SNL46 Wrap-Up Extravaganza!

With another season of SNL in the books, we’re back at it again, and this time more fashionably late than unnecessarily delayed! As always, our Wrap-Up Extravaganzas are a time to reflect, fight personal demons, and just generally get any final thoughts we have about the past season of review coverage out of our systems. And after that: on to new, potentially greener pastures! But for now: here’s some parting words on one of the most complicated seasons in the show’s history.

MATT:
What are your general thoughts on the season?: In the fall of 2020, one of the worst possible things that could possibly happen for SNL happened: it became even harder to make. SNL has been through a lot throughout its history, by virtue of being around so long. It’s bounced back from national and international tragedies, anthrax scares, and Steven Seagal, but it’s never been deterred—perhaps indebted to its ego, SNL does nothing but stick out the most adverse conditions. But being faced with the immensely difficult task of creating a comedy show in the middle of a worldwide pandemic was a particularly unique challenge, and while it spawned three fascinating, valuable “At Home” episodes last season, the return to 8H frequently felt encumbered. For as fascinating as it is to consider that SNL accomplished what they were able to accomplish, week after week, the outcome, disappointingly, tended to lack in fascination.

A lot of that is in the fact that this season’s greatest issues are ones that the pandemic exacerbated, not caused. The cast is the most congested that it’s ever been, and its failure to cohere—while an issue for the past several seasons—has never been more of an issue. This was a “good” season for all of the usual suspects, for the most part, but being the umpteenth season with the likes of Kate and Aidy leading the herd and doing the same shtick that’s defined their last few years ensures there isn’t much of a transformative aspect to the show as it goes on. At the very least, while Beck and Pete continued to maintain the steady screentime that they’d been blessed with for maintaining the show’s good graces, they do some of their best work of their entire tenures here, allowing Beck to leave on a high and Pete… well, you know. On the other hand, this season was perhaps the hardest season for newbies in SNL’s history: Andrew endured a brutally unremarkable first half of the season but was fortunate to truly blossom in the second half as one of the show’s most promising new voices, Punkie toiled enough to survive the season cut, and Lauren was crushingly doomed from the start. I look at someone like Andrew who was able to completely blow away my expectations after months of misuse, and I have to wonder how much potential Lauren might’ve had if she wasn’t roped into a season that had absolutely no use for her. 

Fortunately, there is some light at the end of the tunnel. While Beck is the only heavy-hitter to depart the show, his loss creates new opportunities for the male cast to reconfigure; similarly, while the season begins with an onslaught of some of the most turgid and distressing political material that the show’s ever done, it also marks the end of SNL’s cameo-fest years, and after Biden’s inauguration, the show was able to wield a more apolitical, and at best fun-loving focus. The season finale is legitimately a brilliant episode that seems to forecast brighter days for the show’s future. And Season 47, for however much it had to battle the same issues, would be a refreshing return to form. If this season was a means to an end, then I’ll take it. In the grand scheme of this never-ending era, though, it was kinda just another year for SNL.

What was your favorite thing that you covered this season?: This season of coverage includes two of my favorite reviews that I ever got to write, and two that are on the complete opposite ends of the spectrum. The Anya Taylor-Joy review I got to work on with both Carson and Anthony was the most fun thing I’ve gotten to do for the site so far; it’s such a joy working with those two brilliant bastards, and being able to celebrate such a triumphant episode of the show is a privilege. There’s gonna be more reviews in that vein, so stay tuned for some fun surprises next season! And then of course, my Elon Musk review was such a massive undertaking, but I’m really happy with how it came out even though some corners of the Internet raw-dogged me for being critical of the shitty decision SNL made to put on a shitty episode hosted by a shitty piece of shit. It comes from a place of love, I assure you! 

Favorite sketches?: As is tradition, here’s my top five favorite live sketches, pretapes, Update pieces, and monologues from the past season in chronological order:

Favorite Live Sketches:
The Blitz (Bill Burr)
Birthday Gifts (Regina Page)
Proud Parents (Daniel Kaluuya)
The Muppet Show (Keegan-Michael Key)
NYU Guest Panel (Anya Taylor-Joy)

Favorite Pretapes:
Lexus (Timothée Chalamet)
The Maya-ing (Maya Rudolph)
Viral Apology Video (Daniel Kaluuya)
The Last Dance: Extended Scene (Keegan-Michael Key)
Picture With Dad (Anya Taylor-Joy)

Favorite Update Pieces:
Fran Leibowitz and Martin Scorcese (John Krasinski)
Iceberg That Sank the Titanic (Carey Mulligan)
Andrew Dismukes (Keegan-Michael Key)
Season Finale Joke Swap (Anya Taylor-Joy)
Jeanine Pirro (Anya Taylor-Joy)

Favorite Monologues:
Bill Burr
John Mulaney
Jason Bateman
Timothée Chalamet
Daniel Kaluuya

Favorite episode(s)?: In a season where few episodes rose above an understandable sluggishness, Anya Taylor-Joy stands out as the season’s greatest triumph, though it deserves that reputation: it’s also one of the greatest episodes of this entire era, and one of my favorites that I caught live. It really was just a moment in time where everything felt right, and SNL was able to key into beautifully—the stormclouds of the pandemic were finally beginning to pass, and just as the world could finally start to resemble itself again, SNL could once again feel untethered and delightful with no asterisks about its enjoyability.

On the topic of asterisks, though, there were a handful of strong episodes in the complicated throes of the pandemic, and I was enough of a dick to claim two of them: Bill Burr, who merged his brand of more abrasive comedy with SNL to delightful effect, and Timothée Chalamet, who helped bring about a very performance-driven, goofy, and occasionally even cerebral night of material. John also helped me foster more appreciation of the polarizing Issa Rae episode, and revisiting the doctored, dress rehearsal-laden version that NBC would put online made for a far more enjoyable experience considering how much I was misled by that live airing having perhaps the most cruelly dead audience that SNL has ever had. Lastly, both the Regé-Jean Page and Daniel Kaluuya episodes had their ups and downs, but their best material and well-rounded, amiable vibes help lift them above the pack as particularly rewarding outings to return to.

Hot takes?: I swear, I love Kabir, but every season he covers at least one piece that I absolutely love, but that he severely lambasts! In Season 44 it was that wild “Brothers” sketch with Beck and Kyle; in Season 45, it was Kyle’s Scooter Rineholdt commentary, and while I didn’t defend it since a couple others did, Beck’s “Boop-It” pretape. This season, continuing those Beck or Kyle trends, it’s Kyle’s Update segment alongside Bowen as Fran Leibowitz and Martin Scorcese. Like Scooter, it’s one of those segments which is just so ridiculous, so driven by goofy performances, that it hits this sweet spot for me from Kyle that I absolutely adore when he’s not just doing cringe comedy (or god forbid, Baby Yoda). Bowen also shines with his unexpected but delightful Fran Leibowitz impression, basically just an excuse to be an extravagant sourpuss while saying things like, “Gender doesn’t exist anymore! Y’know why? Ed Koch died!”; his greatest responsibility is keeping things going while Kyle responds to every one of her remarks with some reaction between raucous laughter and a honking seal, and while Bowen teeters on the edge of breaking, he rolls through it like an absolute champ. Also, as I noted in my review of the “Lifting Our Voices” sketch from the Dan Levy episode, Kyle’s ability to strike up chemistry with basically every cast member in the cast is one of his greatest, most deeply-underrated attributes. It’s a shame we didn’t see many more of these moments during his final season.

There are some other pieces I don’t agree with the rating of, though not to as substantial a degree. Mark me down with Carson as a defender of that “headless horseman” sketch from the Mulaney episode, for instance; it’s crude, sophomoric, and above all else aggressively stupid, but it just works for me. SNL can afford to be like that sometimes, and they really commit to it. As a more obscure pick, I’ve also always enjoyed Chris’ Smokey Robinson Update correspondence from the Kristen Wiig episode. It’s sort of a nothing piece, but Chris is one of the most insanely charming cast members the show has right now, and him saying the most inane shit with that falsetto voice is such a delight to me. Beyond that: not too many grievances this season! It’s a fine collection of work and I’m proud of us.

ANTHONY:
What are your general thoughts on the season?: In which we learned a global pandemic couldn’t stop SNL from SNLing. This season kinda passed in a blur; Ego said ‘Edith Puthie’ and Lauren said…well we never got around to that. It’s hard to come up with any new insight on a show as thoroughly analyzed as this. Would it shock you to hear I thought the debate sketches sucked, the elder cast shouldn’t have been there, the newbies should have been used more, the Musk episode was a trainwreck, Aidy Cruz was a bunch of bullshit and Pete did too many raps? Oh well. This season had to have just been the biggest headache to produce, so I don’t want to beat up on the show too much 2 years after the fact, but revisiting it for these reviews has just reminded how little I care for this season. There’s enough highlights in here (Ego steadily gaining a star spot on the show, Beck turning in some strong work, and some one-off great sketches I’ll get to below) to keep it from truly bottoming out like a S20 or even 30, but we’re a lot closer to that territory than I ever want to see the show in.

What was your favorite thing that you covered this season?: Anya Taylor Joy was not only the best episode of the season, but getting to work on a review with Matt and Carson was maybe my favorite thing in general I’ve done for the site so far. Collab reviews! They’re fun guys. (This definitely isn’t me buttering y’all up for future collabs…)

Favorite sketches?: In terms of live sketches, “Proud Parents” is probably the strongest piece of the year, both on paper and in performance. “Birthday Gifts” and “NYU Guest Panel” are also just really solid, sturdy sketches as well. I’d say it’s the pre-tapes though that have an even split for my absolute favorite sketch of the season. “Picture With Dad” is the hardest I laughed at a sketch all season 46, and “The Maya-ing” was the piece that left me the most impressed with its ambition and ingenuity. Interesting to note one of those was written by Andrew Dismukes, a fresh face, and the other by Colin Jost, who’s been at the show in some capacity for over 15 years at this point. Is this a torch passing moment? Or will the show hold on to that torch so long it sets itself on fire? Join us next season to find out!

Favorite episode(s)?: As I said, Anya Taylor Joy, though Burr, Chalamet & Kaluuya were all also highlights in a dreary year.

Hot takes?: Eh, Chappelle’s ep didn’t really do much for me, monologue included. I wasn’t really triggered, but I do think Dave’s a lot more rambly these days than people wanna admit. Even the Uncle Ben sketch kinda misses me once you get past the breaking. And I wanna like “Hailstorm”, but it also kinda just sits there for me. I do like the Beck sketch at least.

CARSON:
What are your general thoughts on the season?:
Season 46 depicts two shows at once: an overstuffed, overserved beast gasping its final breaths, and a plucky upstart looking to breathe new life into an old formula. In a way, it’s like Season 20 and 21 at once (or, essentially, Season 31). The first half of the season is a mess unlike any other in the show’s history: reduced, sleep-deprived audiences (yes, first responders need to laugh too, but do they want to??); the sad, sluggish, inevitable death rattle of the show’s celebrity cameo era; and the weird, disjointed overall pacing of the show (a half hour to get to the end of the monologue? Are you serious??). The second half made a concerted effort to avoid the cameo slog and gently tiptoe away from its safety net of the worst political satire in the nation’s history. Through it all, SNL remained…well, SNL. Even when it didn’t feel like SNL.

Those early episodes were gassed up and off-center, but not without moments of genuine excellence (The Blitz, Hailstorm) or near-excellence (The Birds). The post-election SNL had the air of new effort and found fresh pathways to success (The Maya-ing, Tiny Horse—though YMMV), but wobbled on its feet like a newborn calf. Ultimately, it didn’t look or feel like the SNL we have known and tolerated, but it really came out the same in the end. If you look at the season’s trajectory, however, you can see a tentative show grow into a confident show, with sporadic dips and faceplants along the way. That’s progress even if it didn’t always feel like it at the micro level (for example, the Britney cold opens weren’t any better than Trumpwin cold opens, but man did they feel like an oasis in a very shitty desert). 

Ultimately, SNL had to entertain multiple adaptive elements at once. The execution was unruly and wobbly AF, but ultimately yielded enough moments of greatness or at least interest to justify its existence.

Some quick hits:
— Poor Lauren.
— Beck, always good, always providing terrific flavor to often thankless roles, delivers some of his best ever work. An MVP season.
— Ego has been steadily emerging for some time, but this felt like the year she became undeniable.
— Hey, Pete puts in his best ever work. Way to go, Pete! Two-and-a-half stars!
— There are versions of Kate that are great and some that I loathe, but I never loathe it more than when others are super receptive to it. Enter Dr. Weknowdis, peak Kate indulgence that audiences ate up in spite of being bloated on all the ticks and affectations that have made her a hard cast member to root for these last…several seasons.

What was your favorite thing that you covered this season?: I got to cover some individually great sketches this season and even stumbled into an unexpected favorite (Hailstorm), but really, the most fun I have writing about SNL is debating about SNL. Getting to piggyback alongside site leaders Matt and Anthony was probably my favorite thing to do, if for no other reason than it allowed for a little back and forth between some very smart and insightful people (and also myself).

Favorite sketches?: Here’s my Best of 2020-2021:

COLD: What Still Works? (John Krasinski)
MONO: Bill Burr
COMM1: Lexus (Timothée Chalamet)
SKETCH 1: Birthday Gifts (Regina King)
SKETCH 2: The Blitz (Bill Burr)
SKETCH 3: Picture With Dad (Anya Taylor-Joy)
SKETCH 4: Hailstorm (Dave Chappelle)
SKETCH 5: Sportsmax (Timothée Chalamet)
SKETCH 6: Christmas Morning (Kristin Wiig)
WU 1: Andrew Dismukes discusses grandma (Keegan Michael Key)
WU 2: Dolly Parton (Timothée Chalamet)
WU 3: Iceberg That Sank The Titanic (Carey Mulligan)
SKETCH 7: Proud Parents (Daniel Kaluuya)
COMM 2: Five-Hour Empathy (Issa Rae)
SKETCH 8: Study Buddy (Carey Mulligan)
SKETCH 9: The Last Dance: Extended Scene (Keegan Michael Key)
SKETCH 10: Let’s Say Grace (Regé-Jean Page)
SKETCH 11: NYU Guest Panel (Anya Taylor-Joy)
SKETCH 12:
The Maya-ing (Maya Rudolph)

Favorite episode(s)?: The finale, of course, felt like the big triumphant moment that the show had been struggling to work toward. Only hindsight diminishes what felt like a cumulative impact—what felt like an exclamation mark turned out to be an ellipsis. Beyond that, the Burr and Chalamet episodes felt like they had a little more voice to them. I also still feel that the Dan Levy episode woulda coulda shoulda kinda was a great episode.

Hot takes?: You guys are going to hate me for this one. I don’t want to hate on anything you love (I like Tiny Horse, I don’t love it), but you know those sketches that you really really hate? Like really despise? Like, those ones on your worst ever lists? Yeah, I don’t mind them.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not trying to argue for anything’s greatness. But Gen-Z Hospital? Fuck it, I laughed. In spite of myself, sure, but a laugh is a laugh is a laugh. LIke yes, it’s one joke and not a great one and Elon Musk’s active shooter energy is certainly not helping a damn thing. But for about 30 seconds of this thing, I’m pretty down with the cause even if I know it’s actually bad. Maybe I’m the perfect age where I’m young enough to place the joke but old enough not to muster up offense to everything. 

You know what else? That Morgan Wallen reclamation turd? I don’t hate it either. The guy’s a shithead and SNL is always at its worst when it’s trying to make shitheads appealing, but Wallen is a garden variety shithead and, whatever, it’s a bad sketch with some fun ideas. I’m not too worked up.

Let’s see, what else…I’ve already defended the Headless Horsemen sketch and about half the Dan Levy episode, so you know I’m not grumpy about those. Regurgitations like Extreme Baking Championship and the sleepover sketch from the Jason Bateman episode? Don’t hate ‘em! Don’t love them, but not sure what the big problem is.

Yeah, if it weren’t for me trashing the Maya Rudolph episode, you’d think I was the least critical person on the planet.

JOHN:
What are your general thoughts on the season?: The further removed we are from season 46, the further removed season 46 seems from anything which has happened on the show since that time. 

There’s the obvious (the heavy focus on Kamala Harris, who has since been an afterthought on the show, aside from a few digs during Update), but the sense of the season being an anomaly even trickles down to the cast. 

