For just about as long as he was on the air, Johnny Carson was the undisputed "King of Late Night." From 11:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. on NBC, the native Midwesterner's "The Tonight Show" was the talk show to go on if you were promoting a movie, an album, or trying to launch your stand-up comedy career. Everyone took a seat on Carson's couch. Frank Sinatra, Muhammad Ali, Grace Kelly, Burt Reynolds, Bob Hope ... no one was too big for "The Tonight Show." Almost. There was one big guest who snubbed Carson in favor of the upstart Arsenio Hall in 1989.
Johnny Carson never hosted mass murderer Jason Voorhees on his program.
The waterlogged scourge of Camp Crystal Lake, who killed over 150 people across 10 official "Friday the 13th" movies — a franchise currently on pause due to legal wrangl

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