Conan OBrien revisited his old stomping grounds Tuesday for the first time in 14 years.
The former Late Night host returned to his former NBC Studios home in Rockefeller Center on Tuesday for the first time since exiting the network in 2010 after a contractual dispute and told Tonight Show host Jimmy Fallon that its weird to come back.
I havent been in this building for such a long time, and I havent been on this floor in forever, OBrien told Fallon, adding : You have strange memories. I mean, I was here for 16 years doing the Late Night show before we went to L.A., right across the hall.
OBrien helmed Late Night for 18 seasons from 1993 to 2009, with reported hopes of his hosting gig on The Tonight Show keeping him put. He ultimately did replace Jay Leno as host in 2009, but only for seven months when NBC reinstated Lenos contract.
All these memories came flooding back to me, OBrien told Fallon.
And the first thing that will hit you, and it will hit you, too, because one day youll have this show as long as you want it, but when youre 98, youll move on, and someone else will be in this studio, he continued. When someone else is in your studio, it feels weird.
OBrien famously moved to Los Angeles after negotiating a $45 million agreement with NBC in 2010. He signed a contract with TBS later that year and hosted Conan for 11 seasons before retiring in 2021 , but will soon make his way back to television with a new travel show.
Coming back to 30 Rock with other hosts at the helm, however, still apparently doesnt sit right with the comedian.
So I walked in, and I said, Whos in my old studio? OBrien said. And they said, Kelly Clarkson . And I love Kelly Clarkson. Who doesnt love Kelly Clarkson? But still I felt like, Its not right! Its blasphemy! They should have burned it to the ground!
His new travel series, Conan OBrien Must Go , premieres April 18 on Max.
Support HuffPost
Already contributed? Log in to hide these messages.