Page Six: Jimmy Fallon’s drinking is reportedly still causing lots of problems

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In the fall of 2015, Page Six and some other outlets ran a series of stories about how Jimmy Fallon had or has a major drinking problem. If I’m giving Fallon the benefit of the doubt, I’d say that there is a difference between a “happy social drinker” and a fall-down messy alcoholic, and Fallon seemingly hugs that line. Reportedly last fall, NBC executives were really worried about Fallon’s drunk shenanigans and even more than that, they were worried that Fallon’s drinking would hurt one of their most lucrative properties, The Tonight Show. So… what’s happening these days? Page Six says NBC did do some kind of intervention, although NBC tells Page Six that their sources are telling lies.

Jimmy Fallon was warned to cut back on his boozing by NBC chiefs following a series of bizarre late-night accidents, according to multiple insiders. An NBC insider said of the funnyman, “There were fears that Fallon was out of control and something could happen while he’s out drinking. Things got so serious at one stage that execs feared that Jimmy was splitting up with his wife over his drinking, but they patched things up.”

The beloved “Tonight Show” host’s recent allegedly alcohol-aided antics include tripping on a rug at home and nearly severing his ring finger on a table in June 2015. Then he chipped his tooth “trying to open medicine for his injured finger” a few months later. In October 2015 he cut his hand on a bottle of Jägermeister. In September of this year a “very drunk” Fallon was seen alone at an NYC punk bar at 3 a.m, which sparked more NBC concerns.

Another Fallon source said, “He is a heavy drinker. He sees himself as somebody who needs image rehabilitation.” But, we’re told by another friend, “He knows he needs to be responsible. He has two kids. He has cut back on his drinking.”

The first source said that, while Fallon’s show is No. 1, a few key staff members have left to work for CBS rival James Corden. “Fallon is insanely jealous of Corden,” the source continued. “There’s been some upheaval, and Jimmy hasn’t handled it well. He’s at the top of his game, but he’s insecure.” Fallon has parted ways with his longtime publicist and just hired Brad Pitt’s crisis p.r. manager.

But Fallon has the full backing of NBC, and his contract was extended to late 2021. Bob Greenblatt, chairman of NBC Entertainment, told us, “Jimmy is one of NBC’s biggest assets, and we’re extremely proud that ‘The Tonight Show’ continues to be the late-night leader in all metrics, including ratings and social-media awareness. He’s in a class by himself, and we’re also looking forward to him hosting the Golden Globes in January. As a producer and star he delivers over 200 hours of television a year, and any suggestion that we have concerns about his behavior or have given him any kind of ‘warning’ is completely false.”

[From Page Six]

I sort of understand NBC’s dilemma, surprisingly. They can’t order Fallon to stop drinking during his off-hours, and as long as he behaves professionally while at Rockefeller Center, there’s not much they can do. The Tonight Show is still the top-rated late show, and tons of A-listers still want to come and do softball interviews and play stupid games. So as long as the money keeps rolling in, no one wants to rock the boat. But… yeah, I do think he’s a heavy drinker. Whether he’s just a social drinker or a messy alcoholic, I don’t know.

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Photos courtesy of Fame/Flynet.

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38 Responses to “Page Six: Jimmy Fallon’s drinking is reportedly still causing lots of problems”

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  1. SusanneToo says:

    Umm, Stephen Colbert is Fallon’s rival and Corden is Seth Meyers rival going by time slots. I watch Colbert with Kimmel as second choice. Never watch Fallon.

  2. Little Darling says:

    I mean, one can only be a “functioning” alcoholic for so long. I think he’s been toeing that line for awhile now, if stories are correct.

    It sucks when you know you need rehabilitative help, you want rehabilitative help but there seems to be insurmountable obstacles on the line. I wish everyone who felt they needed a month in a time out from life to sort their shit out mentally/physically/spiritually could. It would better society as a whole.

    • Imqrious2 says:

      I read an article with Brad Garrett (Everyboy Loves Raymond – he played the brother), where he said he was a functioning alcoholic and never came to set “dry”. Same for Larry Hagman, who began his day drinking, and was drunk all through Dallas filming. Obviously, we can’t tell sometimes, one can become quite adept at hiding it.

      Wouldn’t surprise me the least about Fallon.

    • Dolkite says:

      I have a friend who has been a full-blown alcoholic for at least a decade. Every day begins with him vomiting, shortly followed by his morning bottle of Magnum 40 malt liquor. On a light day, he’ll drink 3 or 4 of them; on a bad day, up to 6 or 7. He drinks while he drives. He drinks at work (not hard since he does painting and drywall and is rarely supervised). He even drinks while walking down the street sometimes.

      For the past four years, he’s told me he wants to quit drinking totally, but will only do it in a rehab situation. He’s found a place that’ll admit him for free, with no notice. However, it’s the same story every time…he says he’s going in “next week,” then he’ll get another job and say, “I can’t afford to be out of commission for a whole month…I gotta make money when I can!”

      A few years ago, we were both broke and he was visiting. He had his morning 40, and about an hour or two later, with no way to get more booze, he began throwing up repeatedly and jittering all over the place.