There’s Lauren, Punkie and Andrew, debuting as cast members; Lauren is one of the most forgotten cast members of all time, while Punkie and Andrew, as of current writing, are lucky to even get into episodes. There’s Heidi, Ego and Bowen, who all provided strong writing and performances this season and seemed poised to only be at the start of their best work, but have instead never managed to top anything from this point, and in some cases (particularly Heidi’s), putting out a number of pieces which have made me wonder what I even saw in them.

And of course, Pete, who had a season where everything finally and fully clicked into place, with a chance to leave on a great note…only to undo most of those positives with a final season so half-assed, by the last months many no longer knew if he was even in the cast.

There are some constants, but as is often the case with this show, consistency is not a good thing—the show still doesn’t know how to write for Biden, or politics in general; the show still has no idea what to do with Chloe; Che and Jost still seem to be in purgatory redressed as Weekend Update. 

Fortunately, we still had a few arcs which reached a positive conclusion. Chris Redd, after a shaky season or two, really starts to come into his own in 46, enabling him to dominate portions of 47 before leaving on a high. Beck Bennett also bounces back from a middling few years in a way that most late-stage cast members, including some in his own cast (poor Alex Moffat) rarely do, having a year that was strong on all fronts before getting one of the best final episodes I can remember of any SNL player.

There is also the cementing of part-time cast members, after flirtations in past years, and how it affected the show. At the time I wondered if this would become the norm, but I’m not entirely sure any cast members outside of those who have now left will ever be given such freedom. Looking back, Aidy’s tenure wasn’t affected as much as I may have felt in real time, but I do think Cecily felt out of place for the rest of that season—to be honest I think Cecily felt out of place starting from season 45, but it never came off to me quite as much as it did in 46 (I still shudder at the memory of some of her Update pieces).

I hate to even talk about politics on this show, of all shows, I’m mentioning this solely because I do wonder if this is the last time the show will get any real election boost, especially given how quickly the numbers wore off. A boost which was completely unearned (do you remember any good political commentary on SNL in those months, outside of a joke or two on Update?). I remember hoping the shift away from Trumpwin might finally bring change in cold open length and quality, while realizing that was as likely as an episode co-hosted by Will Ferrell and Adam McKay. The one positive of this period was the collective shrug toward Jim Carrey’s work as Joe Biden finally let Lorne and co see the virtues of having a cast member in these key roles. The writing is still lousy, but baby steps…

This was the only full season where Anna Drezen served as a co-head writer. I didn’t pay as much attention to this at the time, partly because I had become somewhat burnt out on her sketches and partly because I wasn’t sure how this would influence the show as a whole; I’m not sure how much power any head writer has over Lorne or network interference given the number of decades-long writing issues the show has had. I now find myself appreciating her tenure more, both because I think season 46 had longer-than-usual periods of sustained quality (or as close as you’re likely to get with the show, anyway) and because 46 was one of the only large-cast seasons to make an effort to get everyone onto Update, even just once. I wonder if these elements would have continued if she hadn’t left halfway through season 47, or if, like so many things in season 46, it was never going to last. 

One reason I can walk away from this season with something of a soft spot is the season finale. SNL season finales tend to be an expectations game, expectations which can never go low enough due to burnout galore. For once, the season truly ended on a high note, allowing for a sense of joy and completion to carry through the summer months. Even if most of the forever cast still dragged their heels one more year, nothing can take away the commitment and heart that episode had. 

What was your favorite thing that you covered this season?: I’d probably choose the Issa Rae episode as a whole, because I think the episode is very unique, due to the host, where the show (and the country) was at that time,  as well as the variety of material which represents a road the show did not end up taking for the rest of the season. Carey Mulligan I’m happy I got to talk about because for me it is one of those examples of a hostproof episode which doesn’t get as much coverage because it’s not about a host being bad or controversial, just about them being pleasant but average (sometimes a combination that leads to better nights than one might imagine…sometimes not). I’m also glad I got to choose two episodes with very strong Aidy sketches, because I feel like most of the shows I’ve covered haven’t given me that opportunity to praise the parts of her work that made me appreciate her even when her tenure ambled for several years longer than necessary.

Favorite sketches?: Not counting anything I covered, “Samuel Adams,” “Strollin’,” “Take Me Back,” “Tiny Horse,” “Dionne Warwick Talk Show” (#1),  “Christmas Morning,” “It Gets Better,” “Murder Show,” “Bachelor Party,” “Viking Voyager,” “Dating After Lockdown,” “The Maya-ing.” “Viral Apology Video,” “Proud Parents,” “Every Conversation…” “”Last Dance: Extended Scene,” “Muppet Show,” “Hollywood Squares,” “Picture With Dad,” “NYU Guest Panel,” “AMC Theatres,” Andrew’s Update appearance, Cecily as Pirro, Pete’s final Update appearance, Heidi and Mikey “cancel” Update appearance, Melissa’s Dolly Parton Update appearance, “Home Makeover” (CFT), “Gospel Play Promo” (CFT). 

Favorite episode(s)?: Rae, Chalamet, RGP, ATJ.

Hot takes?: I still think the Nick Jonas episode, which was all but ignored at the time, has a great deal of genuinely strong and offbeat material that might have gotten more notice if not for having such an incredibly bland host. I still don’t mind the quieter crowds of a number of episodes this season, and wish the show had used the opportunity to try a wider variety of material that doesn’t rely on generic laughs. I can take this season’s Mulaney episode over season 45’s, even if I’m not watching most of either again anytime soon unless you pay me. While I was never fond of Maya’s time in the cast, I didn’t have any problem with her making various appearances in the first months of season 46—I much preferred seeing her non-Kamaya roles, and the people she took airtime from continued to get little airtime after she left anyway.  I wish Kenan had left after this season—I understand why he stayed, as I imagine even he knew his sitcom would not last very long, but once you get to the point of becoming successful enough to have a big venture elsewhere, it becomes increasingly difficult to sustain yourself in the fabric of SNL (and indeed, I feel like he has had a harder and harder time not sticking out, especially in this giggle-filled season).

KABIR:
What are your general thoughts on the season?: Not as polarizing as the last election season (2016-17), it felt like the show was equating “being political” with “being relevant”; there’s no requirement that politics had to be the focus of so much of the show. But that gave the non-political sketches (or the ones which were subtle) a chance to shine. There was also a much better mix of hosts than I think we’ve had in recent years: stand-ups, comedic actors, serious actors, established stars, former cast members, a few musicians… and the musical guests were almost uniformly solid. Almost.

What was your favorite thing that you covered this season?: I only covered two episodes (John Krasinski and Adele), which were both kind of sub-par. Both of them are very engaging performers, but Adele hasn’t done much comedy and Krasinski hadn’t done much in a long time. So I guess I’ll say it was fun seeing them in this new/revisited arena. Even if the episodes didn’t turn out great, the hosts put in a good effort and seemed to be having fun.

Favorite sketches?: Uncle Ben, because it married the ridiculous to politics and then had the infectious character breaks. Also, Lexus (Timothee Chalamet) because it was just so perfectly done.

Favorite episode(s)?: Dave Chappelle. The recent tradition of having him host after an election has been a nice touch.

Hot takes?: I am extremely tired of the cameo-fest cold opens that are just 1) a press conference, 2) a politician in one, 3) debates.

SNL has always had political humor and always will. So the whole “SNL is too political and not funny anymore” thing is ridiculous. But the show needs to find ways into political humor that are not just same old tropes. Some of the funniest political sketches were more inventive with their settings: Perot/Stockdale taking a drive, Bush 41 and Bob Dole fishing, Reagan (Chevy Chase) playing the organ, Jimmy Carter and family generating electricity with an exercise bike, the Three Mile Island sketch, Reagan’s staff briefing, Palin being interviewed, etc.

VAX NOVIER:
What are your general thoughts on the season?: Looking back, it’s best to view this season on a tempered measure than the average year due to the show having to deal with the global pandemic going on in order to keep running. Production shifts to accommodate safety protocols led to larger blocks of episodes never attempted before, as the uncertainty of completing the season and making it to May, or even to the end of October, loomed over the proceedings. 

This season had so many tonal shifts it can almost be divided into severely mini-seasons: 
— the initial six week stretch where the opening 10+ minutes were dedicated to debate material helmed entirely by a set of recurring guest stars, and a hollow atmosphere in the studio due to limited capacity made way for traces of offbeat sketches atypical for the era, complete with scattered Maya sightings throughoutthe December shows that relished in its post-Trumpwin world while slowing easing back into the normal pre-Covid routine broadcast
— the extended block starting out the new year marked by cold opens with less politics in the foreground, the return of senior cast members stabilizing the ongoing hierarchy, along with peaks and valleys of varying levels on a sketch-by-sketch basis
— the remainder of the season with the entire cast in the studio, whether all of them were used or not, that provided consistent quality material for the most part (and a dark stain on the show’s reputation) that left hints of opportunity for the next generation of players as things began to open once more.

It’s easy to get upset that many long-time cast members didn’t depart after this year, but I can understand why given the circumstances. The main goal that year was completing the season rather than wrapping up their tenures in the long run.

What was your favorite thing that you covered this season?: When signing up for this project, there was only one episode I initially planned to cover from this season. While Nick Jonas didn’t host the best show of the year, it carried a consistent quality that was needed during a troubling period and benefited the overall proceedings. Highlights include Viking Voyager which coasted on low-key energy, and a quality performance from later-season Kate boosting Dating After Lockdown.

Favorite sketches?:
Favorite Live Sketches:
The Dionne Warwick Show (Timothée Chalamet)
Rap Roundtable (Timothée Chalamet)
Amusement Park (Nick Jonas)
Dating After Lockdown (Nick Jonas)
Proud Parents (Daniel Kaluuya)
Dog Park (Daniel Kaluuya)
The Muppet Show (Keegan-Michael Key)
NYU Guest Panel (Anya Taylor-Joy)
AMC Theaters (Anya Taylor-Joy)

Favorite Pretapes:
Enough is Enough (Bill Burr)
5-Hour Empathy (Issa Rae)
Strollin’ (John Mulaney)
Take Me Back (Dave Chappelle)
Lexus (Timothée Chalamet)
Tiny Horse (Timothée Chalamet)
I Got a Robe (Kristen Wiig)
It Gets Better (Dan Levy)
Job Interview (Regé-Jean Page)
The Last Dance (Keegan-Michael Key)
Picture with Dad (Anya Taylor-Joy)

Favorite Update Pieces:
80’s Cocaine Wife (Issa Rae)
Pete Davidson (Jason Bateman)
Melissa as Dolly (Timothée Chalamet)
Joke Swap (Kristen Wiig)
The Iceberg (Carey Mulligan)

Favorite episode(s)?: Timothée Chalamet & Daniel Kaluuya (with Nick Jonas at a distant #3).

Hot takes?: While I can still enjoy the ATJ finale as a victory lap for the season, it can still be difficult to enjoy the moments that were teased as farewells for certain cast members. Especially when Pete had a solid year to go out on, an entire sketch was anchored by all three of the senior women (or “the new girls whose names I can’t remember” as Martin Short once called them), and Cecily’s Pirro bit, that was really a sendoff in all but confirmation, feels diminished due to backtracking it as a farewell for the season, having their cake and eating it at the expense of any underused newbies.

BLUE:
What are your general thoughts on the season’s musical performances?: As one might have assumed from all the 3-star ratings (and frequent comments on performers’ fashion, as that’s what I always resort to pointing out if I can’t think of anything to say about the music), the majority of S46’s musical performances were, in my opinion, just okay. I can’t even use my excuse of being a pop music snob, because even a few rock artists like The Strokes, Foo Fighters, and Bruce Springsteen received mediocre ratings. (Then again, I was never a specific fan of those three… but considering how much I dug Foo Fighters’ S43 performances, I was hoping to enjoy their performances this season just as much.) Very few performances specifically wowed me, not only in terms of music, but in terms of its presentation. Obviously not every artist on the SNL stage has to smash a guitar like Phoebe Bridgers or attempt a pole-dancing routine like Lil Nas X, but I’d like to see more of them try it… I got the impression that there was more of a focus on “ooh, pretty light projections” this season, but that could be my recency bias of having reviewed the previous seasons’ performances so much longer ago and having had them fade from memory. 

With all that said, I did come away from this season with generally positive feelings towards the musical performances. Notably, there was nothing I specifically hated. For the first time since this project started, I didn’t give any musical performances a 1-star rating. I’m sure being a fan of some of the artists who played this season has something to do with that, but hey, I’m never going to complain about a favorite artist getting their chance to be on SNL. And if St. Vincent and Phoebe Bridgers are going to serve as a mental blind spot to help me forget Jack Harlow, Morgan Wallen, and Machine Gun Kelly, then so be it…

Pop, pop, pop was the genre of the season, as per usual, and I have nothing to say about that, given my aforementioned snobbish tendencies. As I said in the S45 wrap-up post, SNL could have picked someone better for their obligatory country artist (I’ll reiterate Jason Isbell as my personal pick, in case that helps manifest it), but I’m glad they chose the obligatory indie artists that they did (now let’s see if Phoebe’s boygenius bandmate Julien Baker will come on as well… or hell, I’d enjoy seeing the entire boygenius trio on SNL, even though I can take or leave Lucy Dacus). I’d love for someone who’s more knowledgeable about current names in hip hop to weigh in on their feelings for hip hop picks this season, though I have a feeling they might feel close to what I feel about the country artists. Finally, while I felt that there was a stronger emphasis on rock than in the previous couple seasons, I would love to see more younger, up-and-coming rock bands on the show as opposed to older acts like The Strokes and Foo Fighters. (Then again, be careful what you wish for or you might end up with Greta Van Fleet. Anyway, as long as I’m tossing out dream SNL picks, might as well give Thunderpussy a mention. If you want classic rock done by people who weren’t alive when classic rock wasn’t considered classic, they’re the group to go to, imo.) 

Favorite performances?: As mentioned above, I am a fan of Phoebe Bridgers and St. Vincent, with the latter’s album Daddy’s Home being my personal pick for Album of the Year 2021, so naturally I was delighted to see them both bring their A-game to the show. And how the hell did I make it this far without mentioning Jack White?? I’ve never quite known what to make of him– sometimes he strikes me as pretentious, other times profound– but it goes without saying that he really knocked those performances out of the park.

Overall rankings: Based partly on my ratings, and partly on my subjective opinion.

1. Jack White
2. Lil Nas X
3. St. Vincent
4. Phoebe Bridgers
5. Megan Thee Stallion
6. H.E.R.
7. Nathaniel Rateliff
8. Dua Lipa
9. Foo Fighters
10. Miley Cyrus
11. The Strokes
12. Nick Jonas
13. Olivia Rodrigo
14. Machine Gun Kelly
15. Justin Bieber
16. Bruce Springsteen
17. Kid Cudi
18. Jack Harlow
19. Bad Bunny
20. Morgan Wallen

And now that that’s out of the way… I’d like to take a moment to announce that Season 46 is the last season from which I will be covering musical guest performances for this project. Other creative projects have taken precedence in my life– most notably my band’s first EP & music video, and a novel– and unfortunately the One SNL a Day project has become less of a priority. That being said, I’ll still continue to read site updates and follow along with what my fellow reviewers have to say about the show. Many thanks to Rose, Anthony, Matt, John, Carson, Kabir, and Vax for allowing me to be a part of this project, and of course thanks to Stooge for starting the original project and leaving a significant gap in each review that I found myself longing to fill. If anyone who enjoyed my reviews wants to keep up with my thoughts on whatever music happens to be striking my fancy lately, I have a (very sporadically updated) music review account on Instagram under @52recordsayear. That’s all, folks… goodnight, and have a pleasant tomorrow! 

