The program was taped at NBC Studio 6B in the
GE Building at 30 Rockefeller Center in
New York City, the original home of
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, until August 2013. In September 2013, the show moved to an identically-recreated set across the hall in Studio 6A, so that 6B could be remodeled for the
return of The Tonight Show to New York in 2014. Studio 6A is the studio from which
Late Night had been broadcast during the Letterman and O'Brien eras, while 6B had housed the
WNBC News 4 New York studios since Carson moved his show to
Burbank, California, in 1972. The show's
house band was
hip hop/
neo soul band
The Roots, It was produced by
Lorne Michaels'
Broadway Video in association with NBC's television arm
Universal Television (although copyright notices for Late Night, like select NBC Programming, read "© (year) NBC Studios, Inc".). Tapings began at 5:30 p.m. for same-day broadcast; audiences arrived as much as 90 minutes in advance, which allowed for
warm-up by a staff member ("try to find everything funnier than normal"); in between guests, Fallon recorded custom promotional clips for the NBC
affiliates.
Online presence The incorporation of the Internet was an innovation decided long before the show began. Highlighting interactivity, Fallon dove into the Web prior to the show premiering, creating a
Twitter account and beginning a
vlog on the show's official website, which ran snippets of comedy bits and background reports on how he was building the show. "The Internet has been awesome," he added. "They've got my back." Online interaction and its presence on the show were crucial to its success. Fallon devoted considerable time and resources to incorporating digital ideas into his comedy—"he sits at his desk behind a
Mac, not a microphone"—focusing especially on social media, which connects the younger audience. Fallon published a welcome video for the
Late Night YouTube Channel in May 2013; the channel featured segments such as "Ask Jimmy," "Night News Now," and "Web Exclusives." Many of the videos received a very high number of views, including the ""#Hashtag" with Jimmy Fallon & Justin Timberlake" clip that had garnered over 17 million views by October 21, 2013. During the open letter controversy between musical artists
Miley Cyrus and
Sinéad O'Connor, the channel published an
a cappella version of Cyrus' song "
We Can't Stop" on October 8, 2013, in which Fallon and The Roots also perform.
Music Music was a signature part of the humor of
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. Fallon employed impressions of celebrities and used song parodies that rest in "borderline-surreal pop cultural juxtapositions," such as Fallon impersonating
Neil Young singing the theme to
The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. Some of
Late Night most famous musical moments included
Paul McCartney joining Fallon to sing "Scrambled Eggs"—the working title of "
Yesterday"—using the original whimsical filler lyrics, as well as
President Barack Obama's appearance to "Slow Jam the News." In 2012, the musical pieces were compiled together as a primetime NBC special, aptly titled ''Jimmy Fallon's Primetime Music Special
, and remastered for the album Blow Your Pants Off''. The show received widespread acclaim for its musical performances, which ranged from superstars such as
Bruce Springsteen,
Beyoncé and
Kanye West to up-and-comers such as
Lorde,
Kendrick Lamar and
Ed Sheeran, all of whom made their network TV debuts on
Late Night. Fallon was heavily involved in choosing the musical guests, in tandem with music booker
Jonathan Cohen and Roots bandleader
Questlove. Other artists who made their network TV debuts on
Late Night include:
Frank Ocean,
Kacey Musgraves,
Florida Georgia Line,
Macklemore & Ryan Lewis,
Carly Rae Jepsen,
Odd Future,
Eric Church,
Panda Bear,
Gary Clark Jr.,
Chvrches,
Grimes,
Sun Kil Moon,
Sky Ferreira,
Disclosure and
Sam Smith,
Jake Owen,
Of Monsters and Men,
The Dismemberment Plan,
M83,
Ellie Goulding,
2 Chainz,
A$AP Rocky,
Tame Impala,
Beach House,
Walk the Moon,
The War on Drugs,
Phantogram,
Savages,
Joey Badass,
Unknown Mortal Orchestra,
Parquet Courts,
Sharon Van Etten,
Courtney Barnett,
Pinback,
Frightened Rabbit and
Passion Pit.
Late Night featured a number of legendary and cult-classic acts who had not performed on American television in many years. In 2009, the show reunited influential Washington, D.C.–based post-punk group
Jawbox for its first performance in 12 years. Other artists of this type who broke long hiatuses from American TV performances on
Late Night included
The Specials (30 years),
The Cars (24 years),
Big Audio Dynamite (21 years),
Mazzy Star (19 years),
Superchunk (16 years),
Sunny Day Real Estate (15 years),
Pulp (14 years),
Portishead (13 years) and
the Afghan Whigs (13 years). Swedish rock band
Refused also made its American TV debut 13 years after its original breakup when it performed in July 2012 on the show. The show broke ground with thematic music-centric weeks, including tributes to
The Rolling Stones,
Bob Marley,
Pink Floyd and
Pearl Jam, during which high-profile contemporary artists covered those bands' songs. In March 2013,
Late Night devoted a full week to
Justin Timberlake, during which Timberlake performed music from his then-new album
The 20/20 Experience on five consecutive shows and appeared in a different comedy sketch during each show. ==Reception==