Like his Worldwide Pants Incorporated boss David Letterman, Ferguson’s Late, Late Show doesn’t tape on Fridays, so in his first opportunity to address (or not) the scandal, he took a funny, purposely awkward approach that teased the potential for more down the road.
“The person you admire and respect is caught in an embarrassing situation. And your job is to be funny about that – whilst trying to keep your own job.”
As Ferguson slowly strolled into frame, avoiding eye contact for effect, the audience started laughing and cheering. “I guess by now you’ve all figured out how I got the job,” he said.
He explained the conundrum like this: “The person you admire and respect is caught in an embarrassing situation. And your job is to be funny about that – whilst trying to keep your own job.”
Throughout the entire, fairly
He continued the theme of a tacit defense of Letterman, as he described his preference for his entertainers to be “dangerous.” But that didn’t stop him from concluding he would be only doing his job if he were to poke fun at the situation. He closed with this:
Let me just say this. I have enjoyed working here. And I’m going to do my darnedest to stay here. But if I inadvertently say something which gets me fired, then I hope it was funny.
We’ll see if Ferguson goes back to the well for more – in the very next segment he putting in joking asides about the case again. As an employee, as well as an entertainer (and one whose popularity is on the rise), it will be fine line to walk.
One other joke from earlier in the monologue: Describing Letterman as the “king of late night television,” Ferguson said, “Unless you believe the NBC press
Here’s the monologue:
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