AND NOW, SOME DATA!!
4601: 5.4 (Chris Rock) – Vax Novier
4602: 6.9 (Bill Burr) – Matt
4603: 6.6 (Issa Rae) – John
4604: 5.1 (Adele) – Kabir
4605: 5.1 (John Mulaney) – Anthony
4606: 7.5 (Dave Chappelle) – Carson
4607: 5.6 (Jason Bateman) – Matt
4608: 6.9 (Timothée Chalamet) – Matt
4609: 5.5 (Kristen Wiig) – Anthony
4610: 6.2 (John Krasinki) – Kabir
4611: 5.3 (Dan Levy) – Matt
4612: 5.8 (Regina King) – John
4613: 6.7 (Regé-Jean Page) – John
4614: 6.5 (Nick Jonas) – Vax Novier
4615: 4.6 (Maya Rudolph) – Carson
4616: 6.5 (Daniel Kaluuya) – Anthony
4617: 6.8 (Carey Mulligan) – John
4618: 3.5 (Elon Musk) – Matt
4619: 5.4 (Keegan-Michael Key) – Anthony
4620: 8.3 (Anya Taylor-Joy) – Carson / Anthony / Matt

Best Episode: Anya Taylor-Joy – 8.3 (Runner up: Dave Chappelle – 7.5)
Worst Episode: Elon Musk – 3.5 (Runner up: Maya Rudolph – 4.6)
Season Average: 6.0

HIGHEST RATED SKETCHES

5 STARS:
The Blitz (Burr; Matt)
Strollin’ (Mulaney; Anthony)
Hailstorm (Chappelle; Carson)
Lexus (Chalamet; Matt)
Birthday Gifts (King; John)
Dating After Lockdown (Jonas; Vax)
The Maya-ing (Rudolph; Carson)
Proud Parents (Kaluuya; Anthony)
The Last Dance: Extended Scene (Key; Anthony)
Picture With Dad (Taylor-Joy; Matt)
Weekend Update (Taylor-Joy; Matt)
NYU Guest Panel (Taylor-Joy; Anthony)
AMC Theatres (Taylor-Joy; Anthony)

4.5 STARS:
CFT: Sunday Night Plans (Rae; John)
Take Me Back (Chappelle; Carson)
Weekend Update (Chappelle; Carson)
Tiny Horse (Chalamet; Matt)
Christmas Morning (Wiig; Anthony)
A Teacher (Wiig; Anthony)
It Gets Better (Levy; Matt)
The Job Interview (Page; John)
Just Say Grace (Page; John)
Viral Apology Video (Kaluuya; Anthony)
Weekend Update (Mulligan; John)
L’eggs (Mulligan; John)
The Muppet Show (Key; Anthony)

4 STARS:
The Drew Barrymore Show (Rock; Vax)
Monologue (Burr; Matt)
Enough is Enough (Burr; Matt)
Samuel Adams Jack-O-Pumpkin Ale (Burr; Matt)
First Date Exes (Rae; John)
Weekend Update (Rae; John)
Your Voice Chicago (Rae; John)
Jack Flatts (Rae; John)
Cinema Classics: The Birds (Mulaney; Anthony) 
Monologue (Chappelle; Carson)
Uncle Ben (Chappelle; Carson)
Stu (Bateman; Matt)
Bits (Bateman; Matt)
The Dionne Warwick Talk Show (Chalamet; Matt)
Rap Roundtable (Chalamet; Matt)
Weekend Update (Wiig; Anthony)
What Still Works? (Krasinski; Kabir)
Now That’s What I Call Theme Songs (Krasinksi; Kabir)
Pandemic Game Night (Krasinski; Kabir)
Lifting Our Voices (Levy; Matt)
The Negotiator (King; John)
The Grocery Rap (Page; John)
Viking Voyager (Jonas; Vax)
Monologue (Kaluuya; Anthony)
Dog Park (Kaluuya; Anthony)
CFT: Beanie Babies (Kaluuya; Anthony)
What’s Wrong With This Picture? (Mulligan; John)
Study Buddies (Mulligan; John)
What I Remember About Last Year (Taylor-Joy; Carson)
Hollywood Squares (Taylor-Joy; Carson)
Making Man (Taylor-Joy; Carson)
It’s Pride Again (Taylor-Joy; Anthony)

LOWEST RATED SKETCHES

2 STARS:
Stunt Performers Association (Rock; Vax)
Bonjour Hi! (Rae; John)
The Haunted Manor (Adele; Kabir)
Trump Addicts of America (Adele; Kabir)
Weekend Update (Adele; Kabir)
Visiting Grandma (Adele; Kabir)
Africa Tourism (Adele; Kabir)
Biden Beats Trump (Chappelle; Carson)
Michigan Election Hearings (Bateman; Matt)
The Situation Room (Chalamet; Matt)
The Grinch (Wiig; Anthony)
Home For Christmas (Wiig; Anthony)
Monologue (Krasinski; Kabir)
Weekend Update (Krasinski; Kabir)
Monologue (Levy; Matt)
Hot Damn (Levy; Matt)
Tucker Carlson Tonight (King; John)
Gorilla Glue (King; John)
Bridgerton Intamcy Coordinators (Page; John)
Snatched, Vaxed, or Waxed! (Rudolph; Carson)
2021 Barfly Awards (Rudolph; Carson)
Weird Little Flute (Mulligan; John)
The War In Words (Mulligan; John)
Mother’s Day (Musk; Matt)
The Astronaut (Musk; Matt)
No More Masks (Key; Anthony)
Commencement Celebrations (Key; Anthony)

1.5 STARS:
Dueling Town Halls (Rae; John)
Biden Halloween (Mulaney; Anthony)
Headless Horseman (Mulaney; Anthony)
New York PSA (Mulaney; Anthony)
Another Uncle Meme (Mulaney; Anthony)
Holiday Baking Championship (Chalamet; Matt)
Super Bowl LV (Levy; Matt)
Women’s Theatre (King; John)
Cinderella (Jonas; Vax)
Choreographers (Rudolph; Carson)
Oops, You Did It Again (Kaluuya; Anthony)
Weekend Update (Musk; Matt)
Gemma & DJ Balls (Key; Anthony)

1 STAR:
Presidential Debate (Rock; Vax)
Vice Presidential Debate (Burr; Matt)
Presidential Debate (Adele; Kabir)
Sleepover (Bateman; Matt)
Morgan Wallen Party (Bateman; Matt)
Pence Takes the Vaccine (Wiig; Anthony)
Secret Word Holiday Edition (Wiig; Anthony)
Wedding Friends (Levy; Matt)
Monologue (Rudolph; Carson)
A Kamala Harris Unity Seder (Rudolph; Carson)
NFTs (Rudolph; Carson)
Half Brother (Kaluuya; Anthony)
Monologue (Musk; Matt)
Gen Z Hospital (Musk; Matt)
The Ooli Show (Musk; Matt)
Wario Trial (Musk; Matt)
Cowboy Standoff (Musk; Matt)
Line (Key; Anthony)
CFT: Star Quality (Taylor-Joy; Matt)

OUR PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS ENTIRE SEASON, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS, IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER

COMING SOON
After some delay, the Best of Beck Bennett should be next in our queue!

May 22, 2021 – Anya Taylor-Joy / Lil Nas X (S46 E20)

by Anthony, Carson, and Matt

Matt: Hey all! So, this was an episode that a handful of us here at the site wanted to cover, and we decided that the best way to do that would be to try out another joint review! Carson, Anthony and I have divided the episode up in terms of the segments that we most wanted to cover (or otherwise were forced to cover because nobody else wanted them), and we tackled those assigned segments as we usually would in our normal reviews… but every sketch also features shorter, alternate takes from the other two writers! It’s like a 3-for-1 deal! We’re treating y’all better than you deserve.

This was a massively fun review to write, so without further ado: Carson, take it away!

WHAT I REMEMBER ABOUT LAST YEAR (Carson)
castmembers, CSR, Leo Yoshimura [real] give recollections of SNL’s season

Carson: After spending the first half of the season doubling down on all the worst traits of Trump era cold opens—celebrity cameos, exorbitant runtimes, grab bags of one-liners with no conceptual throughline—SNL spent the rest of the season trying to give their show openers a jolt of energy with new approaches. The cameos cooled down, the political bent became less direct and the runtimes… well, whatever. The results felt fresher, but were really no better. There were plenty of admirable attempts at a new approach to cold opens, but nothing that felt effective or sustainable (for Season 47, SNL seemed to return to the more tried-and-true formula of the late-90s and early-00s, to generally positive effect). This final cold open—a “Year In Review” of sorts—feels like a concession that things haven’t been fully clicking. Honestly, it’s probably for the best. I have no interest in returning to the Trumpwin well OR another of those lame Britney Spears sketches.
— The cast’s most senior cohort—Aidy, Kate, Cecily and Kenan—open the sketch at home base. During the rapturous opening applause, many of them appear to be tearing up. Which is honestly totally understandable because this is obviously their last show, right? RIGHT???
— “It was actually a pretty fun year for me…” Kenan, holding it down for those of us who didn’t really feel crushed by the world during the first year of COVID.
— Very interesting pajama top that Bowen is wearing.
— Charming, if not quite hilarious, reflections on the first COVID year, particularly Aidy’s early misconception that being able to hold your breath was proof of not having COVID.
— This is doing a nice job of highlighting the early absurdities of working within pandemic restrictions (like Chris Redd locking eyes with Adele mid-nasal swab) and how a half-crowd of masked and exhausted first responders was a less than ideal comedy audience. Honestly, some shows, while quite funny, had Malcom McDowell/Captain Beefheart levels of audience energy. 
— Fun cameo from Leo Yoshimura. He looks great, by the way.
— The season “highlights” bit was predictable, but still very funny, though I wonder if it would have been funnier if they didn’t have Cecily point out the joke.
— “These were unusual circumstances to do comedy under. Was every sketch perfect? Yeah, pretty much. We crushed it!” Great delivery from Kyle.
— Alex, Mikey, Beck and Kenan pointing out the season lowlights (Morgan Wallen, the Mike Pence fly sketch) is a more impressively self-aware piece.
— Fun cameo from Chris Rock! The Will Smith slap officially memory-wiped everything I knew about Chris Rock from before that moment. Was he on SNL or something?
—  Here comes the sincere part where everyone gets all weepy. I’d find it more affecting if I didn’t feel so inured to SNL’s new penchant for solemn weepiness.
— I always thought that comparing Aidy and Lauren in how they look was kind of a shitty thing to do, but then again, look at the screencap of them saying “Live From New York…” It’s honestly so striking and I’m guessing that Aidy’s return is a big reason why Lauren wasn’t brought back. Have any two cast members ever looked so similar while being on the show at the same time? Spade and Carvey?
— All in all, it was a slightly hokey cold open, but the energy was sweet, the jokes landed and we largely got to avoid all the aggravating trappings of the preceding season’s cold opens. That puts me in a good mood at least.
Anthony: The first of two segments tonight that definitely play a little differently now that we know Beck and Lauren are the only two people in the cast leaving this summer (this is especially true for the part mocking the newbies lack of screen time). It is what it is, I mean clearly it’s time for the majority of this crew to pack it up, but I get not wanting to leave the place that loves you so much you get applause breaks for telling mildly amusing anecdotes, as happens to Aidy here when she does the bit about holding her breath. Still, a fun open—a lot of the self-aware digs hit and for once this season it sets a great energy for the night ahead. 
— Also, random note, but why are some of the cast members fake laughing along here like talk show hosts at some of these lines? They know we know they’ve heard them before, right?
Matt: I’m a little higher on this cold open than Carson, though he speaks of it very well. In my opinion, this was just about the most perfect way to conclude a season of exhausting cold opens that I could possibly imagine, and for once, instead of just autopiloting its way through ten minutes of applause, SNL is shooting for the heart. There are some things that hit a bit unfortunately with the hindsight of next season—namely the firing of poor Lauren, who was most certainly dealt the worst hand here, and the lack of cast turnover (something that mars this episode somewhat)—but this was a thoughtful, funny, and ultimately touching way to recap one of the craziest and messiest seasons that the show’s ever had. 
STARS: ****

MONOLOGUE (Carson)
The Queen’s Gambit prepared host for the chessboard that is SNL

Carson: Joy is British?? Well, whattya know?
— This is the first show of the season with a full crowd. You could actually tell in the cold open. The energy is a little stronger tonight.
— Oh, Joy is a Miami-born Argentenian Brit. That’s a fun grab bag.
— Joy is being tasked with getting the regular supply of ho-hum monologue jokes over with the crowd. She’s doing fine and the audience is big enough that everything is getting a bit more than it deserves. That said, the opening chess move joke where Joy does her Queen’s Gambit pose was kind of fun.
— Ok, they’re actually doing something more with the Queen’s Gambit references by having Joy hallucinate a chess board of cue cards with the cast all as chess pieces. It would have been fun if they did more with the visual, but as it stands, it’s probably one of the more ambitious pieces in a monologue the show has done in a decade.
— Joy does the standard “We have a great show” spiel in her native Spanish, which is a nice enough touch, though as a white-passing Spanish speaking Brit, all the cultural ambiguity is enough to make your head spin.
— The chess board thing was a great touch and maybe hinted at a far more fascinating monologue that could have been, but alas this is a 2021 SNL monologue we’re talking about.
Anthony: While this didn’t reinvent the wheel it did a good job setting up Joy as a charismatic and engaging host, and the SNL chess board visual was pretty fun and inventive. 
Matt: Not the greatest monologue, but solid for what it is. I love the hot crowd, and I like the decision to pan along the balcony seats and showcase the full studio—there’s a great shot of a guy standing up and flailing around like crazy that always cracks me up. The audience also gives Anya a standing ovation up top, which feels rare to see, especially for a first-time host; you can tell everyone is really pumped to be there, and that energy gives this episode a wonderful spark.
— The nerd in me loves that the chessboard is composed of cue cards from sketches across the past two episodes, including some that were cut after dress and some that have lines that didn’t make it into the live show. Notably, there are several from “Sending Drinks,” cut from both of the last two episodes, and this week’s “NYU Guest Panel” sketch in the mix.
STARS: ***

HOLLYWOOD SQUARES (Carson)
nearly all celebrities in 1998 episode are problematic

Carson: The cut to the 1998 Hollywood celebrities reveals the joke pretty quickly with Kenan’s Bill Cosby taking up the middle square. But I do notice that the top right square has Apu from The Simpsons. Lauren is also slotted up top in a non-speaking role as Roseanne. Same for Andrew as Kevin Spacey.
— While the reveal is a little predictable, it’s ultimately satisfying. This is a good premise for a sketch, even if I wonder if this would have hit even harder in, say, 2017. I guess it has a bit of a 2021 vibe with the retroactive erasure of potentially offensive content (see the striking of streaming 30 Rock and Community episodes that featured satirical use of blackface), but I feel like this could have felt really edgy just a couple years earlier.
— That all said, the cutaways to the Steve Higgins narration are incredibly effective.
—  Aidy: “One thing’s for sure, I trust Bill Cosby!”
— Funny inclusion of Jeff Dunham. The idea that he would name a talking cornbread “De’Shawn” is pretty hilarious. With the risk of Chris explaining the joke like Mikey Day, his portion where he calls out Dunham actually works pretty well.
— I don’t think things are escalating in any particular way, but the sketch is doing a good job of hitting the same beat in different ways.
— A zippy little piece that has some light fun playing with a hot topic. Was it timely? Eh, I’m not sure about that, but it was well-structured and high energy. 
Anthony: Not the most original piece the show’s ever done (things have changed culturally in the past few years? Ya don’t say) but there’s a tightness to the writing here I appreciate. This doesn’t get bogged down in extraneous details or random one-liners like a lot of modern sketches can, it’s just a quick hit of laughs connected to its premise. Some of it feels like we’re getting into easy shock laughs, but the piece mostly does what it’s supposed to and continues the strong energy the night has going so far.
Matt: Not the best sketch, but a very well-written one and a great way to start the night off. I agree with Carson that it might’ve hit harder more at the start of the #MeToo movement, but it’s still delightfully dark with its meta humor in 2021. I might criticize the anachronistic qualities of some of the celebrities, as people like Jared Fogle and Jeff Dunham were nobodies at the time, but it’s a minor complaint. I’m also surprised to see SNL taking shots at Dunham, a comedian who no doubt still works with a lot of racist shit but who there’s never been a concentrated effort to call out.
— It’s odd that Chris calls on Kevin Spacey, who is portrayed in full make-up by Andrew in the shot of the full board at the start of the sketch, but he never gets a specific close-up. I wonder if his part (and Lauren’s) were trimmed after dress.
— This sketch was previously cut from the Keegan-Michael-Key episode. In a podcast with Mike Birbiglia, he joked that it came down between this and “The Muppet Show,” and I think the right call was made there.
STARS: ****