      • MC2 says:

        Well f- Dolkite. Sorry for the swearing but god- this story made me swear a lot. What an absolute horrible predicament your friend is in & a heart breaking story. That sounds like a miserable existence & scary for you to witness. I just read a story last night about Jennifer Frey who was an amazing sports writer who drank herself to death- just kept drinking each day until she was finally gone.

        How to stop that for your friend……I don’t know & it sucks. It’s great that he found a place that will take him- hopefully he puts that number in his shoe, hat & tattoos it on himself for that time that he is ready to make the call. They can detox him safely and he will be out of that hell hole at least. I bet he feels like a rat on a wheel that can’t seem to jump off and doesn’t know what is there when he jumps.

        I’m glad to hear that he has that desire to quit. Maybe he will seek others out who have gone before him- it’s been done plenty of times by people who have been there & understand. They are very easy to find if you look for them. But that is the piece- you have to reach out your hand & look. God speed that he gets help- each day is one more and a chance to change this life. This life is not a dress rehearsal. We only get one.

    • Lipreng says:

      Not true at all. Many people are functional alcoholics and do not proceed past that point. My father has been a functioning alcoholic for decades – still managed to keep his 6 figure salary engineering job and never got a dui. Lost his first wife and daughter though.

      • MC2 says:

        Hence the ” ” around functioning in the comment. My father too- great career, kids, all the stuff on paper. But what is “functioning” if it effects your relationships, health, etc. Maybe it’s functioning but it’s not living.

      • Lipreng says:

        I guess we just have a different view of what functioning entails. I guess I just consider it as not getting arrested and providing for oneself.

    • Lipreng says:

      I don’t think Jimmy Fallon is a functioning alcoholic though. Time will tell.

    • detritus says:

      I wish people had to do yearly mental health physicals, as well as the regular physical physicals.

      I wish mental health got the same health coverage as prescriptions. I wish EI would kick in for rehab stays. I wish insurance companies would realise that encouraging people to see a therapist/addiction counsellor will reduce health issues down the road.

      My partner’s father was functioning for decades. He had korsakoff syndrome for years. He kept drinking. Until his liver started to fail. Until they took away his licence. Until he died. Alone. In his own bloody vomit. Where his alcoholic friends left him. For three days. My partner and his family had to then clean up the mess. In what was basically a metaphor for his fathers life. Once even the shell of him was gone, they had to deal with the shit and all the broken pieces that were leftover.

      My partner still cannot see it as a disease and refers to his death as his suicide.

      I look at his sister, who never really had a father. I look at my partner, who’s father deserted him when he needed him the most. I look at his mother, who stayed through his dad’s affairs. Who after the divorce, where he treated her like dirt, took him in and helped him detox. He wasted it all because he didn’t want help. He didn’t want to change.

      I don’t know how you can fix that. I truly, deeply wish there was a way to provide mental health support to everyone. Hurt people hurt people.

      • MC2 says:

        This made me think of a great quote from IO Tillet and they said:

        “Everyone is trying to dance with their pain and sometimes it’s who do you stab in the process? It’s what you do about having stabbed them that’s the delineation between people you can have in you life and people you can’t.”

        I think every alcoholic/addict has a broken heart- how could you not when the thing that you love the most turns on you & will kill you if you let it? It’s what you do with it……we do have choices- even when we feel like we don’t.

      • misery chick says:

        @ MC2-So harsh…so beautiful; thanks for sharing!

      • misery chick says:

        @ MC2-So harsh…so beautiful; thanks for sharing!

  3. Patricia says:

    Does drinking account for his humiliating performance on SNL recently, when he did Weekend Update with Tina Fey? I was like “dude you are sitting next to Tina Freakin Fey, pull it together!” It was painful and he really made me wonder what’s going on with him.

    • Bridget says:

      I thought he was always bad at SNL and that was just more of his usual.

    • Mari says:

      I agree Patricia; his performance on SNL was bad. I thought he was on something, too. I didn’t know then that he was such a heavy drinker.

  4. Imqrious2 says:

    Where there’s smoke, there’s fire….just sayin’….

    Personally, I just can’t stand this ever-smirking, overgrown frat boy who has to laught at his own jokes. Has he ever NOT broke the fourth wall while performing?

  5. Nimbolicious says:

    Oh, I think he has a serious problem. That string of injuries he had weren’t pratfalls as he tried to have everyone believe. Those happened during blackouts, for sure. Sadly, Kaiser is right — the suits won’t do anything to help avert a disaster as long as ratings are high and the advertisers are all on board.

    He’s a funny guy and it’s sad….but he’s one DUI away from at least temporary TV oblivion, especially if he hurts someone else. Maybe his wife will demand rehab or else and he’ll agree since there are kids involved.

  6. Jayna says:

    Let’s not forget Johnny Carson was a very heavy drinker and, supposedly, a very mean drunk. Like Jimmy, it didn’t seem to affect his show ever, in that he kept it separate. I’ve never seen a hint of a problem on Fallon’s show. As far as after hours, it’s up to Jimmy to decide to cut back and/or quit for the sake of himself and his family.

