List of years in poetry and The Late Late Show (American talk show): Difference between pages

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{{for|The Late Late Show shown in Ireland|The Late Late Show}}
This page gives a chronological '''list of years in poetry''' (descending order). These pages supplement the [[List of years in literature]] pages with a focus on events in the history of poetry.
{{for|the current incarnation of this show on CBS|The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson}}
{{infobox television |
| show_name = The Late Late Show
| image = <!-- Commented out because image was deleted: [[Image:late late show craig.jpg|''The Late Late Show'' title shot.]] -->
| caption =
| format = [[Talk show]], [[variety show]]
| location = [[CBS Television City]]<br>
[[Los Angeles, California]]
| runtime = 60 minutes per episode
| rating = {{TV-14}}
| creator = [[David Letterman]]
| starring = [[Craig Ferguson]]<br>(2004&ndash;present)<br>[[Craig Kilborn]]<br>(1999&ndash;2004)<br>[[Tom Snyder]]<br>(1995&ndash;1999)
| country = {{USA}}
| network = [[CBS]]
| first_aired = [[January 9]], [[1995]]
| last_aired = present
| num_episodes = 2,578 (as of [[October 27]], [[2007]])
| website = http://www.cbs.com/latenight/latelate/
| imdb_id = 0437729
| tv_com_id = 22830
|}}
'''''The Late Late Show''''' is an [[United States|American]] late-night television talk and variety show currently hosted by [[Craig Ferguson]] on [[CBS]]. The show was greatly inspired by the Irish '''''Late Late Show'''''. It immediately follows ''[[Late Show with David Letterman]]'' and is produced by Letterman's [[Worldwide Pants Incorporated]] in [[CBS Television City]]. The program dates to 1995, and has had three permanent hosts.


Occasionally, the show is split into 15- and 45-minute segments when CBS airs a daily late night highlight show for either [[The Masters]], other [[PGA Tour]] events with rights owned by CBS, or [[tennis]]' [[U.S. Open (tennis)|U.S. Open]]. The show then has a monologue to start, followed by sports highlights, and then the guest segments.
{| align="right"

| __TOC__
==Hosts==
{| class="wikitable"
! Host !! From !! To !! Number of Shows
|-
| [[Tom Snyder]] || [[January 9]], [[1995]] || [[March 26]], [[1999]] || 777
|-
| [[Craig Kilborn]] || [[March 29]], [[1999]] || [[December 31]], [[2004]] || 1,190
|-
| [[Craig Ferguson]] || [[January 3]], [[2005]] || Present || 680 (as of May 2008){{update after|2008|8|1}}
|}
|}


==Tom Snyder era (1995&ndash;1999)==
==[[21st century in poetry]]==
=== 2000s ===
* '''[[2009 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[2008 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Jonathan Williams (poet)|Jonathan Williams]], [[American poet]], [[publisher]] and founder of [[The Jargon Society]]
* '''[[2007 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Emmett Williams]], [[American poetry|American poet]], known for [[concrete poetry]]
* '''[[2006 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Stanley Kunitz]], former [[Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress|U.S. Poet Laureate]]
* '''[[2005 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Philip Lamantia]], [[Beat Generation]] [[American poetry|American poet]]; - [[Robert Creeley]], [[American poetry|American poet]] of the [[Black Mountain poets|Black Mountain School]]
* '''[[2004 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Jackson Mac Low]], [[avant-garde]] [[American poetry|American poet]]
* '''[[2003 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[2002 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Kenneth Koch]], [[New York School]] [[American poetry|American poet]]
* '''[[2001 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Gregory Corso]], [[Beat Generation]] [[American poetry|American poet]]
* '''[[2000 in poetry]]'''


Tom Snyder hosted the program from its inception in January 1995 until March of 1999. The choice of Snyder as host was apparently made by [[David Letterman]], whose contract with CBS gave him the power to produce the show in the timeslot immediately after his own program.
==[[20th century in poetry]]==
=== 1990s ===
* '''[[1999 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Edward Dorn]], [[American poetry|American poet]] of the [[Black Mountain poets|Black Mountain School]]
* '''[[1998 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Ted Hughes]], [[English poetry|English poet]] and British Poet Laureate; - [[Octavio Paz]], [[Mexican literature|Mexican poet, writer]], diplomat, and winner of the 1990 [[Nobel Prize in Literature]]
* '''[[1997 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Allen Ginsberg]] prominent [[Beat Generation]] [[American poetry|American poet]]; - [[James Dickey]], [[American poetry|American poet]] and novelist; - [[Denise Levertov]], [[American poetry|American poet]]; - [[David Ignatow]], [[American poetry|American poet]] and editor; - [[James Laughlin]], [[American poetry|American poet]], and publisher; - [[William Matthews (poet)|William Matthews]], [[American poetry|American poet]] and essayist; - [[William Burroughs]], prominent [[Beat Generation]] [[American literature|American author]]
* '''[[1996 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Joseph Brodsky]], [[Russian poetry|Russian]]-[[American poetry|American poet]], essayist, and winner of the [[Nobel Prize in Literature]]
* '''[[1995 in poetry]]''' Death of [[May Sarton]], [[American poetry|American poet]]; - [[Sir Stephen Spender]] [[Order of British Empire|CBE]], [[English poetry|English poet]]; - [[David Avidan]], prominent [[avant-garde]] Israeli poet
* '''[[1994 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Charles Bukowski]], [[American poetry|American poet]] and novelist
* '''[[1993 in poetry]]''' [[Maya Angelou]] reads ''"On the Pulse of Morning"'' at the inauguration of [[President Bill Clinton]]
* '''[[1992 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1991 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Dr. Seuss]], [[American poetry|American poet]] prominent author of children's verse; - [[James Schuyler]], [[American poetry|American poet]] of the [[New York School]]; - [[Howard Nemerov]], former [[Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress|U.S. Poet Laureate]]
* '''[[1990 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Lawrence Durrell]], [[English poetry|English novelist, poet, dramatist]]


Letterman and Snyder had a long history together: a 1978 ''[[The Tomorrow Show|Tomorrow]]'' episode hosted by Snyder was almost exclusively devoted to a long interview with up-and-coming new comedy talents Letterman, [[Billy Crystal]] and [[Merrill Markoe]]. And in 1982, when ''Tomorrow'' was canceled by NBC, Letterman took over Snyder's timeslot with his own NBC show ''[[Late Night with David Letterman]]''. Because of this, some have speculated that Letterman simply wanted to give Snyder -- whom he had long idolized -- another chance in the late night arena, as a sort of repayment of an old debt.{{Fact|date=June 2007}}
=== 1980s ===
* '''[[1989 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Samuel Beckett]], [[Irish poetry|Irish poet]], playwright and novelist who won the [[Nobel Prize]] in [[1969 in poetry|1969]]; - [[Robert Penn Warren]], [[American poetry|American poet, and writer]], former [[Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress|U.S. Poet Laureate]]; - [[May Swenson]], [[American poetry|American poet]] and playwright
* '''[[1988 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Miguel Piñero]], [[Puerto Rico|Puerto Rican]] [[playwright]], [[poet]], and co-founder of the [[Nuyorican Poets Cafe]]; [[Robert Duncan]], [[American poetry|American poet]] identified with the [[New American Poetry]] and [[Black Mountain poets]].
* '''[[1987 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1986 in poetry]]''' Death of [[John Ciardi]], [[American poetry|American poet]], [[translation|translator]], and [[etymologist]].
* '''[[1985 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Robert Graves]], [[English poetry|English poet and writer]].
* '''[[1984 in poetry]]''' Death of [[George Oppen]], [[American poetry|American poet]], member of the [[Objectivist poets|Objectivist]] group of poets.
* '''[[1983 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Ted Berrigan]], [[American poetry|American poet]]; - [[Edwin Denby (poet)|Edwin Denby]], [[American poetry|American poet]] and dance critic.
* '''[[1982 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Kenneth Rexroth]], [[Beat Generation]] [[American poetry|American poet]]; - [[Archibald MacLeish]], [[American poetry|American poet, writer]] and the [[Librarian of Congress]], associated with the [[modernism|modernist]] school of poetry; - [[Djuna Barnes]], [[American poetry|American poet, writer]], pioneer of the [[modernism|modernist]] school of writing
* '''[[1981 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1980 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Muriel Rukeyser]], [[American poetry|American poet]]


