LOS ANGELES — If leaving the storied role of "The Tonight Show" host mandates retirement, Jay Leno ignored the memo.
Since his longtime late-night gig ended in 2014, Leno has kept up a brisk pace. He pops up regularly on TV projects from fellow comedians Jerry Seinfeld, Larry Wilmore, Tim Allen, Dennis Miller and others.
His passion for anything with wheels and an engine is on display in "Jay Leno's Garage," returning Sept. 22 on CNBC. And he's got a new game show, a syndicated reboot of "You Bet Your Life," debuting Monday (check local listings for times, stations).
"Everything past 'The Tonight Show' was gravy," Leno said. "So the fact I have anything going is fun."
"You Bet Your Life" first aired from 1950 to 1961 with famed comedian Groucho Marx, followed by a short-lived 1992 remake with Bill Cosby. In the new version, Leno shares host duties with Kevin Eubanks, the former "Tonight" band leader who'd gleefully rib the comedian when a joke fell flat.
"People seem to like that camaraderie, because we are friends and we know each other," Leno said.
One of Leno's temp jobs, a guest judge on "America's Got Talent" in 2019, had serious repercussions. He was condemned for making an unaired joke about Koreans based on a racist stereotype, and later apologized.
In an interview with The Associated Press, Leno discussed following in the game-show footsteps of a comedy great, what makes for a good contestant and the risks of topical humor. Remarks have been lightly edited for clarity and brevity.