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Conan Staffers’ Parents Give Tips On Improving The Show | CONAN on TBS

Team Coco | November 12, 2025



Conan calls staffers’ parents to get tips on how to improve the show.

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Airing weeknights since 2010, CONAN on TBS is home to topical monologues, remote segments, celebrity interviews, musical performances and stand-up from the top comedians in the world. Watch highlights, outtakes and behind the scenes footage of Conan palling around with sidekick Andy Richter, tormenting Associate Producer Jordan Schlansky and playing the latest video games on Clueless Gamer.

ABOUT TEAM COCO
Team Coco is the YouTube home for all things Conan O’Brien and the Team Coco Podcast Network. Team Coco features over 25 years of comedy sketches, celebrity interviews and stand-up comedy sets from CONAN on TBS and Late Night with Conan O’Brien, as well as exclusive videos from podcasts like Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend, Literally! with Rob Lowe, Why Won’t You Date Me? with Nicole Byer, The Three Questions with Andy Richter, May I Elaborate? with JB Smoove and Scam Goddess with Laci Mosley.

Conan Staffers’ Parents Give Tips On Improving The Show | CONAN on TBS
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Written by Team Coco

Comments

This post currently has 47 comments.

  1. @ernievc

    November 12, 2025 at 7:35 am

    The dent Conan left on that wall when he threw that chair has haunted me ever since I watched this clip… I wonder if they ever fixed it lol

  2. @AussiePat79

    November 12, 2025 at 7:35 am

    Conan O'Brien was truly the last of the great late-night hosts. He stood at the end of a golden lineage, a weird, brilliant, self-deprecating genius who carried the torch handed down from Johnny Carson, David Letterman, and yes, even Jay Leno.

    Carson was the king. Cool, unflappable, and perfectly timed.
    Letterman was the rebel. Dry, ironic, and inventively offbeat.
    Leno, for all the criticism he got, was a crowd-pleaser who understood the rhythm of the format and kept it steady through decades.

    Then came Conan. A Harvard-educated comedy writer with a towering sense of absurdity and a heart big enough to wear his own pain as a punchline. He respected the format but never let it cage him. He turned awkwardness into art, made silliness feel smart, and left every interview feeling like a shared inside joke.

    But after Conan, it all changed.

    Now we’ve got Jimmy Fallon, a smiling karaoke machine who laughs harder than anyone else in the room just to keep things moving.
    Jimmy Kimmel, once edgy and unpredictable, now tears up on cue every time some political headline hurts his feelings. The man cries more than his guests, then smugly settles back into his desk like he did something brave.
    Stephen Colbert, once a satire god, now preaches so hard it’s like he forgot he was ever funny.

    Late night used to be weird, risky, and spontaneous. Now it’s packaged, branded, algorithm-friendly content pretending to be comedy.
    It used to surprise you. Now it just tries to go viral.

    Conan wasn’t perfect. But he was real. He was weird. He was willing to fail spectacularly just to find something truly funny.
    He could go from a mime fight to a string dance to a dead-serious, heartfelt goodbye, and it all felt honest.

    We didn’t just lose a host. We lost the last late-night show that had a soul.

  3. @elroyblackbean

    November 12, 2025 at 7:35 am

    September budget line items:
    $7,892: new rolling office chairs
    $8,251: drywall repair
    $750,000: emotional distress lawsuit settlements
    $25: New answering machine with 4-ring auto pickup option

  4. @Eidlones

    November 12, 2025 at 7:35 am

    Willing to bet he did the chair throw as a way to force them to get new chairs, by way of comedy skit. Destroying them through a skit is just cost of business, whereas if they were to ask the company for new chairs, it'd probly get rejected.

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