Snyder's show featured a mix of celebrities, politicians and other newsmakers, but was otherwise quite unlike the program hosted by Letterman. Snyder was a former newsman, not a comedian, and his show featured an intimate [[interview]] format with no studio audience present, similar to his old ''Tomorrow'' show of the 1970s, or to the then-current ''[[Charlie Rose (show)|Charlie Rose]]'' show. Throughout most of the show's run, it was also [[simulcast]] over some [[CBS Radio]] stations, and Snyder accepted calls from viewers/listeners somewhat in the manner of [[Larry King]].
=== 1970s ===
* '''[[1979 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1978 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1977 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Robert Lowell]], [[American poetry|American poet]]
* '''[[1976 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1975 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1974 in poetry]]''' - Death of [[Miguel Ángel Asturias]], [[Latin American literature|Guatemalan author, poet]], journalist and diplomat; - [[Anne Sexton]], [[American poetry|American poet]].
* '''[[1973 in poetry]]''' - Death of [[W.H. Auden]], [[Pablo Neruda]], [[J. R. Tolkien]]
* '''[[1972 in poetry]]''' - Death of [[John Berryman]], [[American poetry|American poet]]; - [[Kenneth Patchen]], [[American poetry|American poet]]; - [[Padraic Colum]], [[Irish poetry|Irish]]-[[American poetry|American poet]]; - [[Marianne Moore]], [[modernist poetry|modernist poet]], and [[writer]]; - [[Richard Church (poet)|Richard Church]], [[English poetry|English poet]] critic and novelist; - [[Cecil Day-Lewis]], [[English poetry|English poet]]; - [[Ezra Pound]], [[American poetry|American poet]], critic and the driving force behind several [[Modernist poetry|Modernist]] movements; - [[Mark Van Doren]], [[American poetry|American poet]], academic and critic; - [[Paul Goodman (writer)|Paul Goodman]], [[American poetry|American poet]] and writer.
* '''[[1971 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Jim Morrison]], 27 [[American poetry|American poet]] and songwriter; - [[Ogden Nash]], [[American poetry|American poet]] best known for writing pithy and funny [[light verse]].
* '''[[1970 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Charles Olson]], important 2nd generation [[United States poetry|American]] [[modernist poetry|modernist poet]]


Jazz musician [[David Sanborn]] composed the theme music and several other songs featured on the show.
=== 1960s ===
* '''[[1969 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Jack Kerouac]], influential [[Beat Generation]] [[American poetry|American poet]], writer, novelist; - [[André Salmon]], [[French poetry|French poet]] critic and novelist
* '''[[1968 in poetry]]''' [[Leonard Cohen]], ''Selected Poems, 1956-1968''
* '''[[1967 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Carl Sandburg]], [[American poetry|American poet]], and historian; - [[John Edward Masefield]], [[English poetry|English poet]], and writer, [[Poet Laureate]], [[1930 in poetry|1930]]&ndash;[[1967 in poetry|1967]]; - [[Cecil Day-Lewis]] is selected as the new [[Poet Laureate]] of the UK.
* '''[[1966 in poetry]]''' Death of [[André Breton]], [[Frank O'Hara]]
* '''[[1965 in poetry]]''' Death of [[T. S. Eliot]]
* '''[[1964 in poetry]]''' [[John Lennon]], ''In His Own Write'', containing nonsensical poems, sketches and drawings; a best seller by the member of the [[Beatles]]; [[Something Else Press]] founded by [[Dick Higgins]] in 1963; publishes [[Concrete Poetry]] by several authors, starting in 1964; - Death of Dame [[Edith Sitwell]] [[Order of the British Empire|DBE]] [[English poetry|British poet]], and critic
* '''[[1963 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Sylvia Plath]], [[Robert Frost]], [[William Carlos Williams]], [[Tristan Tzara]], [[Jean Cocteau]], [[Bob Dylan]] releases his ''[[The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan]],'' album, with his most influential early songwriting.
* '''[[1962 in poetry]]''' Death of [[E.E. Cummings]]
* '''[[1961 in poetry]]''' [[Allen Ginsberg]], ''Kaddish and Other Poems''
* '''[[1960 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Boris Pasternak]], [[Russian poetry|Russian poet]] and writer, winner of a [[Nobel Prize in Literature]]


Snyder's trademarks included:
=== 1950s ===
* Frequent informal kibitzing with the show's offstage crew.
* '''[[1959 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Edgar Guest]], [[American poetry|American poet]] known as the "poet of the people"
* His opening remarks, which were delivered while sitting in a chair, and usually told of his adventures earlier in the day while doing everyday, mundane things like buying groceries or driving to work.
* '''[[1958 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Alfred Noyes]], [[American poetry|American poet]]; - [[Robert W. Service]], [[American poetry|American poet]]; - [[Ezra Pound]]'s indictment for treason is dismissed. <ref>Ackroyd, Peter, ''Ezra Pound'', Thames and Hudson Ltd., London, 1980, "Chronology" chapter, p 118</ref> He is released from [[St. Elizabeths Hospital]], an insane asylum in Maryland, after spending 12 years there (starting in [[1946 in poetry|1946]])..
* Snyder usually introduced the show as the "colorcast" or "simulcast," if also airing on radio. [[NBC]] used the term colorcast to introduce its programs produced in color during the 1960s
* '''[[1957 in poetry]]''' [[Howl#The 1957 obscenity trial|Howl obscenity trial]] in [[San Francisco]]
* Just before the first commercial break, Snyder always invited viewers to "''fire up the colortinis and watch the pictures as they fly through the air.''" A "colortini" was an imaginary drink, rather like a martini, that Snyder felt viewers should enjoy while watching the show on a color television. Later, in reference to the radio/TV simulcast of his show, Snyder would often substitute "simultini" for "colortini".
* '''[[1956 in poetry]]''' [[Allen Ginsberg]], ''[[Howl]] and Other Poems'', a signature of the [[Beat Generation]] published by [[City Lights Books]], [[American poetry|United States]]
* '''[[1955 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Wallace Stevens]], prominent [[American poetry|American poet]]


Snyder was originally scheduled to broadcast his last ''Late Late Show'' on March 19, 1999. However, his replacement [[Craig Kilborn]] was still working out the kinks in the new show's format, so the 62-year-old Snyder amiably agreed to 'help out the new guy' by filling in for another few weeks before he was scheduled to step down as the first host of the show. Tom Snyder died of [[leukemia]] on [[July 29]], [[2007]] at the age of 71.
* '''[[1954 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1953 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Dylan Thomas]], 39
* '''[[1952 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Paul Éluard]], 56, [[French poetry|French poet]] who broke with [[Surrealism]]; - [[George Santayana]], Spanish-[[American poetry|American poet]] philosopher, essayist and novelist.
* '''[[1951 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1950 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Edna St. Vincent Millay]] 58


==Craig Kilborn era (1999&ndash;2004)==
=== 1940s ===
When Snyder announced he was leaving, the show was reformatted to resemble ''Letterman'' and other major late-night talk programs. Craig Kilborn took over in March 1999, having left ''[[The Daily Show]]'' to become the new ''Late Late Show'' host.
* '''[[1949 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1948 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1947 in poetry]]''' [[Cleanth Brooks]], ''The Well Wrought Urn: Studies in the Structure of Poetry'', a classic statement of the [[New Criticism]]
* '''[[1946 in poetry]]''' [[Ezra Pound]] brought back to the United States on treason charges, but found unfit to face trial because of insanity and sent to [[St. Elizabeths Hospital]] in Washington, D.C., where he remained for 12 years
* '''[[1945 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Van Morrison]], [[Order of the British Empire|OBE]], [[Irish poetry|Irish poet]], [[singer]], [[songwriter]], [[author]], and [[multi-instrumentalist]]; - Death of [[Paul Valéry]], [[French poetry|French poet]] philosopher, author, [[Symbolist poetry|Symbolist poet]]; - [[Robert Desnos]], was a [[French poetry|French]] [[Surrealism|surrealist]] poet.
* '''[[1944 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1943 in poetry]]''' Death of [[William Soutar]] in Perth; - Birth of [[Jim Morrison]]
* '''[[1942 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[William Matthews (poet)|William Matthews]], [[American poetry|American poet]] and essayist
* '''[[1941 in poetry]]''' Death of [[James Joyce]], Birth of [[Bob Dylan]]
* '''[[1940 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[John Lennon]]


