just a total has been what with him still talking about Paula Abdul and the New Kids on the Block. But Arsenio's reign in 1989 and 1990 was cool while it lasted, too bad he couldn't keep up with the changing times.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-
Woof! Woof! Woof!, 12 gennaio 2004
Author: Pat McCurry (acehighpat@aol.com) da Wilton, NH
I have to agree with everyone else that the first two years (1989 & 1990) were Arsenio's prime years. I used to watch it when I was younger and got a huge kick out of it. I actually have many of the wrestling interviews on tape he did (The ones with Ted DiBiase and Bobby Heenan stick out in my mind). But of course there was the constant brownnosing on the guests. Arsenio had a great interview technique, he just did too much kissing up. It's a bad habit that has followed him into other shows. It only appealed to a certain populi of the United States (Older people watched Carson, college kids watched Dave, people in the know watched Nightline, etc.). Then came 1992 when New Jack Swing was dying down and grunge was being to take form. Jay Leno took over The Tonight Show and made it hipper (and of course you had his agent, Helen Kushnick underbooking Arsenio's guests). Times were just changing and people started to forget about Arsenio.
There were a couple of positives that stood out though. His house band was really kickin'. He would always center certain members of the band out (There was Michael Wolfe of course, You had the "John B. Williams Poetry Moment", and Starr Parodi's one woman band jams). He was funny some of the time. And there is also the fact that a syndicated talk show went as long it did without network backing. But it was only a matter of time when the show got the death knell.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-
A Product Of The Times, 23 aprile 2008
Author: Camelot_2000 da Canada
I admit I have fond memories of the Arsenio Hall show and was a devout viewer, but that was when he first came out and skyrocketed to instant popularity. He was a major hype of the times, an icon for bringing a new, hip and refreshing format to the talk show industry, and checking out his show seemed like the "in" thing to do.
There were funny and memorable moments, like the time Kurt Russell was a guest and a song from an album he recorded as a child star suddenly started blaring on the studio speakers. There were also Arsenio's merciless digs at Roseanne Barr during his opening monologue, most of which were pretty funny. There was also Madonna's hyped up and much publicized appearance (back when she was at a superstar zenith), and after the applause died down and the 'talk' began, all she basically did was throw questions back at him about his alleged romance with Paula Abdul.
Arsenio seemed to revel in his own success too, like showing a clip from "Ghost" where Whoopi Goldberg mentions to two co-stars that his show was on. Or taking note of the news item where a guy got outraged and violent after other people in his household wouldn't let him watch the show.
Yeah, The Arsenio Hall show was a product of the times, unfortunately time wasn't too kind and before long, the fad started to wear out. My interest started to wane in '91 when things weren't making such an impact anymore. Even another appearance from Madonna didn't liven things up. She, looking pale and curiously waxen faced, merely sat quietly while her then-friend Rosie O'Donnell obnoxiously hogged up all the attention.
Yes, Arsenio was a great show, but only at the beginning, afterwards, it became a passing fancy, much like the "Help, I've fallen and can't get up!" commercial and the "Twin Peaks" TV series.
4 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
Good Premise, Bad Results, 15 luglio 2002
Author: John da Southfield, MI
Arsenio Hall's show contained a wide range of ups and downs during its five and a half-year history. There is much to comment, so LET'S GET BUSY!
Firstly, let's focus on the good.
1) This show had a Black person with his own late night talk show. 2) While Carson and Letterman appealed to Whites, Arsenio appealed to the urban sector. 3) Arsenio dressed really well. 4) Arsenio would have guests on his show that appealed to urban culture, but were not considered mainstream enough to appear on Carson or Letterman. 5) Arsenio had an ethnically diverse band. 6) There were several memorable moments in the guest category: · Muhammad Ali was on the show and Sugar Ray Leonard and Mike Tyson made a surprise visit. · Miles Davis' appearance. · Sammy Davis JR's appearance. · Louis Farrakhan's appearance (memorable only because of all the controversy it created). · His shows after the Rodney King acquittals, and riots. · The video collages commemorating highlights of the show. · Bill Clinton playing the saxophone. · Andrew Dice Clay weeping openly to the sympathetic public. · MC Hammer (or Hammer depending on your mindset) and his performances. There are other moments to recognize, but I have to stop here due to space constraints.