PICTURE WITH DAD (Matt)
pre-prom photo causes accidental shotgun blast

Matt: Ah, hell yes, a Dismukes classic! 
— A fantastic disruption to the sweet tone of this pretape with Beck’s dad walking into Andrew and Heidi’s prom picture with a shotgun, and then an even more fantastic disruption with Beck proceeding to accidentally blast his dick off.
— I love the brief, blunt exchange between Alex and Anya’s doctors about how Beck was another case of someone blowing his dick off while holding a gun in a prom picture.
— I think that it’s very hard to write a sketch where the game is how much the game is repeatedly changing, and this sketch really flows from one idea to the next—first it’s about how Beck blew his dick off, then it’s about how much Andrew and Heidi have been having sex, and then it’s about the fact that they’re gonna have sex after prom even though Beck doesn’t want them to—but there’s something about the rapid pacing of this sketch, the way that the dialogue and the characterizations that are written, that keeps it perfectly afloat. That’s how fucking good Andrew is as a writer, and you can tell that the snappiness in his approach is bred from a far more youthful place than most of SNL’s other staffers. The fact that this whole sketch clocks in at a mere three minutes, too, and has so much to it… that’s definitely something SNL could afford to learn from with how long its sketches tend to run.
— There’s also a fantastically rhythmic quality to the dialogue, between Beck’s desperation and the very chaste responses of those around him, that really unifies all of the different games going on.
— Beck: “Lizzie, I’m sorry I ruined your prom by blowing my dick off with my gun… and Laura, I’m sorry I didn’t listen to you, and so I blew my little dick off with my big ‘ol gun.”
— The drawn-out portion with Andrew politely informing Beck that they won’t have sex on his request, but that they totally will, is a particular highlight. 
— I just wanted to say here how goddamn happy I am that Andrew was able to really blossom in the back-half of this season and find a niche, which he continued to maintain into S47. (As for S48… hopefully he’ll get more on than he has been as it progresses.) He’s a newbie with the sort of assured, singular voice that ensures him a long future with the show, and I can’t wait to talk about the sort of nonsense that he’ll continue to brew in the years to come.
Anthony: One of my favorite pieces of this whole era. When I watched live, I got ahead of the initial reveal but assumed it was going to happen at the very end of the sketch after minutes of arguing—for the sketch to jump straight into it and have Beck immediately shoot himself totally took me by surprise and gave me possibly my hardest laugh of the season. Matt does a great job above expressing just why this piece works so well, so I don’t have a ton more to say, but this absolutely one for the highlight reel.
— Also nice to see Beck, on his final night, get such a great role in a piece written by Andrew, one of the future stars of the show. A nice sort of torch passing moment. 
Carson: An immediate favorite. I showed this one to a ton of people after it aired in a very “Look, SNL is still a little bit funny” way. I agree with Matt that the brilliance is in the sheer efficiency of its execution. There are three or four key beats here that a regular SNL sketch would commit five minutes to alone. And while I think Andrew’s Frasier ad-lib was what fully won me over on him, it was his rapid fire back-and-forth with Beck that confirmed my belief that he belonged on the show. Premise-wise, it’s mostly pretty stupid, but in terms of pure execution, it’s really seamless.
— It also needs to be mentioned that in all the high energy and varying comic beats, this is just a really sharp takedown of fragile male egos and patriarchal bullshit. Beck, of course, is brilliant in this role, but so often SNL needs to let the audience in on the satirical POV (just imagine this sketch having Mikey Day standing there declaring “boy, that dad really seems to be compensating for something!”). Here, the comedy zooms by at breakneck speed, allowing the audience to actually engage with the comedy without being told what to think. Classic show, don’t tell—a hallmark of a great sketch.    
STARS: *****

MAKING MAN (Carson)
in heaven, designers of man receive criticism from designers of woman

Carson: The design of human man feels like a concept with a lot of room for play.
—  Mikey: “Where did you guys land on hair for the human man?” Beck: “Uh, we’re thinking about putting it pretty much everywhere.”
— The one huge toe gag comes with a pretty funny visual.
— I like Melissa being the one person on the female design team who is into the male design. I could do without Aidy having to put her in her place. It doesn’t do much for me comedically and it’s triggering my Melissa Defense Mechanism. 
— I love how smug and proud the guys are about their absurd design.
— Kenan being the nipple expert, pretentiously explaining how the male torso is meant to give the illusion of a giant face, is perfect. 
— Mikey: “As you can see, the Dangler uses three different colors of skin.”
— Great bit about “the Dangler” being basically impervious to pain while the “wrinkle pouch” can make the man fall over and vomit by merely being flicked. Some very base, but very funny observations being executed here.
— The guys’ explanation of blue balls is brilliant.
— I’m realizing that Aidy was basically pointless in this scene.
— Kyle does a brilliant turn as a socially awkward Jesus, but it’s ultimately kind of weird non-sequitur addition. The sketch kind of peters (also known as simons) out as a result.
— A very silly, but pretty evergreen concept here. This feels like it could have played as well in 1990 or 1975 or even as a mid-60s Second City piece with Alan Arkin as it does in 2021. This could have played in any season without a single revision. That’s a compliment. The sketch moved along with efficiency and despite my minor quibbles (Aidy’s presence, the non-ending), I’m always delighted to see something that feels classic, even if it’s not an actual classic. In a strong episode like this, it’s breezy fun pieces like this that form an effective connective tissue.
Anthony: Another piece tonight that isn’t exactly covering new ground but is just written tightly enough and with enough fun details that it breathes life back into the piece. Some strong ensemble work too, giving everyone some chances to shine, with Melissa and Kyle at the end especially popping. It’s nice that so far this finale has made a concerted effort to showcase the whole cast, rather than just the cast members we assumed may have been leaving at the time.
— Mikey once again donning that weird ass angel wig from the Chad sketch from Season 44’s Sandler episode that looks like something you’d see on a baby Dee Snyder. 
Matt: Probably my pick for most underrated sketch of the night. It’s not anything too elaborate, but it’s just a cavalcade of observational, writerly goodness, which I’ll always be a huge fan of. While I do agree with Carson that this is a sketch with a certain timelessness that means it could play well in any era, it’s also a piece that I think really emphasizes the strength and utility that every cast member plays. This is, for instance, one of my favorite uses of Mikey as an over-explainer and Melissa as her stock “person who is really into the weird thing” archetype; Kenan and Chris also do great work here in their supporting roles. Kyle feels like a missing link and he hurts the sketch a bit with the non-ending, but he’s fun enough as Jesus and it doesn’t ultimately detract.
— The “man” in this sketch clearly uses a cast of Beck’s face. It was also used earlier this season in the “Headless Horseman” sketch from Mulaney’s episode.
— This is also the final sketch co-written by Dan Licata (alongside Streeter Seidell), who leaves after this season. Even though he’s contributed to a rather odd assortment of sketches, I’ve always really liked him and it was sad to see him leave after only two seasons; some of his work, like this piece and “Melissa Seals the Deal” from the At Home episodes (as well as his writing for the great Joe Pera Talks with You), proved he could wield a strong and singular perspective as a writer, something which feels increasingly valuable in this era’s current writer’s room.
STARS: ****


IT’S PRIDE AGAIN (Anthony)
gay celebrants experience joys & frustrations

Anthony: Hey, a silly sketch about partying. This should be fun to talk about! I mean, my God, what in this goofy little sketch could possibly cause me to have to go on a rant about exhausting discourse?
— The melody on this is lifted from Charli XCX’s “Girl’s Night Out”, though I hear some “Holiday” in there as well.
— Love everyone’s outfits! Punkie’s jacket especially is super dope (just putting as much light as I can out there before I have to have words with some people).
— It’s always remarkable to finally see pieces like this on the show. The show has never had the best history with the LGBTQ community (ask Terry Sweeney), with an especially rough patch that stretches from the Bad Boys era to the Meyers years, where “gay” could be the entire punchline for a sketch (just remember such brilliant sketches as ‘what if a Civil War unit was super gay?’ or ‘what if Frankenstein’s monster was super gay?’). Even in 2012, when Kate was hired, while it was a big moment, it was understood that if she was going to be bringing any energy from her previous show, the Big Gay Sketch Show, it was going to be more in husky, chuckle inducing portrayals of stereotypical lesbians than anything like in this sketch (all of that’s before we get into the whole can of worms that is James Anderson). So sketches like this, directly pitched at queer audiences, written by queer writers and starring queer cast members, are still a pretty special thing when we get them. 
— I believe Anya herself is straight, which may be why she sings the part about allies (though she’s playing a lesbian in this sketch, dating Kate). 
— Bowen: “I don’t wanna be funny, I wanna be hot!”
— I wanted more specifics in Kate and Anya’s part, either on what they’re fighting about, or what’s served at a “gay brunch”. They could have done better than “eggs”. 
— Punkie not knowing who to hit on because all the straight girls having started “dressing lesbian” is the type of specific I was looking for in Kate’s bit.
— We get a cameo from Celeste Yim, one of the writers of this piece (along with Bowen and Sudi Green). They’re the one Kate asks “who let in all these straights?” (tenth screencap above)
— Fun and accurate bit with the friends getting into an exhaustive, regurgitative debate about whether or not to eat Chick-fil-A (“you Georgia Bank bitch!”)
— Lil Nas shows up to huge applause from the studio audience. I’ll bring it up in a sec when he comes on to perform, but his being here is another moment that feels significant. His verse is fine, and features some blurred out butt holes, so who can really complain?
— Funny bit mocking rainbow capitalism with the gang realizing they’re on a Deutsche Bank float.
— Hewwkay. So when this came out, there was a small but vocal contingent on Twitter (hellsite FTW yet again) that was Not. Fucking. Having. this sketch. Their beef essentially is that, instead of this being a piece celebrating Pride and all the good it stands for, SNL deigned to air a piece mocking Pride and portraying queers as messy drunks. Now when things got potentially messy in the Kaluuya episode I kept my mouth shut, but since I feel a little more qualified on this lemme just say: muh babies, touch grass. This is a line that’s been used to defend plenty a sketch I hate, but: you know this is a comedy show, right? What, you wanted them to come out and just say what pride means to them personally, maybe look at the camera as one tear slowly rolls down their cheek? This is a dumb song on a sketch show, not everything needs to be fucking Carol (oh what, they don’t like Carol now? Cool). 
— And all that’s before you get to the disgusting “ironic” tweets from people trying to slag off this sketch that said shit like “guess I’m homophobic now” or “I’m glad conversion therapy camps exist”. Maybe it’s just because I’m the ripe old age of 24, but I feel a bit of a disconnect with how cavalier some of these younger raised on internet LGBTQ+ kids can be with saying stuff like that. I get using stereotypes against you for laughs as an in-joke—like this sketch they all hated does—but when you’re making conversion therapy jokes to criticize someone who legit went to a conversion therapy camp you can go take your Euphoria profile pictures and hyperpop topsters and go fuck off.
Carson: Oh I definitely heard “Holiday” in this. That melody is a straight rip. I’ll take Anthony’s word on the Charli XCX part.
—This sketch really speaks to the benefit of representation. While I like it well enough, the element of lived experience or firsthand perspective really adds depth and nuance to the piece that wouldn’t have been available in basically any season before this. I think there have been previously sturdy pieces that have been marred by the fact that the performers do not reflect that insider’s perspective. I’ve often thought about the tricky balancing act of corporate entities co-opting pride (or as Anthony says: “rainbow capitalism”), but those observations sound crass from an outsider’s perspective. Think the “Girl With No Gaydar,” which is excellent on paper, but runs a bit cringey with all the straight performers swishing around. Or how the gay material from Kids In The Hall (even really wild swings like “Running F****t”) holds up far better than anything from, say, Mr. Show, thanks to Scott Thompson’s singular and uniquely confrontational perspective. For as great as Mr. Show was, a lot of their gay material had a mean-spirited tone (there was always just something about David Cross that felt a mite too Gen-X edgy, wasn’t there?). Anyway, this is all to say, this is a great example of why widening SNL’s cast demographics works in its favor. I may not agree with my one friend who found it offensive that Beck Bennett did a Russian accent for his Putin impression, but a piece like this really highlights how a diverse cast actually expands comedic and satirical potential.
Matt: A nice, similarly fleshed-out and wonderfully queer companion piece to “It Gets Better” from earlier this season. As Anthony said earlier, I love that we’re at a point with SNL in terms of diversity where we can get a sketch like this which plays, specifically, for queer audiences, everyone else be damned; for as rocky as the past few seasons have been, I think that’s one of the greatest current highlights of this specific moment in the show’s history. In terms of the sketch itself, I think it’s one of the stronger musical sketches in some time, thanks to how sharply-honed its perspective is, and I love the specificity of its observations; my favorite bits are about how so many straight women dress in queer-adjacent ways, and the argument over Chik-fil-A.
STARS: ****

CELTIC WOMAN (Matt)
Celtic Woman is a crowd-pleasing mostly-Irish musical extravaganza

Matt: Hooray, a sketch built off of a reference that I don’t understand, my favorite! Apparently Celtic Woman is a real-life Irish folk ensemble whose program was frequently aired on PBS, and who tour around the US doing Irish things, context which was generally lost on me when it aired. With that being said… we’ll see how the sketch fares for me now.
— Already in the second cutaway, Cecily, Kate, and Aidy are breaking through their performance, something that would usually annoy me… but there’s been enough goodwill built up tonight that it feels fairly charming. It also helps that they’re not all that responsible right now for any of the comedic heavy-lifting.
— Steve Higgins’ voiceover is providing almost all of this sketch’s laughs, but all of his writing is absolutely perfect: “Witness Irish culture the way it was meant to be enjoyed: in Ohio.”
— A funny bit with the Celtic Woman briefly performing a very Celtic version of “Sweet Home Alabama” because it’s just the sorta song the audience would want to hear.
— Ah, Lauren makes her final sketch appearance in a rather thankless role, giving a testimonial for Celtic Woman. It’s sad to see her go; she was dealt an absolutely terrible hand this season, and I feel like it would’ve only been fair for the show to offer her another season to try to make more of an impression. She was never bad, but she was also just never given any opportunities to prove her worth or meaningfully participate in the show, and I blame SNL for that—with its horribly bloated cast of veterans that refuse to leave—far more than I blame her for being unable to infiltrate it. Alas, as usual, she is decent here, and does as much as the show allows her to do (very little).
— A great brief cutaway of Beck and Kyle hamming it up like a couple of absolute goons banging the shit out of Irish drums. Chloe is also a lot of fun as an erratic, running violinist. These are references that I’m sure I could have more room to understand, but they’re fun enough as is.
— “Take your grandma and watch the popular girls from your high school get absolutely railed by the idea of Ireland.” I see you, Anna Drezen.
— This is a pretty slight and messy sketch overall, but it’s pretty fun for what it is, and the fact that so much of the humor comes more from the details than the performances makes it fairly fail-proof. I’ll be perhaps a bit generous with how I’m ranking it because this episode’s put me in a good mood.
Anthony: Another in this series of sorta grab-bag Drezen-penned sketches starring one or more of these ladies, but enough of the one-liners hit and it gets in and out quick enough with its little drop of silliness that it definitely doesn’t detract from the episode.
— Nice to see Higgins kill it again on the voiceover. He can actually make those Drezen lines pop more than a lot of performers on the show can.
Carson: Spoiler alert: this is a good episode. But even the good episodes have some weak links. But a weak link does not need to crater an episode. The best weak links kind of merrily float by on good cheer, high energy and base level or worthwhile chuckles. There’s a vague familiarity to Celtic Women, even if the exact reference is lost on you as it was and is with me. But we’ve all been to our local community’s Heritage Days or Cultural Days festival where we’ve watched some sort of traditional Celtic/Ukrainian/Polish/Highland dance routine, so there’s a general vibe that’s easy to connect to. 
STARS: ***

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Montero”