When Kilborn was on the show, it began with a haunting [[full moon]] wavering behind gray [[stratus cloud]]s on the screen to the tuning of an orchestra, while the announcer -- the recorded, modulated voice of Kilborn himself -- blurted out, ''"From the gorgeous, gorgeous [[Hollywood Hills]] in sunny [[California]], it's your ''Late Late Show'' with Craig Kilborn. Tonight [...]"'', and then the guests were announced with the show's theme song composed by [[Neil Finn]]. Then Kilborn was presented, ''"Ladies and gentlemen, *pause* Mister Craig Kilborn"'', with the 1970s [[disco]] band [[Wild Cherry (band)|Wild Cherry]] song "[[Play That Funky Music]]".
=== 1930s ===
* '''[[1939 in poetry]]''' Death of [[William Butler Yeats]]
* '''[[1938 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1937 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Diane Wakoski]] [[American poetry|American poet]]
* '''[[1936 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Federico García Lorca]], [[Rudyard Kipling]]; - Birth of [[John Giorno]]
* '''[[1935 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1934 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Leonard Cohen]]
* '''[[1933 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Sara Teasdale]]
* '''[[1932 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Hart Crane]]; Birth of [[Michael McClure]], [[American poetry|American poet]], [[David Antin]], [[American poetry|American poet]]
* '''[[1931 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Vachel Lindsay]], [[Kahlil Gibran]]
* '''[[1930 in poetry]]''' Death of [[D. H. Lawrence]], [[Gary Snyder]], [[American poetry|American poet]]


After Kilborn's [[stand-up comedy|stand-up]] [[monologue]], he walked to his "Bavarian oak desk" while Finn's theme song continued playing with the chorus ''"The Late Late Show is starting. The Late Late Show is starting now."'' The "Desk Chat" was said to be Craig's favorite part of the show.
=== 1920s ===
* '''[[1929 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1928 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Maya Angelou]]
* '''[[1927 in poetry]]''' [[William Soutar]] creates his ''[[Epigram]] form'' of the [[Cinquain]].
* '''[[1926 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Rainer Maria Rilke]], Birth of [[Allen Ginsberg]]
* '''[[1925 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1924 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1923 in poetry]]''' [[Edna St. Vincent Millay]] is the first woman to win the [[Pulitzer Prize for Poetry]]
* '''[[1922 in poetry]]''' The publication of the [[The Waste Land]] by [[T. S. Eliot]]; [[Rainer Marie Rilke]] completes both the ''[[Duino Elegies]]'' and the ''[[Sonnets to Orpheus]];'' - Birth of [[Jack Kerouac]], influential [[Beat Generation]] [[American poetry|American poet]], writer, novelist
* '''[[1921 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1920 in poetry]]''' '[[The Dial]]'', a longstanding American literary magazine, is re-established by [[Scofield Thayer]]; the publication becomes an important outlet for [[Modernist literature|Modernist]] poets and writers (until [[1929 in poetry|1929]]), with contributors this year including [[Sherwood Anderson]], [[Djuna Barnes]], [[Kenneth Burke]], [[Hart Crane]], [[E. E. Cummings]], [[Charles Demuth]], [[Kahlil Gibran]], [[Gaston Lachaise]], [[Amy Lowell]], [[Marianne Moore]], [[Ezra Pound]], [[Odilon Redon]], [[Bertrand Russell]], [[Carl Sandburg]], [[Van Wyck Brooks]], and [[W. B. Yeats]]


During later seasons, the opening consisted of shots of various Los Angeles hotspots accompanied by a new theme song performed and written by [[Chris Isaak]]. For this new theme song, Kilborn would be played to the desk with a chorus of ''"The Late Late Show is starting"''.
=== 1910s ===
* '''[[1919 in poetry]]''' Birth of - [[Lawrence Ferlinghetti]], [[American poetry|American]] [[Beat generation|beat poet]]; - [[Robert Duncan (poet)|Robert Duncan]] (died [[1988 in poetry|1988]]), [[American poetry|American poet]] associated with the [[Black Mountain poets]] and the [[Beat Generation]]; - [[May Swenson]], (died [[1989 in poetry|1989]], [[American poetry|American poet]] and playwright; - [[William Morris Meredith, Jr.|William Meredith]], [[American poetry|American poet]]
* '''[[1918 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Guillaume Apollinaire]], [[French poetry|French poet]], writer, and art critic
* '''[[1917 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Robert Lowell]], [[American poetry|American poet]]
* '''[[1916 in poetry]]''' The [[Dada]] movement in art, poetry and literature coalesced at [[Cabaret Voltaire]] in [[Zurich, Switzerland]], where [[Hugo Ball]], [[Emmy Hennings]], [[Tristan Tzara]], [[Hans Arp]], [[Richard Huelsenbeck]], [[Sophie Täuber]] and others discussed art and put on performances expressing their disgust with [[World War I]] and the interests they believed inspired it
* '''[[1915 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1914 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Adelaide Crapsey]]; - Birth of [[William Burroughs]]
* '''[[1913 in poetry]]''' The launch of [[Imagism]] in the pages of ''[[Poetry (magazine)|Poetry]]'' magazine by [[H.D.]], [[Richard Aldington]] and [[Ezra Pound]]
* '''[[1912 in poetry]]''' [[Adelaide Crapsey]] creates her ''[[couplet]]'' form
* '''[[1911 in poetry]]''' [[Adelaide Crapsey]] creates the ''American [[Cinquain]]'' form
* '''[[1910 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Charles Olson]] (died [[1970 in poetry|1970]]), [[American poetry|American poet]]; - [[Jean Genet]], [[French poetry|French poet]] novelist, and playwright; - Death of [[Julia Ward Howe]], 91, [[American poetry|American poet]] best known as the author of ''[[The Battle Hymn of the Republic]]''


