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'Larry King Live' Ends After 25 Years On CNN (VIDEO)

Larryking

AP/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 12/16/10 08:44 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:20 PM ET

NEW YORK -- Two presidents, four television news anchors and a 10-year-old son who looked ready to take dad's place behind the microphone turned out to bid Larry King farewell as he pulled the curtain down on his CNN talk show Thursday after 25 years.

King, 77, was serenaded by Tony Bennett singing "The Best is Yet to Come" via remote from Louisiana.

King had announced this summer he would leave, ushered out by a struggling network. Once the dominant voice in cable television news, King has faded in a sea of sharp talkers. British talk-show host and "America's Got Talent" judge Piers Morgan takes over the 9 p.m. Eastern time slot in January.

"You're not going to see me go away, but you're not going to see me on this set anymore," King said. "I don't know what to say except to you, my audience, thank you, and instead of goodbye, how about so long?"

Except for an agreement to host four specials a year at CNN, it's not clear what his work future holds. He's talked of doing comedy, or going back to some radio work.

A parade of guests stopped by, including news anchors Katie Couric, Diane Sawyer, Barbara Walters and Brian Williams, who were in CNN's New York studio. President Barack Obama delivered a taped message, and former President Bill Clinton made his 29th appearance on the show, via remote from Little Rock, Ark.

WATCH KING'S SIGN-OFF:

"You say that all you do is ask questions," Obama said. "But for generations of Americans, the answers to these questions have surprised us, they've informed us, and they've opened our eyes to the world beyond our living rooms."

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger appeared to thank King for moving his show from Washington to Los Angeles, and to declare it "Larry King Day" in his state.

King's wife Shawn and sons Chance and Cannon appeared on set. Chance, in particular, injected some levity with a dead-on impersonation of his father, including the Brooklyn accent.

King has conducted some 50,000 interviews in a broadcasting career where he worked for decades in radio before joining CNN in 1985. He's recorded more than 6,000 shows for CNN.

Before Fox News Channel and MSNBC even existed, King was cable news' top-rated program. Politicians, entertainers, leaders of industry and the faces of news stories hot in the moment all sat across the table from King. Some critics said he often seemed ill-prepared and tossed softballs, while King described his style as "minimalist," with the goal of getting his guests to talk.

Fred Armisen of "Saturday Night Live" delivered a King impersonation - Larry interviewing Larry - dressed in the same bright red suspenders and polka dot tie. Armisen's "Larry" asked what question King had asked more than any other. King replied: "Why?"

"The best question of all is `why?' because it can't be answered in one word and it forces people to think," he said.

On the bottom of the screen, CNN ran messages from friends and celebrities like, "Jenny McCarthy: I'll miss your sexy ass."

Despite the evident warmth, there were some cringe-worthy moments that indicated the time was right for King to exit.

Regis Philbin appeared and sang two lines of a song, expecting King to pick up on it and join him, but King was stumped. Dr. Phil was cut off, almost in mid-sentence, because King said time was too short. The Clinton interview was marred with uncomfortable silences and talk-overs because there was a brief delay in what King said and what Clinton could hear.

King referred to Clinton, without explanation, as a fellow member of the "zipper club," and the control room had to prevail upon the host to explain a few minutes later that it was a reference to the fact both men had undergone open heart surgery.

"I'm glad you clarified that!" Clinton said to King, who has had seven wives.

King was joined at his table by Ryan Seacrest and Bill Maher, who have both filled in for King during breaks in the past. Maher tried not to let the show quickly become maudlin.

"This is not Larry's funeral," he said. "He's hopefully going to be in our living rooms for a lot of years to come. This is the end of a show, not the end of a man."

Rival MSNBC saluted King by buying an ad in USA Today on Thursday, calling King "one of a kind." "Larry, thank you for everything you've done to advance cable news," the ad read.

Others were less nostalgic: The Los Angeles Times website posted videos of King's most embarrassing moments, including when he asked an incredulous Jerry Seinfeld whether NBC had canceled his top-rated comedy.

It's been a muted exit for King, with CNN touting Morgan's upcoming show in ads more than King's. Even as the end neared, King finished fourth in his time slot for Tuesday's interview with the Judds, behind Fox News Channel's Sean Hannity, MSNBC's Rachel Maddow and CNN sister network HLN's Joy Behar. King interviewed Barbra Streisand on Wednesday night.

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NEW YORK -- Two presidents, four television news anchors and a 10-year-old son who looked ready to take dad's place behind the microphone turned out to bid Larry King farewell as he pulled the curtain...
NEW YORK -- Two presidents, four television news anchors and a 10-year-old son who looked ready to take dad's place behind the microphone turned out to bid Larry King farewell as he pulled the curtain...
 
 
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mybostonjack
Vision over visibility.
04:23 PM on 12/20/2010
The only thing I liked that King did was the voice of Doris in Shrek.
05:29 AM on 12/19/2010
when interviewing, he sure read his pre-written notes well

well, sort of.
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stoneythecattledog
08:44 AM on 12/18/2010
It wasn't the hair, not the glasses, and not even the suspenders... that light-bright studio set freaked me out a bit, it would remind me of those original Star Trek episodes I watched as a child. Seriously, though, what I admired about King was how he could get anybody, and I mean anybody, to open up and lay it all out there. Now that's an art and that's what made him the great interviewer that he was.
dela21
I was born a winner!!
05:58 PM on 12/17/2010
So long Larry, I will miss you!
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Zacky Ahmed
Astro-physics, Science, Politics
05:18 PM on 12/17/2010
I would like this opportunity