Anthony: As I said earlier, this feels like a pretty significant performance. I can’t think of a time the show’s ever had such a flamboyantly gay musical guest before. They’ve had gay guests, sure. And loud, enthusiastic, gender bending performers before, yes. Heck, Elton John’s performed on the show, and I don’t just mean in the form of Horatio. But this is an out gay man coming on to sing a song explictly about gay sex, oiled up, in a cut off shirt, in leather pants, grinding up against a bunch of half naked dudes. That feels new.
Blue: I remember thinking when Lil Nas X first captured the nation’s attention with “Old Time Road” that he was prime One Hit Wonder material. A year later, and here he is on SNL proving me wrong. 
— Beautiful staging right from the start, with Lil Nas X silhouetted in front of a backdrop of purple clouds. I also love his outfit.
— I’m enjoying the dancers’ choreography as Lil Nas X descends from the elevated section of the stage.
— The pre-recorded track that Lil Nas X is presumably doubling is coming close to overpowering his live vocals.
— Now Lil Nas X has joined in on the choreography, and he’s doing a great job! This is very fun to watch.
— Big reaction from the crowd as one of the dancers licks Lil Nas X’s neck.
— I love how unapologetically homoerotic this performance is, and how it’s clearly not done for shock value, but rather as a celebration. Like Anthony said above, this feels very new and significant.
— It’s hard to tell on the second chorus if Lil Nas X is singing at all. He did skip a line when the mic wasn’t near his mouth, but even now that he’s holding the mic up, his vocals are getting lost in the mix. Perfectly understandable due to the choreography, though.
— Impressive moment where the dancers lift Lil Nas X in the air
— The pre-recorded vocals are becoming even more obvious on the bridge, with Lil Nas X only bothering to double one line.
— This pole-dancing segment is off to an epic start, with dollar bills flying through the air… until Lil Nas X suffers a wardrobe malfunction almost immediately. It’s hilarious to pinpoint the exact moment it happens; he looks down with an “oh shit!” expression, and then covers his crotch and gives the camera a sheepish glance. He showed a clip from dress of how the performance was supposed to go on Fallon the next day.
— Great confident singing from Lil Nas X on the last chorus.
— Love the closing shot, where Lil Nas X is perfectly centered in front of the screen projection so that it looks like he’s wearing angel wings.
STARS: *****

WEEKEND UPDATE (Matt)
for Mental Health Awareness Month, PED addresses return-to-society fears

Jeanine Pirro (CES) sings “My Way” & submerges herself in red wine

Matt: Che, regarding Andrew Giuliani: “I didn’t know you could get brain damage when your father drinks during a pregnancy.”
— It’s always a bit difficult to talk about topical jokes from old Updates, but as someone who has watched a looooot of Weekend Update from the early years of SNL, I can safely say that Colin and Michael’s Updates tend to hold up the best for me by a considerable margin. There’s a reason, in these rocky seasons, I’ve always considered them the reliable anchor of the show: even the most iffy installments rarely disappoint. I’m still getting some good laughs out of their material in spite of the distance of watching it nearly a year later.
— Oh wow, and we’re already moving onto the sillier individual jokes before the first guest correspondent. That’s definitely a plus.
— Now it’s Pete’s turn to deliver a correspondent piece that made me think he would be leaving the show. Oopsie!
— A solid self-burn from Pete (very new for him, I know) about how even when masked, people recognize him from his eyes because he looks like he “both just woke up and hasn’t slept in days.”
— “AIDS is a lot like SNL: it’s still here, it’s just no one’s gotten excited about it since the ‘90s.”
— Pete ends his feature by sweetly mentioning how much of an honor it was to grow up in front of an audience. I don’t know how much I agree with that sentiment, as the extent of his oversaturation in pop culture and tabloids would hit a fevered pitch next season, but since things came crashing down for him a few seasons ago, I’ve respected how much he seems like he tries to exist outside of that (even if it doesn’t stop him from finding even more baffling celebrities to hook up with). Either way, this is a fairly above-average segment from him, and maybe it would be more impactful if he didn’t follow it up with a segment in the next season premiere where he insists that he doesn’t know why he’s still on SNL either.
— Yay, baby’s first Joke Swap coverage! I specifically asked to cover the entirety of Update in large part just because I wanted to write about the Joke Swap, so this’ll be fun.
— So far, the jokes are pretty basic jabs at Colin being racist or Michael being bad at sex, but they’re still giving me laughs. You gotta warm up to the good shit.
— The run of jokes about the upcoming Superman movie where Superman is Black are fantastic; I love Colin’s joke about how his Kryptonite is “an honest day’s work.”
— Another thing I love is that we’ve hit the point where Colin has started making Michael’s jokes be less jokes and more forcing him to profess support for some terrible person or group. Last Joke Swap, with him telling Epstein to “Rest in power” is probably the peak, but having him honor police officers who used excessive force on a homeless Black man by saying that “Blue lives matter even more” is certainly nothing to sleep on, either.
— Hahaha, and now Michael has completely derailed the ostensive setup of an unrelated joke by having Colin affirm that Woody Allen did nothing wrong!
— And now Colin is doing ANOTHER Superman joke! God, I remember actually crying when I saw this live and it’s still murdering me right now.
— You’d think that would be the perfect crescendo to this Update, but boy oh boy, there’s just one more treat around the corner…
— Cecily’s Jeanine Pirro, here to close out the third season in a row! Within the first 30 seconds she’s already sloshing Colin with her wine glass so we’re clearly building to something special.
— And now, here it is: Cecily breaking out into a performance of “My Way” and jumping into a giant tank of red wine. Fuckin’ grade-A shit, only to be surpassed by Cecily launching a torrent of red wine perfectly into Colin’s face without even looking back at him. If Cecily left after this season, this would be one of the most perfect swan songs a cast member has ever gotten, and the fact that she didn’t leave afterwards was something that had me worried about how well it would play for me with that hindsight… but god, it’s impossible not to love this as a cathartic, bombastic, and beautifully silly way to bring the past season of Weekend Updates to a close. More than anything else, now I just wonder how Cecily could possibly top this when she does her real farewell piece. I suppose we’ll see! (NOTE: We wrote these ages ago. I’ll have thoughts on her proper farewell eventually!)
— I’ve had to contemplate the grade I would give this Update. It’s certainly not perfect all the way through, with the nice but inoffensive Pete feature being a glaring weak point, but I think that its weakness is largely in the fact that both Joke Swap and Jeanine Pirro are so fucking good. And if I were to say that this Update, before those two parts, was at a 3.5, that the Joke Swap bumps it up half a star, and that Jeanine warrants a full bonus star… then baby, we’ve got a sexy, five-star Update. Anthony and Carson can fight me, but I have the power and I’m fucking using it. Sorry, boys!
Anthony: Wowee Batman, a full five! While I can’t quite go that high, this is the good stuff for sure. Joke swap is one of the most fun traditions of any Update era, and this is possibly the best installment yet, so that’s a huge plus, and in general Jost and Che seem to have more energy tonight than they did a lot of nights this season. To be honest, if both these performers left after this (Pete and Cecily, though Jost & Che can certainly take notes as well…), you could maybe talk me into that full fiveroo. As is, it’s hard to look past that Pete’s piece is, as Matt pointed out, fine but really not up to much. And as for Cecily…I mean she kills it, but this was so clearly intended as a send off. And now that it isn’t one, that just makes it, what…an ode to Jeanine Pirro? It just adds an unfortunate weird taste to her whole bit here, which is unfortunate because it’s otherwise easily my favorite thing from Cecily this season.
Carson: Hmm, yeah. My philosophy has always been “If Norm’s Updates didn’t get *****, no one gets *****.” As much as I appreciate the Jost and Che pair—easy No. 3 on my all-time Update list, possibly No. 2 by the end of their never-ending tenure—there’s always been a little bit too much Seth Meyers in the DNA of the duo. Like, watch the first run of jokes, before Che and Jost really explore their dynamic—it’s just the breezy, low-stakes patter of the Meyers era. When the jokes are great, they’re spectacular, but a smooth delivery and a hot crowd will turn a lot of fours into nines. These guys are great when they really let loose, but they still have a sort of professional efficiency that cruises along in third gear. That is until the joke swap which is, as always, worth the price of admission alone.
—The other element has been touched on, but the air of finality that carried this segment during the live airing is deflated now that we know that moments that feel like send-offs are just feints. After another re-heated serving of “Pete Davidson talks about himself and his celebrity” we get a sort-of modest acknowledgment about him “growing up” in front of the audience. It’s low-key enough that it’s not, like, obsequious, but knowing where things are headed with Pete in the coming season, I don’t know if Pete’s maturity journey is quite out of its tumultuous stage.
Cecily’s piece is more obviously excellent because Cecily, for all her flaws (basically her loyalty to James Anderson), is SNL’s most powerful performer. So she nails her piece, perhaps too much! Watching it now, I can see how it does not need to be perceived as a big climactic send-off, but then again, remembering the feelings of the moments, it seems that the extra oomph in Cecily’s performance is due to the extra emotional heft behind it. It was all just a classic case of audience manipulation though. We were duped! Matt’s still in their feelings though, and they get final say on this one, so…
STARS: *****

IN MEMORIAM
a photo of Charles Grodin marks his passing

Matt: Weekend Update ends with a bumper in tribute of the recently-deceased Charles Grodin, who infamously hosted in Season 3 under the guise of not having attended dress rehearsal and futzing through every sketch he appeared in. It’s an episode so legendary that it still perpetuates myths that he was “banned” from the show, and having since seen that incredible episode, I’m glad that SNL—as spotty and weirdly selective as it can be with who it chooses to memorialize—gave him a well-deserved nod.

ENID & ASTRID’S BRAWR BARN (Matt)
Enid (AIB) & Astrid’s (host) Brawr Barn supports large-breasted women

Matt: You gotta appreciate Anya’s gameness and versatility across this episode, because I would not have bet on her being part of a two-hander with Aidy doing a thick New York accent and looking completely at-ease. 
— Like “Celtic Woman,” this is pretty much just another one-liner-athon, but it’s working better. Not only is Aidy more locked-in (she’s pretty underrated at this sort of stuff whenever she’s severed from Kate), but the writing feels stronger and the prop comedy with the various terrifying “brawrs” is selling everything harder.
— A pretty wild bit with Aidy vigorously squeezing and smacking Heidi’s breasts. You can tell Heidi’s doing her darndest not to break, and I feel like we rarely see her come this close.
— Anya: “Nobody has ever had a sexual feeling in this store.” Aidy: “This is a medical experience. We are one step away from a hospital.”
— It’s also nice to see Beck get this sort of meathead role one more time as Aidy’s husband since it’s the sort of role that he was predestined to play. Also a really funny, subtle touch of him smoking a cigar under his welder’s mask.
— Aidy: “I know Victoria’s secret, and it’s that she’s too intimidated to help me!”
— Your mileage may vary with these sorts of sketches, and I feel I tend to be more generous to them than most, but this feels like one of the finer examples to me, carried by committed performances from Aidy and Anya.
Anthony: This and Celtic Woman are the definite dips of this episode, which just speaks to how consistent this episode is overall because neither are particularly poor sketches. Both have their solid one-liners and fun moments of physicality (Chloe doing her crazy violin dance in that piece, Aidy groping Heidi like a maniac here) and neither—and this is real important—overstay their welcome.
— Beck gets one of his many big dumb guy roles of the night here. Nice to see him going out doing what he does best.
Carson: A pretty stock, low-stakes piece for SNL, but it’s written and performed to the absolute peak of its potential, another testament to the strength of this episode. Aidy, in particular, gives an assured, giddy performance, bringing an absolute hammer to a sketch that she could have sleepwalked through. The details in the writing (“You’re a 28Q…”) are keen-eyed and make a great marriage for the performers. Undoubtedly, this is a throwaway, but this is about as good as SNL gets in these kinds of pieces.
STARS: ***½

NYU GUEST PANEL (Anthony)
coeds’ (AIB) & (host) questions to TV cast are softball or insensitive

Anthony: So after some digging I found that several of the cast members of this sketch, including Pete and Punkie, as well as the writers of this sketch, Anna Drezen and Celeste Yim, did a zoom panel for a college a bit before this episode that went down pretty similarly, with Pete being asked breezy questions by star-struck fans and the lesser known minority cast members and writers only being called upon for questions about their “struggles”. So a pretty clear and solid inspiration for a sketch there.
— This sketch works great even without that backstory, as anyone who’s watched dumb press junkets like this can notice this pattern.
— I also found out Melissa was at that original panel. She would have slotted into this sketch pretty perfectly, but I guess I should never count out the show finding new ways to shut out poor Melissa. 
— Was the audience instructed to applaud for Pete? I feel like either answer I get on that will disappoint me. 
— “As a black woman, could you please explain race?” Perfect line to get us into this. Two dumb questions to Pete, that whopper of a question to Ego and we’re off to the races.
— I can’t keep quoting them but every question the non Pete cast members get asked is just chef’s kiss.
— Anya continues to be great here. I love her menacing “we’ll get to you” when Heidi tries to inject and answer one of Pete’s fun questions. There’s an iciness to the way she interacts with all the non-Pete cast members that really sells this, I’d say even more than Aidy, and makes the switch when she gets back to Pete even more effective (also like the affectation she puts on when talking to Pete where it seems like she’s trying to solve a math problem). 
— I like how Pete’s character is blissfully unaware of how probing and uncomfortable his co-stars’ questions are.
— A nice nod to parting writers Sudi Green and Fran Gillespie with 2 questions being submitted by ‘Fran G’ and ‘Sudi G’. We also get a nod to director Hannah Levy with a question from “Hannah L”.
— Aidy messes up the punchline of the bit where she interrupts Punkie by hesitating and then tripping over her words. Feels like a cue card issue.
— The questions eventually hilariously devolve into pure babble (“You’re a gay homo, yah?”).
— Great ending with the interviewers giving out the panelists’ personal cell phone numbers to the chat.
— Another strong ensemble piece tonight. This kept just the right energy for this type of piece, a rapid fire stream of one-liners built around a solid satirical premise that once again tonight finds the show mining humor from a perspective it’s often overlooked. 
— Apparently they tried this again in the Billie Eilish episode, but wisely chose to cut it. This sketch already perfectly explores this premise, there’s no need to return to this ground .(While she’s a fun and competent host, I also don’t think Billie would have managed the tone switches I talked about with Anya as masterfully, which is a big part of what sells this sketch). 
Carson: My favorite thing about this site is when someone argues in favor of a sketch deserving classic status—especially sketches that maybe didn’t register as classics to me on the first go-round. Not because they’re not great, but, y’know, not everything hits with its full gravity in the moment. This season has a few of those (Matt’s review of “The Blitz” from the Bill Burr episode, for one) and I feel like I may have done that once or twice too. This is a good example of that. It’s also another good example of how diversity is a weapon that enhances satirical potential instead of muddies it. SNL frequently veers into a sort of pandering neoliberal mush, but as the cast grows in its diversity, it is able to approach the realm of diversity with more teeth (in a way, I’m reminded of “Dyke & Fats”—a brilliant piece that could not have been effectively approached without the very specific people performing the scene). Here, we’re able to explore the problems associated with “identity comedy” (a term I’m just now making up) where visible minorities are not seen as being anything beyond those minority identities. I mean, it’s not the entire thrust of this scene, but there’s a knowing and lived-in quality to the indignities that Ego, Bowen and Punkie’s characters (or “characters”) have to endure in the wake of their celebrity castmate. I know everyone is playing a role here, but you get a sense that this is barely an exaggeration of the real thing. Pete, for his part, plays the foil well. And as we’ve seen over the course of Season 46, Pete achieving the bare minimum level of proficiency is cause for huge celebration among many online fans. But kudos, nonetheless.  
Matt: Anthony hit this perfectly in his review, so I don’t have a ton to add. If the earlier “Making Man” sketch is an example of a piece whose strength comes from the fact it could play in any era, this is a sketch whose strength is that it could only exist in this era, with these writers and this cast. This is such a perfect idea for this writer’s room’s talent at crafting perfect one-liners and the ensemble is wonderful, with everyone submitting incredible work, particularly Aidy and Pete (two performers I’m usually fairly hard on). I mean this is especially, absolutely perfect use of Pete, and along with his Update feature, this would’ve been a great way to cap off both his tenure and his best season as a cast member… if only he had actually departed, rather than continuing on the show with both feet already out the door.
— “How has being gay and Chinese prevented you from being happy?” Line of the episode.
STARS: ***** 

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Sun Goes Down”

Blue: Interesting choice to have a closeup of Lil Nas X’s face on the screen behind him for the entire performance. I can’t imagine that Studio 8H is a big enough venue to need that kind of visual.
— This isn’t exactly a ballad, but it still fills the “upbeat song + ballad” format well enough.
— As soon as Lil Nas X starts singing, it’s obvious that either his vocals are not 100% live, or the engineer has put a lot of effects on them.
— Lil Nas X’s lower register is quite pleasant to listen to.
— I’m feeling a bit emotional hearing these personal lyrics. Especially “I’mma make my fans so proud of me.” Aw… 
— I suspect that final bit of wordless singing (“ahhh”) was lip-synced, or at least the vocal effect was so prominent it sounded like it was lip-synced.
— I usually get annoyed when singers play air guitar along to their own song, but I’m finding it very endearing coming from Lil Nas X.
— Very touching to hear Lil Nas X tell the audience that he loves them all at the conclusion of the song.
STARS: ***