Segments included:
=== 1900s ===
*''In the News'', a news segment, whose theme song was Survivor's "[[Eye of the Tiger]]", where Kilborn would provide a humorous overview of the day's events. It was briefly called "The World of Whimsy" following the [[September 11th attacks]]. The segment also included characters such as the hoary and cherubic "Ewok Guy" or the [[rap]]ping "PG&E" Lady.
* '''[[1909 in poetry]]'''
*''What Up?'', a Friday segment where Kilborn and three other panelists discussed and joked about the news. It included a guest, the director of the program, Mike Gibbons, who was introduced by Kilborn as "[One] of the brightest minds in show business", and then, staff writer ''Goldie'' - ''"He was the art editor of his high school newspaper."'' Each panelist, in turn, greeted Kilborn with, ''"What up, Craig?"'' This segment was similar to the [[ESPN]] show ''[[Around the Horn]]''.
* '''[[1908 in poetry]]'''
*''Alex, the Disgruntled Old Page'', a bad-tempered page acted by one of Kilborn's staff members, who thought his private thoughts "aloud", unintentionally.
* '''[[1907 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[W. H. Auden]]
*''Sebastian, the Asexual Icon''
* '''[[1906 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Samuel Beckett]], [[Irish poetry|Irish poet]], playwright and novelist who won the [[Nobel Prize]] in [[1969 in poetry|1969]]
*''To Blank with Love'' in which Kilborn dedicated verses to different people and things
* '''[[1905 in poetry]]'''
*''Five Questions'' in which Kilborn asked a geography question, a [[Match Game]]-style "blank" question where the guest had to fill a blank with a word related to the guest, a ''"Now think of other one"'' question in which the guest had to guess what Kilborn had in mind. This segment was a holdover from Kilborn's previous job as the host of ''[[The Daily Show]]''.
* '''[[1904 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Cecil Day-Lewis]], [[English poetry|Anglo-Irish poet]], British [[Poet Laureate]] from 1967 to 1972
*''Tuesdays with Buddy'', with [[Buddy Hackett]]
* '''[[1903 in poetry]]'''
*''Clippings That Tickle Your Funny Bone'' - "They're Funny!"
* '''[[1902 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Langston Hughes]], African-[[American poetry|American poet]], novelist, playwright, short story writer, and newspaper columnist best known for his role in the [[Harlem Renaissance]]; - Death of [[Shiki]] the [[haiku]] poet
*a movie poster review segment
* '''[[1901 in poetry]]'''
*''A Recreation of a Press Photo''
* '''[[1900 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Oscar Wilde]], 46, [[English poetry|Irish poet]], playwright, novelist, and short story writer
*''Yambo'', an elimination game between two guests
*''Craig Kilborn, Man of 537 Faces''
*''Compatible With Opus?'' in which recent cast-offs from CBS reality show ''[[Survivor (U.S. TV series)|Survivor]]'' were given the chance to win a date with staff member Opus Moreschi.
*''Commentary with Mike Greyson'' in which a sports opinionist with a negative take on society, sports, and culture discussed how everything "sucks" or is a "debacle," much to the delight of the audience.
*''A Late Late Show Do-Over''
*a dance segment in which Kilborn said, "All I wanna do is dance, dance, dance" while looking into three different cameras (Another ''[[The Daily Show|Daily Show]]'' holdover.)


Kilborn left the program on [[August 27]], [[2004]], following negotiations which ended unexpectedly when he opted not to renew his contract.
==[[19th century in poetry]]==
=== 1890s ===
* '''[[1899 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Hart Crane]] (died [[1932 in poetry|1932]]), [[American poetry|American poet]]
* '''[[1898 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Stephen Vincent Benét]], [[Federico García Lorca]], [[William Soutar]] in Perth,Scotland; - Death of [[Stéphane Mallarmé]], [[Lewis Carroll]]
* '''[[1897 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1896 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Paul Verlaine]]
* '''[[1895 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Robert Graves]]
* '''[[1894 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Charles Marie René Leconte de Lisle]], [[Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.]] [[American poetry|American poet]], physician, and essayist
* '''[[1893 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1892 in poetry]]''' [[Emily Dickinson]] First collection published; Death of - [[Walt Whitman]], important [[American poetry|American poet]], [[James Russell Lowell]], [[American poetry|American poet]], [[Alfred Lord Tennyson]], popular [[English poetry|English poet]]


==Transition==
* '''[[1891 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Arthur Rimbaud]], [[Herman Melville]]
Subsequent new shows featured guest hosts, culminating in week-long showcases for four finalists: [[Craig Ferguson]], [[D. L. Hughley]], [[Damien Fahey]] and [[Michael Ian Black]]. It was announced on [[December 7]], [[2004]] that Ferguson, a [[Scotland|Scottish]] comedian best known from his role as Mr. Wick on ''[[The Drew Carey Show]]'', was to become Kilborn's permanent replacement. David Letterman made the selection, based on the recommendation of [[Peter Lassally]].<ref>[http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/22791344/dave_at_peace_the_rolling_stone_interview/print Dave at Peace: The Rolling Stone Interview], a September 18, 2008 interview from the ''[[Rolling Stone]]'' website</ref>
* '''[[1890 in poetry]]'''


==Craig Ferguson era (2005&ndash;present)==
=== 1880s ===
{{main|The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson}}
* '''[[1889 in poetry]]'''
Changes to the show during Craig Ferguson's tenure as host have included a more improvisational opening monologue and the addition of short comedic sketches starring Ferguson and other semi-regular guests. Upon occasion, Ferguson has delivered monologues more serious in tone; he was nominated for an [[Emmy Award]] for a show in which he eulogized his father.
* '''[[1888 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1887 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Marianne Moore]]; - [[Edith Sitwell]] [[Order of the British Empire|DBE]]
* '''[[1886 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Emily Dickinson]]
* '''[[1885 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1884 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1883 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[William Carlos Williams]]
* '''[[1882 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Ralph Waldo Emerson]], 78, important [[American poetry|American poet]], author, and philosopher; - [[Henry Wadsworth Longfellow]], 75, important [[American poetry|American poet]]; - Birth of [[James Joyce]] (died 1941), influential [[Irish poetry|Irish poet]] and writer; - [[A. A. Milne]] (died [[1956 in poetry|1956]]), [[English poetry|British poet]] author, playwright and writer of children's poetry best known for his books about the teddy bear, [[Winnie-the-Pooh]].
* '''[[1881 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1880 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Guillaume Apollinaire]], [[French poetry|French poet]], writer, and art critic


=== 1870s ===
==References==
{{Refimprove|date=October 2008}}
* '''[[1879 in poetry]]'''
<references/>
* '''[[1878 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Carl Sandburg]] (died [[1967 in poetry|1967]]), [[American poetry|American poet]], and historian; - [[John Edward Masefield]] (died [[1967 in poetry|1967]]), [[English poetry|English]] poet and writer, [[Poet Laureate]], [[1930 in poetry|1930]]&ndash;[[1967 in poetry|1967]]; - [[Adelaide Crapsey]]in New York
* '''[[1877 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1876 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1875 in poetry]]''' [[French language|French]] translation of [[Edgar Allan Poe]]'s "[[The Raven]]", by [[Stéphane Mallarmé]] with drawings by [[Edouard Manet]]; - Birth of [[Rainer Maria Rilke]], important pre-[[Modernism|modernist]] 20th century poet in [[German poetry|German]].
* '''[[1874 in poetry]]''' [[Arthur Rimbaud]]'s ''[[Illuminations]]''First collection of [[George Eliot]]'s poetry.
* '''[[1873 in poetry]]''' [[Arthur Rimbaud]]'s ''[[Une Saison en Enfer]] ([[A Season in Hell]])''
* '''[[1872 in poetry]]''' [[Christina Rosetti]] '''In a bleak mid winter' (Christmas Carol)'''
* '''[[1871 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1870 in poetry]]'''


=== 1860s ===
==External links==
*[http://www.cbs.com/latenight/latelate/ ''The Late Late Show'']
* '''[[1869 in poetry]]''' [[George Eliot]] [[sonnet]] '''Brother & Sister'''
*[http://www.mcsweeneys.net/2004/11/30black.html On Being a Candidate to Take Over a Late-Night Network Talk Show], a ''[[McSweeney's]]'' article by [[Michael Ian Black]]
* '''[[1868 in poetry]]'''
*{{imdb title|id=0112043|title=The Late Late Show with Tom Snyder}}
* '''[[1867 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Charles Baudelaire]], [[French poetry|French poet]] and [[art critic]]; - Birth of [[Shiki]] the [[haiku]] poet
*{{imdb title|id=0192906|title=The Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn}}
* '''[[1866 in poetry]]'''
*{{imdb title|id=0437729|title=The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson}}
* '''[[1865 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1864 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1863 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1862 in poetry]]''' [[Christina Rossetti]] '''Goblin Market'''
* '''[[1861 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1860 in poetry]]'''


{{Americas Late Night Comedy Talk Show}}
=== 1850s ===
<!--do not add additional network categories for foreign broadcasts--originating network only-->
* '''[[1859 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1858 in poetry]]''' [[Henry Wadsworth Longfellow]], ''The Courtship of Miles Standish
* '''[[1857 in poetry]]''' [[Charles Baudelaire]]'s ''[[Les Fleurs du mal]]''
* '''[[1856 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1855 in poetry]]''' [[Walt Whitman]]'s ''[[Leaves of Grass]],'' [[Lewis Carroll]]'s ''[[Jabberwocky]],'' [[Henry Wadsworth Longfellow]]'s ''[[Hiawatha]]''


