Letterman Top Ten: David Letterman’s final 'Top Ten List', The last point for the rundown was "Things I've Always Wanted to Say to Dave," and stars swung out to at long last impart their musings to Dave. Every number originated from an alternate VIP, drawing Bill Murray, Tina Fey, Chris Rock, Peyton Manning, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Jim Carrey, Jerry Seinfeld, Steve Martin, Barbara Walters, and Alec Baldwin.
There were numerous champions, including Manning, who told Letterman, "You are to drama what I am to satire."
Here is the full transcript of David Letterman's last Top Ten rundown.
Alec Baldwin: "Of all the syndicated programs, yours is the most geologically helpful to my home."
Barbara Walters: "Did you realize that you wear the same cologne as Muammar Qaddafi?"
Steve Martin: "Your broad plastic surgery was a need and a slip-up."
Jerry Seinfeld: "I have no clue what I'll do when you go off the air … You know, I just considered something– I'll be fine."
Jim Carrey: "Genuinely, Dave, I've generally discovered you to be a touch of an over-performer."
Chris Rock: "I'm simply happy your show is being given to another white fellow."
Julia Louis-Dreyfus: "Much obliged for giving me a chance to partake in another tremendously baffling arrangement finale."
Peyton Manning: "You are to comic drama what I am to parody."
Tina Fey: "Much obliged for at last demonstrating men can be entertaining."
Bill Murray: "I'll never have the cash I owe you."
David Letterman had a lot he could call his own amusing minute in his Late Show sendoff, which was loaded with big name visitors, old clasps, and off camera takes a gander at the individuals who set up the show together. Letterman had one of the best lines amid his monolog.
"It's starting to appear as though I'm not getting The Tonight Show," he jested, referencing the warmed fight back in the mid 1990s to supplant Johnny Carson, work inevitably given to Jay Leno.
Another highlight was the last Top Ten rundown. The rundown itself had a fascinating source. A while ago when the show was on NBC, the journalists were attempting to concoct a repeating bit for Letterman, and head author Steve O'Donnell said they needed to parody a percentage of the ludicrous records included in New York papers as fil...
There were numerous champions, including Manning, who told Letterman, "You are to drama what I am to satire."
Here is the full transcript of David Letterman's last Top Ten rundown.
Alec Baldwin: "Of all the syndicated programs, yours is the most geologically helpful to my home."
Barbara Walters: "Did you realize that you wear the same cologne as Muammar Qaddafi?"
Steve Martin: "Your broad plastic surgery was a need and a slip-up."
Jerry Seinfeld: "I have no clue what I'll do when you go off the air … You know, I just considered something– I'll be fine."
Jim Carrey: "Genuinely, Dave, I've generally discovered you to be a touch of an over-performer."
Chris Rock: "I'm simply happy your show is being given to another white fellow."
Julia Louis-Dreyfus: "Much obliged for giving me a chance to partake in another tremendously baffling arrangement finale."
Peyton Manning: "You are to comic drama what I am to parody."
Tina Fey: "Much obliged for at last demonstrating men can be entertaining."
Bill Murray: "I'll never have the cash I owe you."
David Letterman had a lot he could call his own amusing minute in his Late Show sendoff, which was loaded with big name visitors, old clasps, and off camera takes a gander at the individuals who set up the show together. Letterman had one of the best lines amid his monolog.
"It's starting to appear as though I'm not getting The Tonight Show," he jested, referencing the warmed fight back in the mid 1990s to supplant Johnny Carson, work inevitably given to Jay Leno.
Another highlight was the last Top Ten rundown. The rundown itself had a fascinating source. A while ago when the show was on NBC, the journalists were attempting to concoct a repeating bit for Letterman, and head author Steve O'Donnell said they needed to parody a percentage of the ludicrous records included in New York papers as fil...

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