Now, let's focus on the bad, which led to its premature cancellation:
1) The constant ass kissing while giving interviews. No one liked that. 2) More often than not, he would have guests on the show that appeared so frequently that they became stale and boring to watch. One popular example was George Wallace. 3) The monologues were terrible. Naturally, some jokes don't work at times. When Arsenio delivered jokes that died, he would attempt to keep it going to make it funny. It didn't work. The material was poorly written, and poorly delivered. 4) The perpetuation of ethnic stereotypes associated with hip-hop culture. Many times, he overdid it to the point that it looked clownish. 5) The fact that he had to maintain his "high-top fade" to let people know that he was still "Black" appeared to be very plastic after awhile. 6) His filler guests. For a little while, there was a show which came on right after Arsenio called "The Party Machine", hosted by Nia Peeples. Why do you need to have Nia Peeples as a guest on Arsenio (at the end of the hour program, in fact), when she is hosting the next program? Filler! 7) The "Master Impressionist" routine. It got old after the first time! Some you could not figure out.
The program got so bad that his guest stars were of greater interest than he was. Towards the end of the series run, I would only watch the beginning of the telecast to see who his guests were and what he was wearing. I would then either turn the channel or turn the TV off.
His timing was very lacking. The audience hollering "WOOF WOOF WOOF" was going to get played out eventually. Though Johnny Carson's approach was conservative, it remained lively enough to last 30 years. Arsenio was not going to last a third of that. He did not keep up. He thought that the same antics were going to keep him on the air. It didn't.
Arsenio originally had a 6-year contract to do his show. That means that his 6 year anniversary would have come in December, 1994. However, his show ended in May, 1994. His show ended 6 months early. Why is that? It's because Paramount wanted to pull the plug. They probably bought out the last 6 months of his contract and ended it. Thank goodness. Thank goodness for Arsenio's sake.
Arsenio's style and format led to an attempt at shows that tried to duplicate his formula: "Vibe", "The Keenan Ivory Wayans Show". "The Chris Rock Show" on HBO was the best.
Arsenio was extremely overrated as a comedian, as a celebrity. There has to be more to him than being a former friend of Eddie Murphy to have a career. Too bad his career is gone. See you in 5,000 hours!
2 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-
Decent talk show, hurt by the backlash of Americans against hip-hop culture., 10 ottobre 1999
Author: Robert Morgan da Indianapolis
Arsenio Hall's talk show debuted after Joan Rivers' talk show failed- though syndicated, the show was carried mostly by Fox affiliates who had the empty time slot left by Joan Rivers. Riding the wave of popularity of "safe" hip-hop culture (represented by such things as the comedian Sinbad, Young MC, and DJ Jazzy Jeff & Fresh Prince), Arsenio struck a chord with a fairly large percentage of America's youth and wanna-be-hip; instead of the boring antics of Carson and the "establishment" Letterman, here was someone who represented the new popular element in American culture.
For a couple of years, the hype and excitement surrounding the show was akin to that of Saturday Night Live's first years. People stopped what they were doing to watch- there were parties centered around the show. The excitement carried through to the show, where the audience would be boisterous- catcalling, yelling at guests and Arsenio... meanwhile Arsenio played the genial, hip host. Jokes more risque than Carson, none of the self-deprecating humor or embarrassing stunts Letterman.
Unfortunately, within a few years, the party was over. White America decided they were tired of the hip-hop culture (probably because the very thing that made hip-hop exciting was sanitized by businessmen to appeal to white youth), and many others began seeing Arsenio as a sell-out- someone who pandered more to whites than blacks. Almost as quickly as the show's popularity flared up, it waned...
In retrospect the show isn't that bad. Arsenio was too genial to guests- much was made over his fawning- but the show was a breath of fresh air for an audience used to, and sick of, NBC's offerings.
1 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-
carson fans need to get over it, 26 ottobre 2003
Author: the_urban_prince da The Mighty Mighty Dark Urban Empire!!!!!
face it he's gone,and its not really arsenio's fault.and yeah i agree with the first poster what killed arsenio was the backlash against hip-hop,especially after the LA riots.so arsenio was forced to somewhat change formats.wich caused another backlash amung the urban audiences.and he honestly never recovered.
everybody seems to be convinced that grunge killed arsenio but thats also false. it had absolutley nothing to do with arsenio's ratings.either way this show is sorley missed
2 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
The Arsenio Hall Show-Starring Arsenio Hall, 13 febbraio 2006
Author: rcj5365 da Durham,North Carolina
If someone were to come up to you on the street and asked you this question.......Who is Arsenio Hall?