[[Category:1995 television series debuts|Late Late Show]]
* '''[[1854 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Arthur Rimbaud]]
[[Category:1990s American television series|Late Late Show, The]]
* '''[[1853 in poetry]]'''
[[Category:2000s American television series|Late Late Show, The]]
* '''[[1852 in poetry]]'''
[[Category:CBS network shows|Late Late Show, The]]
* '''[[1851 in poetry]]'''
[[Category:Television talk shows|Late Late Show, The]]
* '''[[1850 in poetry]]''' [[Elizabeth Barrett Browning]], ''[[Sonnets from the Portuguese]]''; - Death of [[William Wordsworth]]
[[Category:Variety television series|Late Late Show, The]]

=== 1840s ===
* '''[[1849 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Edgar Allan Poe]], [[Edgar Allan Poe]]'s ''[[Annabel Lee]]''
* '''[[1848 in poetry]]''' Founding of [[Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood]]
* '''[[1847 in poetry]]''' [[Henry Wadsworth Longfellow]]'s ''[[Evangeline]]''
* '''[[1846 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1845 in poetry]]''' [[Edgar Allan Poe]]'s ''[[The Raven]]''
* '''[[1844 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Paul Verlaine]]
* '''[[1843 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1842 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Stéphane Mallarmé]]
* '''[[1841 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1840 in poetry]]'''

=== 1830s ===
* '''[[1839 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1838 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1837 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1836 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1835 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1834 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Samuel Taylor Coleridge]]

* '''[[1833 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1832 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Lewis Carroll]]; - Death of [[Sir Walter Scott]]
* '''[[1831 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Emily Dickinson]]
* '''[[1830 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Christina Rossetti]] in London

=== 1820s ===
* '''[[1829 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1828 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1827 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1826 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Issa]] the [[haiku]] poet
* '''[[1825 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1824 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Lord Byron]], important [[English poetry|English]] [[Romantic poetry|Romantic poet]]
* '''[[1823 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1822 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Percy Bysshe Shelley]], important [[English poetry|English]] [[Romantic poetry|Romantic poet]]
* '''[[1821 in poetry]]''' Death of [[John Keats]], important [[English poetry|English]] [[Romantic poetry|Romantic poet]]; - Birth of [[Charles Baudelaire]], [[French poetry|French poet]] and art critic
* '''[[1820 in poetry]]'''

=== 1810s ===
* '''[[1819 in poetry]]''' Scholars described - ''The Great Year'' for [[John Keats]], who publishes his famous ''Odes''; - Birth of [[George Eliot]], [[Walt Whitman]], important [[American poetry|American poet]], [[Herman Melville]], [[American poetry|American poet]], novelist, [[James Russell Lowell]], [[American poetry|American poet]], [[Julia Ward Howe]], [[American poetry|American poet]]
* '''[[1818 in poetry]]''' [[Lord Byron]]'s ''[[Childe Harold's Pilgrimage]], Book IV,'' published; - Birth of [[Charles Marie René Leconte de Lisle]]
* '''[[1817 in poetry]]''' [[Percy Bysshe Shelley]], ''Laon and Cythna''
* '''[[1816 in poetry]]''' [[Percy Bysshe Shelley|Shelley]] marries [[Mary Shelley|Mary Woolstonecraft Godwin]], [[Lord Byron]]'s ''[[Childe Harold's Pilgrimage]], Book III,'' published
* '''[[1815 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1814 in poetry]]''' [[Percy Bysshe Shelley]] and [[Mary Shelley|Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin]] elope to war-ravaged France, accompanied by Godwin's step-sister, Mary Jane.
* '''[[1813 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1812 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1811 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1810 in poetry]]'''

=== 1800s ===
* '''[[1809 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Edgar Allan Poe]], [[Alfred Lord Tennyson]], [[Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.]] [[American poetry|American poet]], physician, and essayist
* '''[[1808 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1807 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1806 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1805 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Friedrich Schiller]], [[German poetry|German poet]]
* '''[[1804 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1803 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1802 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1801 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1800 in poetry]]'''

==[[18th century in poetry]]==
=== 1790s ===
* '''[[1799 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1798 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1797 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1796 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Robert Burns]], [[James Macpherson]]

* '''[[1795 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[John Keats]], important [[English poetry|English poet]]
* '''[[1794 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1793 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1792 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Percy Bysshe Shelley]], important [[English poetry|English poet]]
* '''[[1791 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1790 in poetry]]'''

=== 1780s ===
* '''[[1789 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1788 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Lord Byron]], ([[English poetry|English]])
* '''[[1787 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1786 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1785 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1784 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Samuel Johnson]] [[English literature|English author]], wrote [[Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets]], (1779&ndash;81)
* '''[[1783 in poetry]]''' Death of [[ Buson]] the [[haiku]] poet
* '''[[1782 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1781 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1780 in poetry]]'''

=== 1770s ===
* '''[[1779 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1778 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1777 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1776 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1775 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1774 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1773 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1772 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Samuel Taylor Coleridge]]
* '''[[1771 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Thomas Gray]], [[English poetry|English poet]], (born [[1716 in poetry|1716]]); - Birth of [[Sir Walter Scott]]
* '''[[1770 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[William Wordsworth]], important [[English poetry|English poet]] (died [[1850 in poetry|1850]]); - Death of [[Thomas Chatterton]], 17-year old [[English poetry|English poet]] and [[forgery|forger]] of pseudo-[[medieval poetry]] born [[1752 in poetry|1752]]

=== 1760s ===
* '''[[1769 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1768 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1767 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1766 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1765 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1764 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1763 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1762 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Issa]] the [[haiku]] poet
* '''[[1761 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1760 in poetry]]'''

=== 1750s ===
* '''[[1759 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Robert Burns]], [[Friedrich Schiller]], [[German poetry|German poet]] philosopher, and dramatist (died [[1805 in poetry|1805]])
* '''[[1758 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1757 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1756 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1755 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1754 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1753 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1752 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1751 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1750 in poetry]]'''

=== 1740s ===
* '''[[1749 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1748 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1747 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1746 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1745 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Jonathan Swift]], [[Anglo-Irish]] [[satire|satirist]], [[essay]]ist, political [[pamphleteer]], [[English poetry|poet]]
* '''[[1744 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Alexander Pope]], [[English poetry|English poet]]; - Anonymous, ''[[Tommy Thumb's Pretty Song Book]]'', the first extant collection of nursery rhymes
* '''[[1743 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Richard Savage]], [[English poetry|English poet]]
* '''[[1742 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1741 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1740 in poetry]]'''

=== 1730s ===
* '''[[1739 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1738 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1737 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1736 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[James Macpherson]], Scottish poet
* '''[[1735 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1734 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1733 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1732 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1731 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1730 in poetry]]'''

=== 1720s ===
* '''[[1729 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1728 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1727 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1726 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1725 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1724 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1723 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1722 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1721 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1720 in poetry]]'''

=== 1710s ===
* '''[[1719 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Joseph Addison]], English [[essay|essayist]] and [[poet]]
* '''[[1718 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1717 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1716 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Thomas Gray]], [[English poetry|English poet]], (died [[1771 in poetry|1771]])
* '''[[1715 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Buson]] the [[haiku]] poet
* '''[[1714 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1713 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1712 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1711 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1710 in poetry]]'''

=== 1700s ===
* '''[[1709 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Samuel Johnson]], [[English literature|English author, biographer]]
* '''[[1708 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1707 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1706 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1705 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Michael Wigglesworth]] (born [[1631 in poetry|1631]]), [[English poetry|English poet]], colonist in [[American poetry|America]] called "the most popular of early New England poets"
* '''[[1704 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1703 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1702 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1701 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1700 in poetry]]''' Death of [[John Dryden]], influential [[England|English]] [[poet]], [[literary critic]], [[translator]] and [[playwright]]

==[[17th century in poetry]]==
=== 1690s ===
* '''[[1699 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1698 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1697 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Richard Savage]], [[English poetry|English poet]]
* '''[[1696 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1695 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1694 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Basho]] the hailu poet
* '''[[1693 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1692 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1691 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1690 in poetry]]'''

