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"I don't think there is any truth to the rumors," he went on, referring to his frontrunner status in the ratings when NBC took him off "The Tonight Show." "See, it's always been my experience that NBC only cancels you when you're in first place," Leno cracked. "So we are fine. We are OK." O'Brien, who has attracted a smaller if younger audience than Leno did as "Tonight" host, made no mention of the scuttlebutt in his monologue. On Thursday, the rumors surrounding Leno's fate left industry analyst Shari Anne Brill mystified. "For me, the big question is what is going to happen at 10 p.m. going forward," Brill said, "because that's a critical time period to promote the late local news, and it was the affiliates' dissatisfaction with their lower audience numbers that was the catalyst for speculation on this purported move (for Leno) into late-night." "The unsolved mystery is what happens at 10 p.m." said Brill of Carat USA. What sparked Thursday's flurry of Web reports was unclear, but coincided with reports this week that NBC has as many as 18 pilots for prospective new series
-- presumably more than would be needed to replenish a prime-time schedule for a network that expected to continue filling five hours weekly with Leno's show. The speculation may also be a run-up to the winter Television Critics Association meeting, which begins this weekend in Pasadena. At this annual conclave, network programming initiatives are unveiled for media reporters. In turn, reporters have a forum to grill network brass on programming questions. NBC's session is scheduled for Sunday. ___ On the Net:
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