At one time this man had one of the hippest and brightest talk show in the history of late night television and also to make a point here that he was the ONLY African-American entertainer to accomplished such a feat during a period between the 1980's and 1990's when Johnny Carson was the undisputed ruler of the "late night talk-show circuit",and to put in this same category David Lettermen and also Ted Koppel,who had a news magazine show during the late-night hour.
Say what you want about Arsenio Hall,since his show was a not to be missed and for one "The Arsenio Hall Show"(Syndicated:1989-1994)was the coolest show ever made,and righteously so. I remember watching Arsenio Hall when it first premiered in 1989 and from the first episode it really took off since at the time "The Arsenio Hall Show" debuted after "The Joan Rivers Show",and "Late Night Starring Chevy Chase" were dismal failures. For the six years that it ran in syndication,Arsenio Hall was riding the wave of popularity and the explosion of "hip-hop" culture and "trends" was about to follow. He did however struck a chord with the youth of America since Arsenio show was just about as good as it got and then some. However,a large percentage that were watching the show were younger people since for the first two seasons(between the years 1989 and 1991),"The Arsenio Hall Show" was the hottest show on the planet and within its first season(1989-1990)it dethroned Johnny Carson off the top spot of the late night supermacy. It was during the first two seasons the show was akin to that of the first years of Saturday Night Live. People stopped everything to what they were doing and watch--there were parties centered around the show and there was excitement in the air as well since the next day people would gather around the water cooler to discuss about last night's show and to eventually think about what Arsenio will do next or for matter something in between. A prime example of one episode I do recall was when Arsenio had a special guest or mystery guest to surprise the crowd and then something else would come in and really get the crowd jumping! It was between the years of 1989 and 1991 that were the best Arsenio Hall had since he was the Number One late night talk show in America. Then the unexpected happen. Let's face it,Arsenio Hall did what Johnny Carson,David Lettermen,Jay Leno,and even Conan O'Brien couldn't do...bring a hip audience with hip appeal to the youth of America! And secondly,history was being made too since Arsenio Hall became the ONLY black entertainer to successfully host his own weekly late-night talk show,and his own program which was something other African-Americans did as well like Keenan Ivory-Wayans,Flip Wilson or to an lesser extent Nat King Cole!
The show took chances that NO ONE else dared to do but Arsenio Hall! Several moments were excellent here including a daring saxophone player who was the governor of Arkansas who went on to become the President Of The United States(William Jefferson Clinton). Bill Clinton won the presidency in 1992 because he dethroned Bush and kept it real and keeping in touch with the youth of America thanks to Arsenio Hall!!! The other? When The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan,Leader Of The Nation Of Islam came on Arsenio's show when no one else dared to get him for an interview and eventually appeared on national television!! The same can be said for Reverend Jesse Jackson and also for Reverend and activist Al Sharpton. The show was a launching pad for up and coming comedians as well including George Wallace and Bernie Mac not to mention Chris Rock and others that became famous thanks to Arsenio Hall! Not to mention on the same category aspiring actors and actresses who would go on to much bigger and better thanks to Arsenio Hall! There were some funny moments as well too.
As far as music was concerned,it was so much that "The Arsenio Hall Show" did for entertainers on a URBAN scale and it featured some of the best R&B acts and not to mention "hip-hop" acts of all time! He also had other acts as well that consisted of many musical fields including several bands that made their appearances of his show when the "grunge" era of rock music was about to explode upon the youth of America. Many of these performers were on Arsenio Hall's show when NO ONE else like The Tonight Show,David Lettermen or Conan O'Brien wouldn't let them in the door! Nor for that manner wouldn't have them!
During the years 1991 to 1994,the show suffered a decline and in the ratings as well since the pop culture was changing at a rapid pace leaving Arsenio Hall behind. America quickly lost interest in the program and other shows of the time were making jokes about Arsenio which to this day he doesn't like. The show was also a political hotbed for topics and issues which killed the show's good ratings. The ratings really started to slip during the O.J. Simpson trial and not to mention the wake of the riots that engulf Los Angeles,California during the show's 1992-1993 season. During that time Arsenio turned his show into a "Phil Donahue" type forum on inner city problems,and I do recalled that one episode of his show during an discussing of this got really ugly and it was during a taping with a live audience. This is when the show got worst and from their his audience was deserting him. Because of this,the show was pushed back into a later time slot and from there the final episode of "The Arsenio Hall Show" came to an end in May of 1994,after an astounding six year run in syndication.
Add another comment
Related Links