=== 1680s ===
* '''[[1689 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1688 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Alexander Pope]], [[English poetry|English poet]]
* '''[[1687 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1686 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1685 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1684 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1683 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1682 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1681 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1680 in poetry]]'''

=== 1670s ===
* '''[[1679 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1678 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1677 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1676 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1675 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1674 in poetry]]''' Death of [[John Milton]], important [[English poetry|English poet]]
* '''[[1673 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1672 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Joseph Addison]], English [[essay|essayist]] and [[poet]]
* '''[[1671 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1670 in poetry]]'''

=== 1660s ===
* '''[[1669 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1668 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1667 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Jonathan Swift]], [[Anglo-Irish]] [[satire|satirist]], [[essay]]ist, political [[pamphleteer]], [[English poetry|poet]]
* '''[[1666 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1665 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1664 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1663 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1662 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1661 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1660 in poetry]]'''

=== 1650s ===
* '''[[1659 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1658 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1657 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1656 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1655 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1654 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1653 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1652 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1651 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1650 in poetry]]'''

=== 1640s ===
* '''[[1649 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1648 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1647 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1646 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1645 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1644 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[Basho]] the haiku poet
* '''[[1643 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1642 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1641 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1640 in poetry]]'''

=== 1630s ===
* '''[[1639 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1638 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1637 in poetry]]''' Death of [[Ben Jonson]], important [[English poetry|English poet]], [[playwright]], [[actor]]
* '''[[1636 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1635 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1634 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1633 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1632 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1631 in poetry]]''' Death of [[John Donne]], important [[English poetry|English poet]], essayist, author, preacher; - Birth of [[John Dryden]] influential [[England|English]] [[poet]], [[literary critic]], [[translator]] and [[playwright]]; - Birth of [[Michael Wigglesworth]] (died [[1705 in poetry|1705]]), [[English poetry|English poet]], colonist in [[American poetry|America]] called "the most popular of early New England poets"<ref name=wt>Trent, William P. and Wells, Benjamin W., ''Colonial Prose and Poetry: The Beginnings of Americanism 1650-1710'', New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co., 1903 edition, page 41</ref>
* '''[[1630 in poetry]]'''

=== 1620s ===
* '''[[1629 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1628 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1627 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1626 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1625 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1624 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1623 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1622 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1621 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1620 in poetry]]'''

=== 1610s ===
* '''[[1619 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1618 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1617 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1616 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1615 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1614 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1613 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1612 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1611 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1610 in poetry]]'''

=== 1600s ===
* '''[[1609 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1608 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[John Milton]], important [[English poetry|English poet]]
* '''[[1607 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1606 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1605 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1604 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1603 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1602 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1601 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1600 in poetry]]'''

==[[16th century in poetry]]==
=== 1590s ===
* '''[[1599 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1598 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1597 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1596 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1595 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1594 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1593 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1592 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1591 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1590 in poetry]]'''

=== 1580s ===
* '''[[1589 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1588 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1587 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1586 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1585 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1584 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1583 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1582 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1581 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1580 in poetry]]'''

=== 1570s ===
* '''[[1579 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1578 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1577 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1576 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1575 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1574 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1573 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1572 in poetry]]''' Birth of [[John Donne]], important [[English poetry|English poet]], essayist, author, preacher; - Birth of [[Ben Jonson]], important [[English poetry|English poet]], [[playwright]], [[actor]]
* '''[[1571 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1570 in poetry]]'''

=== 1560s ===
* '''[[1569 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1568 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1567 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1566 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1565 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1564 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1563 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1562 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1561 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1560 in poetry]]'''

=== 1550s ===
* '''[[1559 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1558 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1557 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1556 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1555 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1554 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1553 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1552 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1551 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1550 in poetry]]'''
=== 1540s ===
* '''[[1549 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1548 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1547 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1546 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1545 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1544 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1543 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1542 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1541 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1540 in poetry]]'''
=== 1530s ===
* '''[[1539 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1538 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1537 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1536 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1535 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1534 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1533 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1532 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1531 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1530 in poetry]]'''

=== 1520s ===
* '''[[1529 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1528 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1527 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1526 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1525 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1524 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1523 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1522 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1521 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1520 in poetry]]'''

=== 1510s ===
* '''[[1519 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1518 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1517 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1516 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1515 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1514 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1513 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1512 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1511 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1510 in poetry]]'''

=== 1500s ===
* '''[[1509 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1508 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1507 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1506 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1505 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1504 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1503 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1502 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1501 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1500 in poetry]]'''

==[[15th century in poetry]]==
=== 1490s ===
* '''[[1499 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1498 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1497 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1496 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1495 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1494 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1493 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1492 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1491 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1490 in poetry]]'''

=== 1480s ===
* '''[[1489 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1488 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1487 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1486 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1485 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1484 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1483 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1482 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1481 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1480 in poetry]]'''

=== 1470s ===
* '''[[1479 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1478 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1477 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1476 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1475 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1474 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1473 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1472 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1471 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1470 in poetry]]'''

=== 1460s ===
* '''[[1469 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1468 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1467 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1466 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1465 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1464 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1463 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1462 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1461 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1460 in poetry]]'''

=== 1450s ===
* '''[[1459 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1458 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1457 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1456 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1455 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1454 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1453 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1452 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1451 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1450 in poetry]]'''

=== 1440s ===
* '''[[1449 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1448 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1447 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1446 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1445 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1444 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1443 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1442 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1441 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1440 in poetry]]'''

=== 1430s ===
* '''[[1439 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1438 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1437 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1436 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1435 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1434 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1433 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1432 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1431 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1430 in poetry]]'''

=== 1420s ===
* '''[[1429 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1428 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1427 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1426 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1425 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1424 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1423 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1422 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1421 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1420 in poetry]]'''

=== 1410s ===
* '''[[1419 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1418 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1417 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1416 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1415 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1414 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1413 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1412 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1411 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1410 in poetry]]'''

==[[14th century in poetry]]==
=== 1390s ===
* '''[[1399 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1398 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1397 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1396 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1395 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1394 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1393 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1392 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1391 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1390 in poetry]]'''

=== 1380s ===
* '''[[1389 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1388 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1387 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1386 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1385 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1384 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1383 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1382 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1381 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1380 in poetry]]'''

=== 1370s ===
* '''[[1379 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1378 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1377 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1376 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1375 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1374 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1373 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1372 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1371 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1370 in poetry]]'''

=== 1360s ===
* '''[[1369 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1368 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1367 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1366 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1365 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1364 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1363 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1362 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1361 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1360 in poetry]]'''

=== 1350s ===
* '''[[1359 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1358 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1357 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1356 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1355 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1354 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1353 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1352 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1351 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1350 in poetry]]'''

=== 1340s ===
* '''[[1349 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1348 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1347 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1346 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1345 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1344 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1343 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1342 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1341 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1340 in poetry]]'''
=== 1330s ===
* '''[[1339 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1338 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1337 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1336 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1335 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1334 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1333 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1332 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1331 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1330 in poetry]]'''
=== 1320s ===
* '''[[1329 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1328 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1327 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1326 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1325 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1324 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1323 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1322 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1321 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1320 in poetry]]'''
=== 1310s ===
* '''[[1319 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1318 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1317 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1316 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1315 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1314 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1313 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1312 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1311 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1310 in poetry]]'''
=== 1300s ===
* '''[[1309 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1308 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1307 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1306 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1305 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1304 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1303 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1302 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1301 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1300 in poetry]]'''

==[[13th century in poetry]]==
=== 1290s ===
* '''[[1299 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1298 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1297 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1296 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1295 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1294 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1293 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1292 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1291 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1290 in poetry]]'''

=== 1280s ===
* '''[[1289 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1288 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1287 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1286 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1285 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1284 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1283 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1282 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1281 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1280 in poetry]]'''

=== 1270s ===
* '''[[1279 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1278 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1277 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1276 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1275 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1274 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1273 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1272 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1271 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1270 in poetry]]'''