AMC THEATRES (Anthony)
for AMC Theatres, Vin Diesel (BEB) rhapsodizes about going to the mooovies

Anthony: And so we say goodbye to Beck Bennett. Beck had a quick rise at the show, slowly but surely taking the glue guy spot from Taran (that he got to have for like, a season and a half) and holding it down since (with Mikey in tow as Glue #2). While Beck’s never been my favorite on the show, he’s always been a reliable, committed performer. I do think it says something that even amongst the “things must never change” stans, Beck’s departure went mostly unremarked upon. Still, he certainly had his moments, as tonight showed. Going out the door, the guy gave us two of my favorite things he’s ever done on the show.
— I talked in the Kaluuya review about sketches I could show non-fans, and my God if this isn’t the sketch from Season 46 that’s had the strongest success rate. People I’ve shown this to just love this thing, and I have certain friends I still say “moooveees” within casual conversation. I think it’s a testament to Vin Diesel’s lovably ridiculous dumb guy public persona as much as it Beck’s strong work here.
— Bit of a full circle moment here for Beck, as Vin Diesel was one of his first notable roles all the way back in his third episode.
— The writing on this is kind of nothing at times, but we’re not here for the writing. We’re here for Beck to grovel “mooooveees”.
— “Have you ever seen a moovee? It’s amazing!”
— Great bit with Kenan as a janitor who comes in to clean, notices Diesel rambling, and silently backs away.
— This does start to drag a bit by the end, and the ending is your typical SNL handwave. In concept and execution it’s probably closer to a 4, but the rating system is already screwy as is with 6 reviewers, and much like the maskless audience, we’re just feeling ourselves at this point. At the end of a frankly drab and dreary season (and an even worse year surrounding it) this hits. In what’s sure to be the most generous rating I’ll ever give on the site, I award Vinny a full Fast Five.
Carson: A nice goodbye moment of sorts for Beck. As a true stalwart, Beck ends his tenure with some proper scene work as opposed to, you know, that Kristen Wiig boondoggle. I much prefer it this way. Granted, this isn’t exactly the greatest sketch in the world, but it’s a good example of Beck’s ability to push his confident macho idiot persona to its giddy extreme. The writing here is observant and reasonably sharp, but it takes Beck’s beefy goofiness (and goofy beefiness) to really sell it. Unlike Anthony, I see this as a slightly modest final sketch, but it certainly encompasses Beck’s comedic spirit to a tee.
Matt: This is the perfect swan song to Beck, ceded the 10-to-1 spot to do the sort of effortlessly sublime stupidity that he was always best at, and which—in SNL’s insistence that he maintain a glue position—we didn’t get to see nearly as much as we should have. This is the sort of sketch that only he could really sell, partially because it’s the sort of sketch that he’d be the only one to pitch, and my god does he kill it here. Every single word that he fights his way through as Vin Diesel is gold, and I’m glad that he could leave the show on the sort of high that so many of the other cast members surrounding him could’ve afforded to as well.
STARS: ***** 

GOODNIGHTS

CUT FOR TIME: STAR QUALITY (Matt)
(AIB) & (KAM) serenade doll, (BOY) & (host) introduce new music genre on (KET)’s talent-search program

Matt: Hahahaha, yeah, fuck this shit.
— I don’t want to point fingers at the specific writer who made this sort of sketch commonplace, especially because said writer by this point has departed from the show, but that just makes this sketch, with all of the cliches that it mercilessly checks off—Kenan in an ungodly hammy performance speaking garbly garbage that’s ostensibly designed to sound funny (“the hyman of the entertainment industry”; “vaginacologist”), stupid character names, Southern accents, and lul so random details delivered through club music—all the more watery, as if the torch of said writer deserved to be preserved like an eternal flame rather than stamped out like a flaming bag of dog poop.
— The trellis used as a backdrop element in this sketch can be seen stored on the “Making Man” set during the cold open. Is that fun information?
— At least Bowen gets to wear hella mesh here. Happy for him.
Anthony: Weird structure to this. Figured we’d either get a series of contestants or just focus on one weird pair, but instead it’s one long bit with Kate & Aidy followed by another long bit with Bowen and Anya. Oh yea, and neither are funny in the slightest.
— They shoulda called this one Deep House Don’t, amirite? Don’t worry folks, we’re almost done here. 
Carson: What I liked: The hymen line (sorry) and Bowen’s “And me? I’m on the same level as her.” What I didn’t like: All the cliches of modern SNL (as mentioned above but also a “Kenan Reacts” for good measure) sloppily adorning a sketch with no root structure. Just a few vaguely connected ideas (music!) mashed together in a Frankenstein monster of inscrutable and aimless sketch comedy. Like, imagine going for an Anderlette vibe and failing at that
STARS: *

CUT FOR TIME: BACKSTAGE PITCH (Anthony)
(KAM), (BEB), (EGN), & (AIB) pitch Queen’s Gambit spoofs to (host)

Anthony: “Sketch about not being able to come up with a good sketch” is a pretty “sketch you’d see in a Sketch 101 class” concept, but it’s a decent jumping off point for a series of quick jokes, so let’s see how the hit rate on this turns out.
— It says quite a bit about Kate’s later seasons at the show that you could totally convince me Queen’s (Borough) Gambit was an actual sketch idea she pitched. I did enjoy her almost profound delivery of “I am not” when Anya asks if she’s actually from Queens.
— I wonder if they would have made the graphic of the talking chess piece in the Queer Eye parody less horryifying if this made it to air.
— Ego’s bit, pitching a chess theme Hustlers parody called “Chustlers”, isn’t up to much, but I do like seeing the show have enough confidence in her to place her along Kate, Beck and Aidy here. It feels like, had this been done in the previous season’s finale, this role would have gone to Cecily or Kyle (I mean he’d rock the fur coat, admittedly). It may not have been intentional, but it’s a nice capper for Ego’s season, one that saw her really rise through the ranks of the show and walk away the MVP of the year. 
— “Sometimes, when a host is really known for one thing-” I will not stand for this The Witch erasure. (If we’re pretending Split and Glass don’t exist on the other hand…eh, okay.)
— Another self-winking nod from the show that having a tech billionaire host may not have been the greatest move, with Kate nearly breaking in tears after finding out Elon Musk hosting wasn’t just a dream she had. I’m not too into the “broken down Kate” thing they were doing this season, but it’s a solid moment. 
— This is just collapsing into word salad at this point, which I know is the point but it just leaves the thing feeling kind of empty. This feels a bit like SNL trying to ape the past success of the random humor of The Lonely Island shorts, as well as a precursor to the more successful fast paced Tik Tok style Please Don’t Destroy videos we’ll get next season (more on those when I return with my next review…), but unfortunately for now it feels stuck in between those and ends up just feeling like a lot of fast paced oh-so-random bits without much really tying them together. There’s some minor fun to be had (I mean, “Dairy Queen’s Damn Bitch”), but this is definitely more bubblegum than steak (I can still only compare sketch to food). 
Carson: I was mostly down with the premise here and was kind of hopeful it would be one of those quick hit pieces with lots of jump cuts, but I think we only got that in part. Instead, this felt like it really got diverted. Some ways were fun (Aidy talking about getting a whale), but some, like the COVID and Elon Musk stuff, felt redundant to the Cold Open. Now granted, this was a dress rehearsal pre-tape, so maybe the producers felt this piece didn’t hold together (it doesn’t) but could still be salvaged for parts. Which, frankly, I think was the right choice.
— I also, just…*sigh*…I don’t think I can handle the Kate persona. I think she’s still a fine sketch performer, I guess, but when Kate is tasked with playing herself, all of her tics come out in a wild flurry and I just can’t handle it. Am I alone in this?
Matt: This isn’t a super great sketch, and I think it’s a fair cut, especially in favor of the other pretapes that made this episode. I’m a bit more generous to it than Anthony and Carson, though; while the premise is basic, I always like seeing these seasons do more meta sketches that play around with the cast as themselves (which is in short supply these days), as well as the show spoofing its track record of obligatory, host-specific parody sketches. My favorite parts were less the cutaways and more the little exchanges that take place in Anya’s dressing room: Aidy talking about “shooting” the whale they bought for “Free Queenie” and Kate’s breakdown over Elon Musk hosting are very good little moments that play off of the identity of both of them as performers well. Seeing Ego get to join in the pile-up as well is a nice affirmation of the spot she’s carved out at the show. 
STARS: **½ 

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
Anthony: Hot diggity dang, was that a strong one. I think this is the first review since we took over from Stooge where every single segment in the live show got a positive grade. As with many of us, I was pretty disappointed when over the summer only one of the super senior cast members chose to leave, and that does undeniably taint the episode a bit, though I think you only really feel it for a couple of lines in the open and with Cecily’s piece. Overall, this was still one of the best episodes of this whole era: the writing, while not particularly daring or inventive, was, to use this phrase again, just a whole lot tighter than we generally get; a new host came in and crushed, and a well-liked cast member got to leave on top with two of his funniest pieces. There really isn’t much more you could ask for from a finale.
Carson: An undeniably strong episode and I felt it at the time too. From the refreshing cold open and monologue to a reasonably triumphant Weekend Update, this episode felt brisk and invigorating. While I only had one sketch slated for five stars going into the review (Picture With Dad), I was effectively convinced on one other (NYU Guest Panel). As for the other two to receive the full grade? They’re within reasonable shouting distance of greatness for me to not be too rattled, though I think a high end episode like this one will make merely decent pieces feel so much more. But then again, even the merely decent pieces (Brawr Barn, Celtic Women) had a little more zip going for them than usual. Honestly, after such an understandably difficult season where the show had to sort of re-invent itself through COVID and into the post-Trump era, it was nice to see them wrap the season with a complete victory lap. Felt well-earned. Would have been a great farewell episode for so many people. Only Beck got the memo.   
Matt: I remembered this episode being truly delightful when it aired, but I was worried that it wouldn’t hold up nearly as much when I had to cover it… so it was, truly, a delightful surprise that it ended up being even better than I recalled! It definitely hurts a bit to account for the fact that it would’ve been a perfect farewell episode for Cecily, Aidy, Pete, and Beck—only one of whom took the opportunity—but hey, quality is quality. Following the past season of highs and Elon Musks, this episode is a massive, glorious victory lap, and undoubtedly one of the greatest season finales the show has ever had. And again, out of this season?? It’s madness, but the numbers don’t lie. I’ll break out the big g-word: absolutely gangbusters.

OUR PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


RATED SEGMENTS FROM BEST TO WORST
Picture With Dad
NYU Guest Panel
Weekend Update
AMC Theatres
Making Man
What I Remember About Last Year
It’s Pride Again
Hollywood Squares
Enid & Astrid’s Brawr Barn
Monologue
Celtic Woman
(CFT: Backstage Pitch)
(CFT: Star Quality)

COMING SOON!
The Best Of Beck Bennett!

May 15, 2021 – Keegan Michael Key / Olivia Rodrigo (S46 E19)

by Anthony

NO MORE MASKS
Anthony Fauci (KAM) introduces scenes dramatizing maskless scenarios

— Kate’s Fauci returns. As Matt pointed out when this impression made its debut, there’s an incongruity in how this impression is so superficially similar to Kate’s other slimy male politician roles but for a man the show clearly wants us to respect. Has…has the show gone so all in on Kate they’re now thinking of it as an “honor” to be impersonated by her?  
— Not the worst concept of actors playing out scenarios where you do and don’t have to wear a mask under new mandates. Well, they’re not quite actors, they’re “doctors who minored in theater”, though I feel like it would have been stronger as just simply ‘actors’, as it’s less of a mouthful and would explain the inaccuracy of the scenes they perform. Either way, this feels somewhat reminiscent of those High School Theater Showcase sketches, which I always enjoyed.
— Every member of the cast (minus the Update bros) appears in this sketch. On the one hand, it’s nice to see so much of the underutilized cast get a chance to shine. However, the show has had a lot of these sketches in the last couple years where it’s just a string of cast members coming on to say their bit and leave, and they’re by nature pretty inconsistent pieces. I also rarely feel like we need the bits with one or two cast members as a moderator interjecting to let us know that the wacky person we just saw was in fact wacky, as Kate’s Fauci does here.
— I don’t know if Bowen and Ego hooking up here was a subtle reference to their joke fling they have on Instagram, but it was a fun bit either way. 
— Not getting much out of these in-sketch skits. They just feel like a collection of buzzwords and bad acting tics.
— I see the show reusing its own “COVID mask covering an undesirable bottom half of someone’s face” joke from the premiere. 
— Kyle coming into a skit to try and turn it into an improv scene is kinda funny, though again I don’t need Kate’s Fauci commenting on it.
— Interesting Cecily’s the only one to get 2 skits (and yet misses the LFNY, very curious – scratches chin). 
— Cute meta moment with Kate acknowledging the audience to tell them they still need to keep their masks on.
— Some of the gags in this were okay but there just wasn’t much to hold onto. It feels like one of those Jost pieces (he co-wrote this with Gary Richardson) that’s trying so hard not to have an opinion it ends up not feeling like much of anything. 
STARS: **

MONOLOGUE
alongside CES & KET, singing host is excited to do all the SNL things

— You can tell even before he goes into his personal history with the show how much it means for Key to be up there. 
— It’s a nice full circle moment to have a former cast member from MADtv, SNL’s main rival for much of the 90’s and 2000’s, hosting the show. Though he’s not the first cast member to come in contact with the show, as both Jeff Richards and Taran Killam are alums of both shows. MAD was a show I used to slag off for many years as an inferior SNL clone, but having seen more of it recently I’ve really come around on the early years of it (I’m not so into it by the time Key comes around, unfortunately) as it, at its peak, embraced the “kid brother of SNL” label in the best way possible by leaning into the juvenile nastiness, stupidity and chaos of a little brother. It’s a show I know has been dogged on by a lot of people, so it’s nice to see it have this moment of minor victory. 
— I was half expecting an Eminem reference when Key mentions he grew up near Detroit’s 8 Mile Road, but I guess that’s Pete’s wheelhouse.
— Speaking of Pete, he shows up for a second and makes an Elon Musk joke, making us all shudder in horror as this confirms the previous episode wasn’t just some horrible collective nightmare we had.
— Really? We have a sketch comedy veteran of two shows, one of which he co-created and was among the most acclaimed sketch series of all time, and we’re giving him your standard basic boring musical monologue? 
— Keegan’s Schmigadoon! co-star Cecily pops up here. Expect to see more of that pairing tonight, though don’t expect to like it. 
— The melody here is a lift from the classic SNL “Not Gonna Phone It In Tonight” (now and forever the gold standard of musical monologues), which is a nice little easter egg at least.
— We get questions from the audiences now too, meaning SNL is deploying both of its stock “monologues for hosts we don’t know what to do with” tricks, even though they have one of the most capable hosts they’re ever gonna get on that stage. 
— Steven Castillo pops up (in I believe his first speaking role, though he previously popped up in the Career Day sketch from Chance’s first episode) to praise Key for his work on Get Out, an inevitable reference to his former sketch partner’s rather illustrious post-Comedy Central career.
— Fun bit with Kenan and Keegan clarifying they’re different people, although do people really mix them up? C’mon guys…
— Keegan’s enthusiasm helped to bolster this (I mean, look at him in that last screenshot), but it was still far too safe and predictable a way to start things off for such a capable host.
STARS: **½ 