  7. Brittney B. says:

    He’s been a big mess for a long time, and I’m honestly surprised he manages to hold it together so well. Most of the people who were using coke with him in the 90’s/early 00’s have settled down and grown up a bit, but I don’t think he ever got out of the reckless cycle of drug abuse & anonymous sex.

    • Little Darling says:

      Couch psychologist here: But I wonder if he correlates his talent and schtick with being a semi bombed funny frat boy? So much of his persona is the frat boy/party/silly/best friend you have great fun with, so I wonder if it’s impossible for him to separate the two now? Or if he truly thinks he’s always better a little wasted.

      So many creatives who suffer with addiction truly believe their talent and creativity will cease to exist without the other. That “sober” people are boring or sober living is boring.

      • MC2 says:

        This is so true! I think that if you are a true addict then the substance, insidiously, becomes part of you & your identity. At the very least, it becomes your best friend (see Keifer’s new song for a good example). Cutting that out of your life is not so easy. Who will you be? If you are drunk and/or high each day or it’s big part of your mind, then you don’t know who you will be and that is scary as sh7t.

        I’ve known musicians who say it’s their burden to keep using for their ‘genius’ but the truth is that you just don’t know until you stop but the unknown is the worst- especially if someone just ripped your security blanket away.

        If you are an addict, then sober living IS boring- until you actually get sober imo. The very next day after a high is the worst and is not indicative of what living without booze/drugs is like but that’s the taste people get and no thanks. It does take time to really see it I think.

  8. Jen says:

    He’s a messy alcoholic, and I’ve stopped watching his show because it now seems so sad seeing him fall all over his guests. NBC is not in a hard position, people in the public eye get fired all the time for things done on their own time. It just hasn’t hurt their ratings enough for them to fire him.

  9. frosty says:

    he’s like something out of another era, a charming and genial host who never draws a sober breath. I’ve not seen it affect his actual performance and if it’s unmanageable for him personally I hope he’ll find a way to stop or cut back.

  10. Kate says:

    Just thought I’d mention here that Seth Meyers’s show is the one to watch if you want to see an actually good late night talk show. His political commentary is On. Fire. and his interviews are thoughtful and interesting.

  11. detritus says:

    I thought he was married?
    Where’s his wedding ring? and WTF is going on with his fingers on his left hand?

    ETA: his almost ripped his finger off in a fall in his kitchen a few years ago, and now doesn’t wear it. Also why his one finger looks effed. Because they almost couldn’t save it.
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-3504436/Jimmy-Fallon-steps-without-wedding-ring-vowing-not-wear-symbolic-piece-jewellery-following-horrific-accident.html

  12. Margo S. says:

    He’s looking really worse for wear. It’s also clear he’s insecure. But honestly, he works during the afternoon, then goes out after and gets sh!tfaced, then goes to sleep and does it all again the next day…. He has two kids and a wife at home. What a selfish ass.

  13. TJ says:

    My friend ran into him at a bar in NYC one night and I guess they got talking and Jimmy hung out with my friend and his group. My friend said Jimmy started off being really cool but then got so wasted that it was awkward. They actually ended up leaving bc he was being weird.

  14. MellyMel says:

    Ah man I really like him. Always have. If this is true I hope he gets help.

  15. poppy says:

    he’s a drunk with problems more than just being a drunk. and the more he ravages his looks with his substances of choice, the more insecure he will become (seems impossible but is) -which will in turn increase the very behaviors that are hurting him physically and psychologically.
    he’s not a kid anymore, and drunk or not, his whole schtick is UGLY and extremely umamusing after a certain age. he passed that age while he was on SNL. he would be nowhere without a cadre of very talented writers. Tina Fey’s worship of him on SNL was very WTF, like her Lindsey Lohan love.

  16. Lyonnaise says:

    I like him and I like his show, although I haven’t watched it in awhile because going to bed at 9pm is more appealing.

    Anyway, he has 2 small children, around the same age as mine, he needs to get it together for them.

  17. Riemc526 says:

    It sounds like he’s not hugging the line between fall-down drunk and happy social drunk. It sounds like he’s pretty bad. I’m also hoping his wife didn’t patch things up by letting him tell her he’d try to get better and her believing him without proof. The disease of alcoholism doesn’t just affect the alcoholic.

  18. Minina says:

    I feel really bad for him. I get the feeling that he doesn’t want to quit because he doesn’t think he’s as funny when sober. I’m sure SNL made him all the more sure that he’s only funny when drunk or high. And now that he’s reached this level of success (talk about failing upward), he might feel he can’t just sober up and not be as funny or fun with his guests.

    Did anyone see his Martin short/Steve Martin interview, I thought Martin short was about to ask Jimmy a personal question but it cut to Jimmy and he was asking an unrelated question, it was definitely because they edited something out, maybe a joke about his drinking image.

    But even before that Jimmy seemed to be faking it. I have a feeling maybe he’s trying to work sober? And he ends up having to fake his giggles even more, cuz he’s not buzzed. It must make it really awkward for him, and is especially noticeable when he works with other comedians.

    I think he was sober with Tina recently on Weekend Update, and that’s why he was phoning it in and not really funny.