=== 1260s ===
* '''[[1269 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1268 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1267 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1266 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1265 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1264 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1263 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1262 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1261 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1260 in poetry]]'''

=== 1250s ===
* '''[[1259 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1258 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1257 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1256 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1255 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1254 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1253 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1252 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1251 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1250 in poetry]]'''

=== 1240s ===
* '''[[1249 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1248 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1247 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1246 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1245 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1244 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1243 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1242 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1241 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1240 in poetry]]'''
=== 1230s ===
* '''[[1239 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1238 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1237 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1236 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1235 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1234 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1233 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1232 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1231 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1230 in poetry]]'''
=== 1220s ===
* '''[[1229 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1228 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1227 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1226 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1225 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1224 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1223 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1222 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1221 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1220 in poetry]]'''
=== 1210s ===
* '''[[1219 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1218 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1217 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1216 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1215 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1214 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1213 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1212 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1211 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1210 in poetry]]'''
=== 1200s ===
* '''[[1209 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1208 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1207 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1206 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1205 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1204 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1203 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1202 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1201 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1200 in poetry]]'''

==[[12th century in poetry]]==
=== 1190s ===
* '''[[1199 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1198 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1197 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1196 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1195 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1194 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1193 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1192 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1191 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1190 in poetry]]'''

=== 1180s ===
* '''[[1189 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1188 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1187 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1186 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1185 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1184 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1183 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1182 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1181 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1180 in poetry]]'''

=== 1170s ===
* '''[[1179 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1178 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1177 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1176 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1175 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1174 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1173 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1172 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1171 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1170 in poetry]]'''

=== 1160s ===
* '''[[1169 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1168 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1167 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1166 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1165 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1164 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1163 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1162 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1161 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1160 in poetry]]'''

=== 1150s ===
* '''[[1159 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1158 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1157 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1156 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1155 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1154 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1153 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1152 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1151 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1150 in poetry]]'''

=== 1140s ===
* '''[[1149 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1148 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1147 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1146 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1145 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1144 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1143 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1142 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1141 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1140 in poetry]]'''
=== 1130s ===
* '''[[1139 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1138 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1137 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1136 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1135 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1134 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1133 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1132 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1131 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1130 in poetry]]'''
=== 1120s ===
* '''[[1129 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1128 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1127 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1126 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1125 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1124 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1123 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1122 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1121 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1120 in poetry]]'''
=== 1110s ===
* '''[[1119 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1118 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1117 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1116 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1115 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1114 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1113 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1112 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1111 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1110 in poetry]]'''
=== 1100s ===
* '''[[1109 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1108 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1107 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1106 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1105 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1104 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1103 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1102 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1101 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1100 in poetry]]'''

==[[11th century in poetry]]==
=== 1090s ===
* '''[[1099 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1098 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1097 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1096 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1095 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1094 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1093 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1092 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1091 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1090 in poetry]]'''

=== 1080s ===
* '''[[1089 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1088 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1087 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1086 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1085 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1084 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1083 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1082 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1081 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1080 in poetry]]'''

=== 1070s ===
* '''[[1079 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1078 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1077 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1076 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1075 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1074 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1073 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1072 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1071 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1070 in poetry]]'''

=== 1060s ===
* '''[[1069 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1068 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1067 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1066 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1065 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1064 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1063 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1062 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1061 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1060 in poetry]]'''

=== 1050s ===
* '''[[1059 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1058 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1057 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1056 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1055 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1054 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1053 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1052 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1051 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1050 in poetry]]'''

=== 1040s ===
* '''[[1049 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1048 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1047 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1046 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1045 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1044 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1043 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1042 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1041 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1040 in poetry]]'''
=== 1030s ===
* '''[[1039 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1038 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1037 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1036 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1035 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1034 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1033 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1032 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1031 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1030 in poetry]]'''

=== 1020s ===
* '''[[1029 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1028 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1027 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1026 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1025 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1024 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1023 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1022 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1021 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1020 in poetry]]'''
=== 1010s ===
* '''[[1019 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1018 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1017 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1016 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1015 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1014 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1013 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1012 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1011 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1010 in poetry]]'''
=== 1000s ===
* '''[[1009 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1008 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1007 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1006 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1005 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1004 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1003 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1002 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1001 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[1000 in poetry]]'''

==[[10th century in poetry]]==
=== 990s ===
* '''[[999 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[998 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[997 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[996 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[995 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[994 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[993 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[992 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[991 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[990 in poetry]]'''

=== 980s ===
* '''[[989 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[988 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[987 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[986 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[985 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[984 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[983 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[982 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[981 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[980 in poetry]]'''

=== 970s ===
* '''[[979 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[978 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[977 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[976 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[975 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[974 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[973 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[972 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[971 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[970 in poetry]]'''

=== 960s ===
* '''[[969 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[968 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[967 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[966 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[965 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[964 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[963 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[962 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[961 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[960 in poetry]]'''

=== 950s ===
* '''[[959 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[958 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[957 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[956 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[955 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[954 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[953 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[952 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[951 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[950 in poetry]]'''

=== 940s ===
* '''[[949 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[948 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[947 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[946 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[945 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[944 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[943 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[942 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[941 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[940 in poetry]]'''

=== 930s ===
* '''[[939 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[938 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[937 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[936 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[935 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[934 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[933 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[932 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[931 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[930 in poetry]]'''

=== 920s ===
* '''[[929 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[928 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[927 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[926 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[925 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[924 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[923 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[922 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[921 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[920 in poetry]]'''

=== 910s ===
* '''[[919 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[918 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[917 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[916 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[915 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[914 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[913 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[912 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[911 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[910 in poetry]]'''

=== 900s ===
* '''[[909 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[908 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[907 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[906 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[905 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[904 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[903 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[902 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[901 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[900 in poetry]]'''

==[[9th century in poetry]]==
=== 890s ===
* '''[[899 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[898 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[897 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[896 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[895 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[894 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[893 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[892 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[891 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[890 in poetry]]'''

=== 880s ===
* '''[[889 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[888 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[887 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[886 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[885 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[884 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[883 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[882 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[881 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[880 in poetry]]'''

=== 870s ===
* '''[[879 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[878 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[877 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[876 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[875 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[874 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[873 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[872 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[871 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[870 in poetry]]'''

=== 860s ===
* '''[[869 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[868 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[867 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[866 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[865 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[864 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[863 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[862 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[861 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[860 in poetry]]'''

=== 850s ===
* '''[[859 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[858 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[857 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[856 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[855 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[854 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[853 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[852 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[851 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[850 in poetry]]'''

=== 840s ===
* '''[[849 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[848 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[847 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[846 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[845 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[844 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[843 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[842 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[841 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[840 in poetry]]'''

=== 830s ===
* '''[[839 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[838 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[837 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[836 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[835 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[834 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[833 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[832 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[831 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[830 in poetry]]'''

=== 820s ===
* '''[[829 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[828 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[827 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[826 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[825 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[824 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[823 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[822 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[821 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[820 in poetry]]'''

=== 810s ===
* '''[[819 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[818 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[817 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[816 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[815 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[814 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[813 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[812 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[811 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[810 in poetry]]'''

=== 800s ===
* '''[[809 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[808 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[807 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[806 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[805 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[804 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[803 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[802 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[801 in poetry]]'''
* '''[[800 in poetry]]'''

== Poetry before the 9th century==
* [[8th century in poetry]]
* [[7th century in poetry]]
* [[6th century in poetry]]
* [[5th century in poetry]]
* [[4th century in poetry]]
* [[3rd century in poetry]]
* [[2nd century in poetry]]
* [[1st century in poetry]]
* [[1st century BC in poetry]]
* [[2nd century BC in poetry]]
* [[3rd century BC in poetry]]
* [[4th century BC in poetry]]
* [[5th century BC in poetry]]
* [[6th century BC in poetry]]
* [[7th century BC in poetry]]
==References==
<References/>
{{Lists of years}}


[[zh:深夜秀]]
[[Category:Culture-related timelines|Poetry]]
[[Category:Years in poetry|*]]
[[Category:History of literature|Poetry]]

Revision as of 05:38, 11 October 2008

The Late Late Show
Created byDavid Letterman
StarringCraig Ferguson
(2004–present)
Craig Kilborn
(1999–2004)
Tom Snyder
(1995–1999)
Country of origin United States
No. of episodes2,578 (as of October 27, 2007)
Production
Production locationsCBS Television City
Los Angeles, California
Running time60 minutes per episode
Original release
NetworkCBS
ReleaseJanuary 9, 1995 –
present

The Late Late Show is an American late-night television talk and variety show currently hosted by Craig Ferguson on CBS. The show was greatly inspired by the Irish Late Late Show. It immediately follows Late Show with David Letterman and is produced by Letterman's Worldwide Pants Incorporated in CBS Television City. The program dates to 1995, and has had three permanent hosts.