PROM SHOW
at prom, high schoolers (BOY), (HEG), (host) comment on the red carpet

— A Gillespie/Green piece, the duo behind those SoulCycle pieces and “What’s Wrong With This Picture?”, among others. They’ve never been my favorite duo, as their stuff tends to feel a little aimless, but they usually have an ear for sharp Drezen-y one-liners that keep them afloat.
— To that end, I enjoyed the line about a memorial chocolate fountain for a girl that moved.
— Fun energy from Key here, his first of several roles tonight where he blends in with the cast seamlessly.
— I remember when this aired, a number of fans compared it to “Wake Up Wakefield”. However, we don’t get a female cast member in drag here, since I guess we already spent that gag in the open.
— Dismukes on his knees to play a freshman is obvious but cute.
— Yea, another one of these big cast pieces that lives and dies by the one-liners and little cast moments that pop, since there’s no real underlying concept to propel things forward. We’re never in a different place at the end of these sketches than we were at the beginning, we’ve just seen different people do different odd things. 
— Again though, at least the one-liners are solid. I especially enjoyed this exchange between Bowen and Ego: “What are you wearing?” “Green.” “And who is it by?” “Mall.”
— The bit with Mikey and Aidy as “two dorks who bang” didn’t do much for me, though I did like Aidy wearing a ribbon to raise awareness for her mom’s ribbon store. 
— Key mentions the tradition of bringing water bottles full of vodka to prom. They actually had guards with breathalyzers at the entrance to my prom, so I guess they finally caught on to that one.
— Nice to see Melissa get a comedic moment for once. This is her and Alex’s 100th episode as cast members, and they get a few moments a piece to pop in this ep. A nice gesture, though I wish them getting multiple moments to shine in a milestone ep for them like this was par for the course and not something that seemed like cause for celebration. 
— Funny that Pete’s playing the teacher when he’s the second youngest cast member on the show. The bit with Heidi and Bowen fawning over him for merely existing almost felt meta, though I’m probably just reading into things. 
— As pointed out above, there were a fair number of strong lines in this one, and it was well performed as usual (a lot of this cast can play teens in their sleep) but it also felt pretty scattershot and unfocused. 
STARS: ***

THE LAST DANCE: EXTENDED SCENE
Michael Jordan (host) ruins John Michael Wozniak (HEG)

— A Last Dance sketch over a year after the miniseries aired. I remember watching live being surprised over how late they were to this, especially since they already did parody it during the At Home shows, and especially since that previous parody was pretty lame. 
— The visual of Heidi as Michael Jordan’s head of security is just perfect. It’s stuff like this that reminds how phenomenal the makeup and wardrobe departments are at SNL, because I’d never expect Heidi of all people to look like that dude, and yet it’s uncanny
— The direction on this needs to be lauded as well. Adriana Robles and Hannah Levy directed this piece and the attention to detail and the level to which they recreate the look and feel of the documentary is a huge part of why it’s so successful. 
— Of course, we have to get to the main reason this works so well: Heidi Gardner. Heidi’s a bit of a hit or miss performer for me; she’s a consummate professional who will totally commit to her characters, which I always admire, but those characters themselves are often too self-consciously ‘wacky’ for me to enjoy them much. Even when I do really enjoy her work, it’s often more from a place of admiration than me straight up finding what she’s doing hilarious. All that being said, that level of commitment to this character is absolutely hysterical and is, in my opinion, the funniest thing she’s done on the show up to this point. 
— Keegan is also doing top notch work here, totally selling the intense need to win and low key menace of Jordan as tries to completely strip this man of his dignity. 
— I could do without the reference to the “I took that personal” meme, since that line wasn’t even from this part in the doc. I could see someone saying they had to include it if they were parodying The Last Dance, but I feel like that argument would hold more water if this parody weren’t a year late. 
— Even Alex gets a great little moment, popping up for a second with a spot-on Phil Jackson. 
— Kenan and Chris as Charles Barkley and Dennis Rodman aren’t exactly new roles for them (well, I believe this is Chris’s first time as Dennis Rodman, so it is literally a ‘new role’, but it doesn’t exactly feel like he’s stretching) but they’re still fun and not overused here. 
— Heidi is just killing it with the increasing desperation and frustration in this character. Her little moment where she tries to save face after having to expose her penis (I know, pronouns getting a little funky here) to everyone is a particularly strong moment for her. Not that I care much about the Emmys, or that I want to keep banging on the cliche drum of “bash Kate, Aidy & Cecily”, but this far more award worthy than any of their nominated work this season. 
— The writing on this isn’t anything particularly special, but this is one of those pieces totally made by performances and production value. Everyone involved in the execution of this was working at their highest level, which I have to reward. 
STARS: *****

THE MUPPET SHOW
(host) & (KET) rough up Statler (BEB) & Waldorf (MID)

— Random plugs for the Disney+ Marvel shows at the beginning of this. Wonder if that was the only way Disney would give them the rights to use the Muppets?
— Melissa as Lily Tomlin is a super fun little bit. Considering Lily herself was the one of the see off SNL’s ill-fated group of Muppets all the way back in the season 2 premiere, it’s quite a nice full circle moment.
— While he has a few more appearances coming up, this and the monologue were the only real uses the show had of Kenan and Keegan’s chemistry, which I’d like to see more of, cus they pop together. The infectious energy between these two remind me of the valet characters Keegan used to do on Key and Peele.
— Got a good laugh out of Key thinking Kermit was a “little dragon”.
— Keegan continues to just crush it as host tonight. He’s killing me with his “you are more than welcome to leave” bit. 
— Keegan beating up one of the muppets is the obvious escalation to this sketch but also the exact one you want. Statler rising up, shaking, with big swollen eyes, is just a fantastic visual. That little tremble is especially effective—the puppeteers here are doing a great job. 
— Got a laugh out of Kenan, in his tough security guy voice, describing the backstage scene at The Muppet Show as “too madcap for my tastes”. 
— Good ending with Statler and Waldorf befriending Key and Kenan. I’d have shaved about half a minute off this, but this actually zipped along fairly breezily for a 5 minute piece and was better written than I think it might appear at first glance, though the performances and production design are once again doing the heavy lifting. Still, a really fun piece overall. 
STARS: ****½ 

GEMMA & DJ BALLS
at TGI Friday’s, Jemma & musician boyfriend (host) provide inapt songs

— Ah, Cecily. Once upon a time she was among my favorite cast members the show had ever had. She had that commitment I praised Heidi for, and yet there was something that grounded her broader characters in a way Heidi never found. And in an era where so many cast members increasingly stuck to their lane, she really found a way to keep surprising me with what she could do on the show. That is, until around Season 44, and especially 45, where I started to increasingly wonder to myself “have we seen all Cecily can do on the show?” One of the cast members whose versatility I had most praised in the past was more and more starting to rely on an old bag of tricks. This cratered in season 46, where I don’t know that she had a single role that didn’t feel reminiscent of something she had already done on the show. And while we now know she had her own personal issues to deal with during this season, distracting her from putting in the most effort at the show (to that point, while she isn’t up to much new, she is at least far more committed throughout the following season) that doesn’t make it hurt any less to see such a talented cast member so clearly going through the motions. Which is why I’m so happy she took note of all that and decided to debut a new character here.
— Ah, no recognition applause, which makes sense as this is an entirely new character.
— Interesting English accent from Cecily. It’s fun to hear new voices and not ones I’ve heard plenty of times before over multiple seasons.
— Kenan is acting like he’s never met these people before, as you would when meeting a new person. So again, no points docked there.
— Cecily’s doing a purposefully bad version of a club song here. Since it’s not the 18th or so time I’ve seen this, it’s fairly amusing.  
— Ah, so Kenan has met these characters before. A fairly interesting twist I didn’t see coming.
— Keegan has some solid energy here as Gemma’s boyfriend. One thing I like about his performance is we didn’t find out later he was a sex creep (please don’t let that become ironic). 
— A lot of lines from Gemma’s boyfriend about how aroused he thinks Kenan is. It’s almost like the writers (Anderlette, as if I had to clarify) think that’s like a core cornerstone of this sketch, though that’d be stupid, wouldn’t it? 
— Ah, it turns out Kenan was aroused. A fairly interesting twist I didn’t see coming.
— All in all, it was great seeing Cecily doing something completely new again. However, this took place at a TGI Fridays, and I’m a Chili’s man, so I must dock all but one and a half stars. 
STARS: *½ 

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Drivers License”

Blue: Now, I understand the mentality behind “one upbeat song and one ballad”- it’s to show an artist’s versatility. And, I understand that artists who play on SNL often play their singles in the order in which they were released. That being said, I’m not gonna lie that it always bothers me when artists on SNL start their set with a slow song. But I’ll ignore that now because I know we’re getting something more upbeat later.
— I like the (comparatively, to the original recording) stripped-down arrangement on the first verse.
— Olivia’s dress is lovely.
— Olivia has sung the word “suburbs” with a slight “sh” sound both times on the first verse, which my ears are warping into “showers.” If you take “showers” to mean rain, this actually gives this line an entirely new meaning.
— Olivia’s belting is strong, but she doesn’t sound very relaxed.
— Now that Olivia is standing at the microphone, her posture could be better. However, she’s admirably handling the increased amount of belting on the second verse.
— Great shot of Olivia’s reflection from the overhead mirror, before the camera pans down to her. It’s certainly fitting to have red lights flash as she sings the words “red lights!”
— The melody of the bridge makes it easy for the vocalist to toe the line between “bluesy” and “flat.” For the most part, Olivia is staying on the right side of that line. Her last note, however (on the word “babe”), definitely crosses it.
— The “p” and “f” plosives on the last chorus are very distracting to me, but I don’t think that’s Olivia’s fault so I’ll let that go.
— Something about the chord that the song ends on is SO satisfying.
STARS: ***

WEEKEND UPDATE
out-of-favor Liz Cheney (KAM) struggles to list any conservative allies

AND describes watching Brink! with his great grandmother in Texas

Bob Baffert (BEB) makes excuses for Medina Spirit’s positive drug test

— (Refer to my first screenshot) Colin Jost, seen here doing a joke he’s done a thousand times before.
— Nothing special in this first batch of jokes from Jost and Che, relying on some pretty easy targets for punchlines (Matt Gaetz, Johnson and Johnson, etc.).
— Okay, Che’s line about Nancy Pelosi’s supposed “socialist agenda” was a good one.
— Kate comes back as interchangeable political impression #112—I mean, Liz Cheney.
— Yea this is doing nothing for me, especially once Kate starts going on a Brian-Doyle Murray style list of undesirable famous people.
— “I’m not conservative enough? To borrow a line I’m sure Colin uses a lot, ‘do you know who my father is?!’” Okay, at least this bit had one solid line.
— “I loved (Trump) like a straight sister.” Okay, two solid lines…
— Kate leaves with a line about Melania being the one who told her to stand against Trump, since we’re still ringing that bell.
— We get a joke about last week’s controversial host Elon Musk, though it’s a fairly soft one.
— Dismukes! After what was probably the most brutal season for newbies in the show’s entire 46 year run, it’s nice to see one spotlighted here with his own segment. 
— I liked the purposefully awkward bit of interaction between Andrew and Jost up top.
— Haha, love Andrew waiting for applause from SNL’s notoriously easy audience after stating he’s from Texas only to get nothing. Now I’m sure any of our readers from the lone star state are lovely people, but hey, sometimes you fuck around and get no love back. 
— Funny line about thinking Kelsey Grammer was British only to find out “he’s just fancy”.  
— Fun moment with Jost pointing out how rambly Andrew’s piece is, and an even better moment with Andrew saying he needed to do his Frasier joke and insisting that it “crushed”. 
— Andrew is coming off very effortlessly charming here. A lot of people have compared him to Mulaney, and this is where those comparisons make the most sense to me. They both command the stage with a similar sense of coy ease. He also has a boyish charm that reminds me of Andy Samberg (Andrews sticking together). 
— Ha, love how the Disney Channel original movie Brink! gets far more audience response than Texas did.
— Love Andrew’s description of a typical DCOM: “Middle school’s tough, and also I’m a mummy.”
— A very fun Update debut for Andrew that spells out the potential for him. This wasn’t hilarious, but his ease and charm was immediately notable and impressive for a newbie, especially one so young and green.
— Jost’s Chicago accent sure is something…
— Che follows up an uncharacteristically clapter-style line (about guns being given to the mentally ill) with one that feels far more up his wheelhouse (turning a headline about small animals into a joke about widowers). 
— Lol at someone cheering at the mention of Ohio State, only for Jost to tell them “hold on” as it’s a story about a sex offender working for them.
— Another Beck appearance this season at Update. After spending most of his run not doing much at the desk besides Jules, it’s interesting how often he popped up there in his final season (playing Tom Brady, Bruce Springsteen, the MyPillow guy and now this role). Unfortunately, as much as I enjoy Beck, none of those roles really worked for me (MyPillow was okay but felt very reminiscent of stuff we’ve seen him do plenty already).
— Not a fan of this voice Beck is using.
— When naming his horses that have been accused of using steroids, Beck calls one of them “Kumail”, which feels like a weird slam.
— The mental image of a horse exposing himself on Zoom is kinda funny, but this is mostly just white noise.
— The graphics of the jacked horses are okay. Still can’t say this bit needed to exist.
— An up and down Update. Kate and especially Beck didn’t give me much to get excited about, while Dismukes had a really strong and endearing debut. As for Jost and Che, outside a couple decent lines they felt like they were going through the motions. I wonder if they knew whether or not they were coming back for Season 47 yet, cus they definitely feel like guys with their eyes on the door. Without Dismukes this would be down at 2.5 or possibly even a 2, but he kept them just in passing range.
STARS: ***

LINE
at the Kennedy Center, (CES), (KAM), (host) forget “I Got Rhythm” lyrics

— Cecily and Kate are both very talented performers, so I want to give them more benefit of the doubt, but sadly at this point when I see them pop up in a sketch like this—in a lounge setting in old age makeup—I pretty much immediately tune out.
— I’m not trying to be one of those “SNL stole this idea! PLAGIARISM!!” people, because this is a pretty obscure podcast so I doubt many people at SNL are even aware of it (although cast member Ego has guested…), but this premise always reminded me of a bit from the podcast Teacher’s Lounge. However, that improvised bit from 4 guys inside a studio is far funnier than this bit prepared over a week for America’s most venerable comedy institution. There’s just more joy to be found in someone genuinely fucking with their friends than in Cecily and Kate doing their same old shtick while Mikey does his feigned frustration routine. 
— While this sketch itself is doing nothing for me, I once again have to commend Key for how effortless he is in his role. If you showed someone these sketches and didn’t tell them he wasn’t in the cast, they would never know. 
— Didn’t as much as smile during the bit where they were telling backstage stories. This is a Drezen piece, which is surprising because there’s very little life to these lines. 
— This sketch isn’t on the show’s YouTube page, likely due to right’s issues, but I’m also willing to guess the show was fine with burying this dog. This wasn’t the worst the show can offer, but it was about as nothing as it can get.
STARS: * 

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Good 4 U”

Blue: Ahh, one of my ultimate not-so-guilty pleasure songs.
— Pleasantly surprised by the thick tone of the bass. I hope the other instruments don’t drown it out in the mix when they enter.
— Olivia is sliding down in pitch at the end of almost every line- “really easilYYyy,” “only took a couples WEEeeks,” “working on yoursEEeelf…” Etc. It’s not working for me. Doing it once is effective enough.
— Wow @ Olivia’s sneer right before she launches into the chorus. If this song isn’t personal to her, she’s sure acting like it is.
— Olivia starts off the chorus sounding flat, but she gets back on track quickly. I’m still not a fan of her belting, though. She sounds a bit tight and strained, like she’s struggling to stay at the top of her range. Maybe this song should have been written in a lower key.
— In contrast to Olivia’s obviously-live vocals, it sounds an awful lot like her backing vocalists are lip-syncing.
— Olivia is really selling the song with her facial expressions, stifled laughter, and conversational tone across the second verse. I’m enjoying this.
— On the one hand, this is a very difficult song to sing live (I know from experience), so I understand why Olivia hasn’t moved from center-stage. On the other hand, I would love to see her use the space more. The second verse would have been an ideal time to do that and engage the live audience by walking around, instead of relying on the close-ups of her face for the TV audience.
— I’m hearing some more flat notes on the second chorus, which concerns me given this song is one of Olivia’s hits and is presumably played at all of her shows. I hope she doesn’t strain her voice too much from repeatedly performing this song.
— Now I see why Olivia wasn’t using all the space that the stage provided her- her dancing is delightfully awkward! I’m glad she appears to be having fun.
— Once again, Olivia is deliberately sliding down in pitch on the bridge, and once again, it feels like overkill. 
— Even when she’s moving across the stage on the last chorus, Olivia is focusing on her bandmates more than the audience, which looks odd to me. 
— Olivia’s bassist looks so proud of her at the end of the song. In fact, he was smiling throughout the whole performance. I don’t blame him, it’s a very fun song! 
STARS: ***

COMMENCEMENT CELEBRATIONS 
relatives shout unauthorized hurrahs at high school graduation ceremony

— The previous week had some controversy when that atrocious Gen Z Hospital sketch was accused of mocking AAVE (African American vernacular English), which caused Che, the writer of that piece, to come out and respond that it’s not other people’s place to tell him how reverential he needs to be to his own culture. It’s a thorny issue I don’t want to get into, but I will say considering this piece’s writer was Bryan Tucker, a fully white guy, that this one feels a little…weird. Again, not my place to comment further, but just feels a bit weird.
— Ego and Key have a fun chemistry at least, and it is nice to see Punkie get a comedic role for once. Just wish both of those things were put to use in a sketch with stronger writing. 
— Why did the crowd groan at that Simone Biles joke?
— Gary Richardson with a cameo, although I can’t find out if he had any input in the writing of the sketch. I’m going to assume/hope so.
— Okay Kenan’s family upset at “a white girl named Laticia” was kinda funny.
— Feels like a bit of damage control to throw a generic hick family in there after 3 minutes of sketch. Either way, it’s not particularly funny.
— Beck’s character randomly accusing Alex of being a pedophile wasn’t funny and felt like the sketch was just desperately looking for a shock laugh.
— The bit with the families petitioning to let Mikey’s family cheer again only to be angry when their cheers weren’t enthusiastic enough was fun. 
— Yea, all this really did was make me hope to see Key host again so we can get a sketch that taps into his and Ego’s chemistry in a genuinely effective way.
STARS: **

GOODNIGHTS

— Key comes off really charming here when he sincerely states “this was better than the dream”. He openly says he hopes to come back next season. That didn’t happen, unfortunately, but hopefully we do get him back at some point because, episode quality aside, this man absolutely deserves to be in the show’s revolving door of hosts like Driver or Mulaney that can come back whenever they please. (Uhh, speaking of which, can we can get Driver back again already?)