to Thank Larry King for all his work, and for being so great interviewer

seriously in a time where, every host got their biased interviews,

it is one of the last neutral interviewer who will go away now

what a tear jerker.
04:45 PM on 12/17/2010
Larry King retiring from his show? Yeah right. Just like Tom Brokow and many others, Larry
will always be on TV. He will continue to interview other washed up celebreties like Brokow
and the rest.
04:34 PM on 12/17/2010
For all the comments and my own personal opinion about his inability to interview, as I watched last night, I kept going back to one thought: At least he is alive to hear all of the kudos, and it was done now and not after he wasn't around to hear it. The "fade to black" was for the show, not his life.
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KJLSanDiego
04:09 PM on 12/17/2010
It's amazing what the right haircut and frames can do!
He looks better now than when he started!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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04:02 PM on 12/17/2010
Poor programming such as his show was one of the reasons why I stopped watching television. I'm going to bet he's not going to be replaced by anything interesting.
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RusStyles
03:37 PM on 12/17/2010
Give the man his props...Nobody stays on the air for 25 years, especially in this over-saturated media market, if they don't perform. And how many times he's been married is totally irrelevant to his job performance, unless his talk show specialized in: How To Maintain a Successful Marriage.
03:14 PM on 12/17/2010
He can always join the circus. There's an opening on the midway in the freak show for a Human Frog.
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CHARLESTHETENTH
03:04 PM on 12/17/2010
Good riddance to a most dysfunctional man. Married more times that you can count fingers on one hand and his demeanor....long on sweetness...short on temper...abrupt with the public..Won't be missed that much....by some maybe...those that watch interviews with no substance and don't give a hoot about his personal life. Geez, couldn't he afford more than a pair of jeans and suspenders ?? My be his trademark or he may be a scrooge...but Jeans look better on the younger set.not so well on a man his age...
03:20 PM on 12/17/2010
"short on temper" "abrupt with the public" -- are you referring to his favorite phrase that was sometimes parodied by comedians (before he himself became a parody), "what's the question?!" to the callers?

As he has explained in the past: the GUEST is the guest, the caller is not the guest, the caller does not get to opine and hold forth, it is a courtesy to other successive callers for earlier callers to get to the point of their questions and/or comments. Yes, it was harsh. But, he was being a good on-air traffic cop.
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julbar
07:12 PM on 12/19/2010
Booo.. party pooper.. He was in a class of his own.. like him or not.
02:32 PM on 12/17/2010
(cont'd from previous post due to word limit.)

He had heart surgery and was absent from the CNN show. I remember Rona Barrett filling in. Thankfully, one day he reappeared back as the host: "This is Larry King, filling in for Rona Barrett" with a deadpan smirk to camera.

I stopped watching mainly because the show started having multiple guests in one hour, instead of a single guest/single topic. The show started to take on an "Entertainment Tonight" flavor. Larry lapped it up; he no longer had to struggle. Just one performance per day and you're raking in millions. He jumped the shark when he appeared on Philadelphia TV with his fiance Julie and so smitten. They were going to marry. Days later, the wedding was abruptly off. He lost credibility with me. Whatever I learned from his show earlier stayed, but he was no longer worth following. This was probably sometime during the Clinton years, when I questioned my gravitation towards the Left as a result of my emotional reaction to some of the legislative failures and dishonor of Presidents [sic] Clinton.

(Off topic: I resolve to not go wobbly on Obama as I had with Bill Clinton - that only got for ALL of us a "lost decade" as a result of the most dramatic example to my memory of right-wing judicial activism and voter disenfranchisement that overrode states' rights and put Bush Jr into office.)
02:21 PM on 12/17/2010
(cont'd from previous post due to word limit)

This was in Syracuse, and I would listen to WSYR, 570 AM if I'm not mistaken. I learned about American patriotism, Brooklyn-style, from his stories about his youth. How "Nathan's" was a local hot dog joint at Coney Island.

He frequently to his callers and listeners explained that he never considered himself a "journalist" but an "entertainer". He was not obligated to observe the Fairness Doctrine as an entertainer, but made it a point to do so anyway in order to set a personal standard. His guests complimented him on being given the mike to make or break their own case as they saw fit. His philosophy was that if you randomly tuned in to this radio show not knowing he was on, you should always find yourself listening to the guest, as opposed to the host. Same for TV - if you flipped channels to find yourself watching the TV show, you should always catch the camera on the guest, not the host.

The CNN TV show was a HUGE deal at the time. Finally got his due as America's interviewer. Rest is history. However, I couldn't watch talking heads. Commercial breaks distracted from the flow. Don't know why ads on radio were not so distracting. Also, TV was public/communal - everyone in the house had to watch and that was not the case usually. Just easier to focus on the radio. And the TV show went downhill over time.
02:13 PM on 12/17/2010
Started listening to his Mutual Radio show in the early 1980s. Gave me an appreciation of considering current events outside of what would now be called the MSM. I was in high school at the time. His radio show went from midnight to 5 AM, all live. 1 hour of interviews with a single guest (or team/duo/ etc.), followed by 2 hours or "open phones" call-in questions for the guest/s, followed by 2 more hours of open phone on any topic between the caller and Larry. I was mesmerized by the "real world" appeal of the show instead of what I was supposed to be learning in school in my senior year in high school. Now I feel I got political awareness, alternative education and appreciation for learning regardless. I would be in bed with an earphone, while pretending to be asleep.

I got a dose of thoughtful comments as a counterpoint to the fawning TV coverage of the 1980s "greed is good" giddiness. Larry's loyalty to the Democrats was responsible for my move to the Left. And it was a needed balance to my impressionable mind of the Reaganism of the time. I learned to tune out the TV news during those years after learning about the White House stagecraft that the Reagan Administration implemented. And of course, Frank Reynolds, Max Robinson and the like were soon superceded by with more "corporate" type newsreaders showing canned viewpoints from political operatives.