Occasionally, the show is split into 15- and 45-minute segments when CBS airs a daily late night highlight show for either The Masters, other PGA Tour events with rights owned by CBS, or tennis' U.S. Open. The show then has a monologue to start, followed by sports highlights, and then the guest segments.

Hosts

Host From To Number of Shows
Tom Snyder January 9, 1995 March 26, 1999 777
Craig Kilborn March 29, 1999 December 31, 2004 1,190
Craig Ferguson January 3, 2005 Present 680 (as of May 2008)[needs update]

Tom Snyder era (1995–1999)

Tom Snyder hosted the program from its inception in January 1995 until March of 1999. The choice of Snyder as host was apparently made by David Letterman, whose contract with CBS gave him the power to produce the show in the timeslot immediately after his own program.

Letterman and Snyder had a long history together: a 1978 Tomorrow episode hosted by Snyder was almost exclusively devoted to a long interview with up-and-coming new comedy talents Letterman, Billy Crystal and Merrill Markoe. And in 1982, when Tomorrow was canceled by NBC, Letterman took over Snyder's timeslot with his own NBC show Late Night with David Letterman. Because of this, some have speculated that Letterman simply wanted to give Snyder -- whom he had long idolized -- another chance in the late night arena, as a sort of repayment of an old debt.[citation needed]

Snyder's show featured a mix of celebrities, politicians and other newsmakers, but was otherwise quite unlike the program hosted by Letterman. Snyder was a former newsman, not a comedian, and his show featured an intimate interview format with no studio audience present, similar to his old Tomorrow show of the 1970s, or to the then-current Charlie Rose show. Throughout most of the show's run, it was also simulcast over some CBS Radio stations, and Snyder accepted calls from viewers/listeners somewhat in the manner of Larry King.

Jazz musician David Sanborn composed the theme music and several other songs featured on the show.

Snyder's trademarks included:

  • Frequent informal kibitzing with the show's offstage crew.
  • His opening remarks, which were delivered while sitting in a chair, and usually told of his adventures earlier in the day while doing everyday, mundane things like buying groceries or driving to work.
  • Snyder usually introduced the show as the "colorcast" or "simulcast," if also airing on radio. NBC used the term colorcast to introduce its programs produced in color during the 1960s
  • Just before the first commercial break, Snyder always invited viewers to "fire up the colortinis and watch the pictures as they fly through the air." A "colortini" was an imaginary drink, rather like a martini, that Snyder felt viewers should enjoy while watching the show on a color television. Later, in reference to the radio/TV simulcast of his show, Snyder would often substitute "simultini" for "colortini".

Snyder was originally scheduled to broadcast his last Late Late Show on March 19, 1999. However, his replacement Craig Kilborn was still working out the kinks in the new show's format, so the 62-year-old Snyder amiably agreed to 'help out the new guy' by filling in for another few weeks before he was scheduled to step down as the first host of the show. Tom Snyder died of leukemia on July 29, 2007 at the age of 71.

Craig Kilborn era (1999–2004)

When Snyder announced he was leaving, the show was reformatted to resemble Letterman and other major late-night talk programs. Craig Kilborn took over in March 1999, having left The Daily Show to become the new Late Late Show host.

When Kilborn was on the show, it began with a haunting full moon wavering behind gray stratus clouds on the screen to the tuning of an orchestra, while the announcer -- the recorded, modulated voice of Kilborn himself -- blurted out, "From the gorgeous, gorgeous Hollywood Hills in sunny California, it's your Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn. Tonight [...]", and then the guests were announced with the show's theme song composed by Neil Finn. Then Kilborn was presented, "Ladies and gentlemen, *pause* Mister Craig Kilborn", with the 1970s disco band Wild Cherry song "Play That Funky Music".

After Kilborn's stand-up monologue, he walked to his "Bavarian oak desk" while Finn's theme song continued playing with the chorus "The Late Late Show is starting. The Late Late Show is starting now." The "Desk Chat" was said to be Craig's favorite part of the show.

During later seasons, the opening consisted of shots of various Los Angeles hotspots accompanied by a new theme song performed and written by Chris Isaak. For this new theme song, Kilborn would be played to the desk with a chorus of "The Late Late Show is starting".

Segments included:

  • In the News, a news segment, whose theme song was Survivor's "Eye of the Tiger", where Kilborn would provide a humorous overview of the day's events. It was briefly called "The World of Whimsy" following the September 11th attacks. The segment also included characters such as the hoary and cherubic "Ewok Guy" or the rapping "PG&E" Lady.
  • What Up?, a Friday segment where Kilborn and three other panelists discussed and joked about the news. It included a guest, the director of the program, Mike Gibbons, who was introduced by Kilborn as "[One] of the brightest minds in show business", and then, staff writer Goldie - "He was the art editor of his high school newspaper." Each panelist, in turn, greeted Kilborn with, "What up, Craig?" This segment was similar to the ESPN show Around the Horn.
  • Alex, the Disgruntled Old Page, a bad-tempered page acted by one of Kilborn's staff members, who thought his private thoughts "aloud", unintentionally.
  • Sebastian, the Asexual Icon
  • To Blank with Love in which Kilborn dedicated verses to different people and things
  • Five Questions in which Kilborn asked a geography question, a Match Game-style "blank" question where the guest had to fill a blank with a word related to the guest, a "Now think of other one" question in which the guest had to guess what Kilborn had in mind. This segment was a holdover from Kilborn's previous job as the host of The Daily Show.
  • Tuesdays with Buddy, with Buddy Hackett
  • Clippings That Tickle Your Funny Bone - "They're Funny!"
  • a movie poster review segment
  • A Recreation of a Press Photo
  • Yambo, an elimination game between two guests
  • Craig Kilborn, Man of 537 Faces
  • Compatible With Opus? in which recent cast-offs from CBS reality show Survivor were given the chance to win a date with staff member Opus Moreschi.
  • Commentary with Mike Greyson in which a sports opinionist with a negative take on society, sports, and culture discussed how everything "sucks" or is a "debacle," much to the delight of the audience.
  • A Late Late Show Do-Over
  • a dance segment in which Kilborn said, "All I wanna do is dance, dance, dance" while looking into three different cameras (Another Daily Show holdover.)

Kilborn left the program on August 27, 2004, following negotiations which ended unexpectedly when he opted not to renew his contract.

Transition

Subsequent new shows featured guest hosts, culminating in week-long showcases for four finalists: Craig Ferguson, D. L. Hughley, Damien Fahey and Michael Ian Black. It was announced on December 7, 2004 that Ferguson, a Scottish comedian best known from his role as Mr. Wick on The Drew Carey Show, was to become Kilborn's permanent replacement. David Letterman made the selection, based on the recommendation of Peter Lassally.[1]

Craig Ferguson era (2005–present)

Changes to the show during Craig Ferguson's tenure as host have included a more improvisational opening monologue and the addition of short comedic sketches starring Ferguson and other semi-regular guests. Upon occasion, Ferguson has delivered monologues more serious in tone; he was nominated for an Emmy Award for a show in which he eulogized his father.

References

  1. ^ Dave at Peace: The Rolling Stone Interview, a September 18, 2008 interview from the Rolling Stone website

External links