NEW YORK (AP) -- Genial comic Drew Carey was tapped
Monday to replace silver-haired legend Bob Barker on the CBS
daytime game show "The Price is Right."
Comedian Drew Carey will soon
host the longest-running game show in American television.
The deal was set Monday afternoon shortly before a taping of
CBS' "Late Show" with David Letterman, where he confirmed it.
"I realize what a big responsibility this is," he said. "It's
only a game show, but it's the longest-running game show in
American television and I plan to keep it that way."
The selection attracted more attention than usual for a daytime
show because of the prospect of replacing Barker, 83. Barker retired after 35 years in
the job last month following taping of his 6,586th episode.
The opening attracted widespread interest, including from comic
Rosie O'Donnell after she left "The View."
Carey, 49, spent a decade on his own ABC
sitcom and also was host of the improvisational game show "Whose
Line is It Anyway?"
He will also be host of a new CBS prime-time game show, "The
Power of 10," that airs next month. He told The Associated Press on
Monday that CBS officials first contacted him about "The Price is
Right" immediately after he completed a pilot of the other game
show this spring.
"My agent called me and said `I was talking to CBS casting
today' and in my head I was thinking, `Oh, `CSI' guest star?' And
he said what would you think about replacing Bob Barker on
`The Price is Right?"'
Asked if he found the prospect of replacing such a TV legend
daunting, Carey recalled talking to a friend who knows the game
show business who told him, "as long as Bob Barker is cool with it,
the fans will be cool with it."
"I'm cool with it," Barker said after hearing Carey's
remarks.
Barker said he's not familiar enough with Carey's past
performances to offer an opinion on his selection. But, he said, "I
understand he ad-libs very well and that he has a very nice,
friendly way of working, and I think both of those would be helpful
to him on`The Price Is Right."'
His advice for Carey: "Go out there and do that show the way you
think it should be done. Don't imitate me and don't imitate anyone
else."
While Carey said he doesn't know Barker personally, the comedian
said he was comfortable that his predecessor would be accepting
when he took on the job.
The negotiation process was nerve-racking. While he was talking
with CBS about the job, Carey said he got a call from another
lawyer in Hollywood who told him one of his clients was offered
"The Price is Right" job.
He figured CBS had lined up back-ups if the first choice did not
come through.
"If I was going after a second baseman, I wouldn't just talk to
one second baseman," the Cleveland Indians fan said. "If I were the
general manager, I would be talking to a few second basemen."
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