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Fallon's arrival sets in motion a carefully arranged host shift at NBC. O'Brien, who took over "Late Night" from its original host, David Letterman, in 1993, is now devoting full time to prepping his version of the Los Angeles-based "Tonight" show, where he will replace Jay Leno in June. Then, come fall, Leno will return to the air with a new weeknight prime-time hour airing at 10 p.m. An hour before Fallon's premiere Monday, CBS' "Late Show with David Letterman" kicked off a full week of appearances by the superstar band U2. Besides performing a new song, U2's four members also pitched in for some comedy. Letterman said viewers shouldn't just think "these are pretty-boy rock
'n' rollers." They're willing to help however they're needed, he said as the camera switched to a shot of U2 shoveling snow outside the Ed Sullivan Theater. Fallon also found humor in the wintry weather during his debut monologue as he joked about opening-night jitters. "New York City was hit with a huge snowstorm," he noted, "and I woke up this morning and said,
'Please, let it be a snow day! Please!'" But that was clearly a joke. Considering his level of enthusiasm, it would have taken a full-scale blizzard, at the least, to keep him off the air. ___ On the Net:
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