CUT FOR TIME: SENDING DRINKS
(AIB) (KAM) get overwhelmed by gifts and advances from peculiar men (host) (BOY)

— A piece originally cut from the previous week’s Elon Musk episode. Something tells me seasoned sketch comedy veteran Keegan Michael Key will be able to pull this off better than robotic tech billionaire Elon Musk.
— Was “ferris reel” a genuine flub from Aidy? Assuming so, since it was such an odd moment without a discernible punchline. 
— Keegan and Bowen in these ridiculous get-ups is indeed a fun visual, as one would expect. 
— This is another Drezen piece. Keegan sending Aidy a “note” that’s just a print out of the Wikipedia entry for “sex” is the type of fun detail I was missing in her other piece from this episode (“Line”). 
— I feel like there’s a way to make this sketch more active than it is, which as is is just Keegan and Bowen doing a series of odd things followed by Kate and Aidy explaining what odd things they just did. It just leaves things feeling stilted and kind of lifeless.
— Key and Bowen fighting for the girl’s honor is sort of an interesting direction to take this in, though it’s over before it really starts and again I really don’t need Kate and Aidy narrating every step of the process.
— Typical with bad modern SNL blocking, Key announces he and Bowen are virgins to the audience when he’s meant to be telling Kate and Aidy, who are directly behind him.  
— Yea, I can see why this was cut two weeks in a row (not that anything should have made air the previous week). There were a couple fun moments in here but nothing to make it seem like it had much of a point to exist beyond the initial funny visual of Keegan and Bowen in those costumes. 
STARS: **½ 

CUT FOR TIME: RAP DISS
Rapper (host) releases fiery diss track to his enemy (CHR)

— Second Eminem mention in this review, but this sounds a lot like a beat Dr Dre would have cooked up for him in the early 00s. 
— The premise of a rapper releasing an apology track in lieu of a diss track is solid, and Key is always fun when playing this kind of pathetic macho posturing, but there’s too many dead spots and random asides in here for this to achieve any kind of greatness. Still, as far as pretapes go, it gets the job done.
— Fairly obvious ending with Key’s plea not working and him still getting his comeuppance. 
STARS: ***

IMMEDIATE POST SHOW THOUGHTS
— A disappointing show, outside of a couple strong highlights, though absolutely not due to the host. Key came in and completely blended with the cast in every segment he was in, providing laughs without demanding too much of the attention. It’s just a shame the show around him wasn’t up to very much. Again, truly hope he can return and we can get an episode more suited to his standards. 

MY PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
The Last Dance: Extended Scene
Muppet Show
Prom Show
(CFT: Rap Diss)
Weekend Update
Monologue 
(CFT: Sending Drinks)
Commencement Celebrations
No More Masks
Gemma & DJ Balls
Line

TOMORROW
Anya Taylor-Joy and Lil Nas X close out the season, with coverage from me, Matt AND Carson?! I’m seeing triple – 9 reviewers!

May 8, 2021 – Elon Musk / Miley Cyrus (S46 E18)

by Matt

MOTHER’S DAY
musical guest sings “Light Of A Clear Blue Morning” for castmembers’ moms

— Miley Cyrus wearing a very Miley Cyrus outfit here.
— Ah, our semi-annual “let’s bring out everyone’s moms” sketch for the season! It feels like it’s been some time since the last big one—S43, to be exact, though the At Home finale featured a cute mother’s day tribute with photos from the entire cast—and doing something like this after such a nightmarish season, drenched in pandemic protocols which have largely withheld the cast from their families… it makes things feel a lot more sweet.
— It’s also a very nice song choice for her to be singing Dolly Parton’s song, “Light of a Clear Blue Morning,” what with Dolly being her godmother. (Could we ever be that lucky?) 
— Right out the gate we have Kate and her mom, and it’s easy to see where Kate gets her loopy energy—she’s a complete ham, and they both do some Mary Katherine Gallagher shtick together.
— Oh god, I spoke too soon, Mrs. Mooney might win the ham-off tonight. 
— As it’s turning out… there’s actually shockingly little on the page here? Hell, when it’s Heidi and her mom’s turn, the joke is that they didn’t even write her a joke. Most of the humor here feels like it’s coming out of a mix of goodwill and some serious heavy-lifting from the cast’s natural charm. The actual interplay is very lackluster, and everyone is getting so little time (maybe a consequence of how ginormous the cast is?) that very, very little is registering.
— Kenan’s mom proving that reaction shots run in the Thompson blood line is very cute, at least.
— It’s also nice to see both Bowen and Ego’s mothers, given that they’ve talked about the long road to their parents accepting their dreams. (Ego, memorably, turned her relationship with her parents into a classic sketch earlier this season.) And look where they are now: doing subpar comedy bits alongside their children! 
— Good god, look at everyone cramming on and around the stage.
— I have such a paper heart, and this cold open should’ve had an easy job landing with me, but… there was just nothing good written here. Even as an opportunity to give cute little winks to the audience goes, it doesn’t fully work because it feels so uninvolved, as if the gesture of getting everyone’s mom onto the show was good enough. Spiritually, it sort of is, but as entertainment, it falls disappointingly flat. Hopefully this is the night’s only disappointment.
STARS: **

MONOLOGUE
neurodivergent host & his mom [real] talk about the future & his past

— Full disclosure: I haven’t watched a single second of this episode since I saw it live, and when I saw it live, I was under the heavy influence of several edibles which made the entirety of my watch experience feel like I was peeking into some horrible alternate reality where SNL was, oh my god, kind of bad??? So it’s exciting, and also disorienting, to go back into it with full awareness that everything that I’m seeing is actually real, whether or not I’d like it to be.
— Also, I’ll get this out of the way right now… Elon Musk never should have hosted SNL. It doesn’t matter that he’s a prominent figure, and someone who considers himself funny—none of that suggests that this is a good idea, not just moralistically but at a fucking baseline. This man does not have an ounce of natural charisma. He’s the sort of guy who takes a joke that’s been dead for months, decides to do it in real life for the lolz, and then immediately starts firing people after that wimpy attempt at relatability. Let that sink in.
— Also, I mean, right off the bat, they’re having Elon joke about the lack of tonality in his voice, and how poorly that lends itself to comedy. Too little, too late guys—he’s in the building, doing his monologue right now.
— Elon also announces that he’s the first person with Asperger’s to host SNL. Disregarding the iffiness of that terminology (something something Nazis), he’s not—Dan Aykroyd is. I will never stand for Aykroyd erasure.
— Because of his autism, Elon jokes that he won’t make a lot of eye contact with the cast tonight. God, that’s gonna fuck things up so much! SNL in these years is of course known for its performers staring naturally at each other instead of out at iffily-placed cue cards. He’s gonna ruin everything!
— Oh no, I’m just over one minute into this monologue. Alright.
— On the topic of megalomaniacal supervillains, Elon has the body language of Gru from Despicable Me. It’s really something to take in.
— After an applause break, Elon says a sentence and then mugs for five straight seconds until he gets another applause break.
— Elon also manages to weave both Joe Rogan and OJ Simpson into one joke. Those are just two things that feel harrowing to be invoked in the same breath from this person especially.
— It’s also right about now that I’m starting to notice the very awkward audience response in this monologue, which feels overeager to the point of artificiality. It reminds me of how Kim Kardashian’s monologue next season has a very bizarre, forced sense of rhythm to it that made the audience feel like they were doing a call-and-response exercise. The fact that Elon is somehow even less natural delivering jokes than Kim, though, knocks all of this into the deepest recesses of the uncanny valley. It feels like a dystopian broadcast.
— Now, Elon’s brought his mom out, Maye Musk, and it’s even more awkward. They’re executing their rapport to pin-drop silence with the sort of chemistry that feels like they’ve never met before now. 
— I remember some people online being impressed by how jovial and fun Elon came across in this monologue way back in the days where I guess Elon’s status as an insane threat to the welfare of our society was less prominent, to which I can simply ask… what? Even giving him the benefit of the doubt, this whole thing—SNL trying to sell us on the idea of Elon Musk—is just uncomfortable and skin-crawling. It’s gonna be a long night.
STARS: *

GEN Z HOSPITAL
zoomers mourn death of their bestie with young vernacular

— Hey barkeep, I wanna die tonight!
— Now here’s a sketch that generated quite a bit of controversy after it aired, and somehow, not just for being bad! There were some accusations that it was appropriating AAVE as a source of humor, which… is valid, to some extent. I think that opens the doors for a broader discussion on how much contemporary slang, especially among younger people, is co-opted from black culture. There’s a legitimately interesting satirical premise in there for sure. But the fact that this was written by Michael Che means that we’ll never approach anything tactfully, and SNL leaves itself all too vulnerable to criticism. I suppose that’s the credo of this whole goddamn episode, though…
— Either way, this sketch is bad. Bad, bad, bad. The whole joke is just everyone talking with overwrought slang use which is ill-fitting of the serious situation that it’s being applied to.
— Elon: “What I have to say now might be a lil’ cringe.” To say the least…
— As a minor note—because I mean how many variations can I have on saying this sketch sucks?—the set feels so weirdly barren. Like there’s a bunch of stuff and then vast empty space in the middle. Combined with the cast’s very loud outfits, everything visually clashes… it’s a sketch that you could tell was bad without even having the volume on.
— The audience, while initially a bit receptive, has really started to die in the back-half. I can’t blame them. I know that when you’re actually in the studio you laugh at things more than you’d think, but this is an indefensibly weak sketch which no amount of goodwill could fully mask. Case in point: when Melissa walked out with a Supreme urn, nobody responded to it at all.
— Elon Musk: [fully swallows line of dialogue] Mikey: “That was beautiful, Doctor Bruh.”
— The fact that this was our lead-off sketch is, like, a red flag atop a red flag.
STARS: *

EVERY CONVERSATION WITH PEOPLE YOU HAVEN’T SEEN SINCE THE PANDEMIC STARTED
rusty social skills make conversations awkward at post-quarantine party

— I remember when I first saw this, I dismissed it pretty early on as another lazy concept for the night—it does sound like the sort of thing you’d see Buzzfeed do, where the whole premise is just the title and how “relatable” that is—but in light of this sketch being fairly well-received by a lot of other people, I’m gonna give it a fair shake.
— Nice to see everyone getting to use their talents at underplaying, especially Kate, Beck, and Ego. They’re always fun to watch being more deadpan.
— There is something I like about this sketch, because I do like observational comedy and it’s darn near the closest we’ll get to slice-of-life material in these years of the show, but I’m still not a huge fan of the format. While it’s something that SNL never leaned on too much, it’s just something I’ve seen too many times and become kind of desensitized to.
— Of all of Elon’s uses in this episode, this is probably the best by default. Being in a pretape means he’s a bit more at ease, and the show can lean into his natural, uncanny energy. I like that he’s the one person at this house party who thinks that his awful small talk is going well, too—with some added catharsis from Heidi’s internal monologue about how dumb what he’s saying is.
— The one bit of this pretape I remember most vividly is Heidi thinking “I’ll fucking kill you” after Elon makes a jab at her. Surprised that clip didn’t get more play in the wake of this episode, though it’s not as flashy as “Gen Z Hospital” or “Wario Courtroom,” I suppose.
— Beck: “I went to one dinner outdoors and one dinner indoors. (Do I have brain damage? I think I might have permanent brain damage.)”
— Even if the whole “cousin incest” angle between Ego and Chris is pretty tired by this point, I like that their two-hander has a bit more progression to it. It’s probably the most interesting portion to return to even if none of the two-person scenes are bad. Chris’ superb facial acting is also, as usual, a fun thing to key into. 
— A very solid button, with Dismukes giving a toast before quickly realizing that he’s at the wrong house.
— This definitely isn’t as bad as I recalled, and it was smart to put it more up top the show to rebound from the episode’s painful start, but it’s nothing too special. Just some nice, soft pandemic humor. I might be more positive towards it if it was in an episode with a better atmosphere, though.
STARS: ***½

THE OOLI SHOW
Frances McDormand (KAM) visits oddball Icelandic talk show

— Hey look, it’s Chloe’s only original character again! I’ve never known what to make of Ooli as someone who’s never really known what to make of Chloe’s character work; while I enjoyed that first, digital exclusive Ooli sketch for breaking format, I can’t say I was a big fan of her At Home sketch (which felt like kookiness for kookiness’ sake). And now she’s in a talk show setting, where SNL original characters and impressions go to die—how fun! It’s almost like they were scraping the bottom of the barrel trying to find sketches for Elon or something.
— Also: Elon straight-up looking like Dieter from Sprockets. Sure. Whatever.
— The whole gist of this sketch seems to be “Oh, look at how kooky these Icelandic weirdos are!” Some shades of the Nunis, some shades of The Prince Show, and naturally some of Kristen’s Björk impression in there as well—all of which are things I never particularly liked. I like whimsy, but when you force it too much it comes across as tryhard instead of particularly charming… and this sketch is trying very hard.
— I usually like Kate’s Frances McDormand impression (which I didn’t remember being a part of this), but it feels like she’s going extra muggy in this. Maybe it’s that veteran reflex to try to milk a laugh out of a clearly sinking ship, but this sketch doesn’t need more of a sense of desperation to it.
— Speaking of impressions I forgot were a part of this sketch, Pete as Steve Buscemi. Would you believe he’s not nailing this one?
— Basically the one good thing about this sketch is that it made a little opportunity for Melissa to do her Björk impression, and it’s, par for the course with Melissa, incredibly good. But watching this whole-ass sketch for ten seconds of Melissa fun? Very much not worth it.
STARS: *

MURDER DURDER
southeast Pennsylvania accents dominate crime story

— It feels weird to use this term in the context of modern SNL, but with how much the show’s distanced itself from doing direct show/movie parodies, this sketch feels very throwback-y. While it’s a direct response to Mare of Eastown, it also feels kinda like a spiritual successor to the great “Don’ You Go Rounin’ Roun to Re Ro” sketch from Season 36.
— I will say, one difference between this sketch and “Re Ro” which points towards the stylistic shift in the show’s comedy overtime: I don’t know how much we need Alex as the audience surrogate pointing out how confusing Kate’s Philly accent is. I had the same issue with that “Lesbian Period Drama” sketch from last episode, where Kate sorta existed to comment on what was happening in a way that immediately says, “Don’t believe this could be a real thing—this is a parody!!” It doesn’t really have to be underlined.
— Lots of very guilty amusement in this. I can see how it would be polarizing, and while this isn’t my favorite thing ever, I think that it’s still pretty fun. As with the earlier “Pandemic Conversations” pretape, both Kate and Beck are getting particularly fun work, with the former doing some solid underplaying while spitting out strings of nonsense and the latter going full ham with the lines about how his “durdur” was murdered.
— Weird that we have back-to-back sketches that make a joke about being so regional that everyone is kinda related to each other.
— Alex: “[That’s your] granddaughter?? How old are you?” Kate: “I’m a Philly 40.”
— Hmm, the Gritty stuff is maybe good for a cheap laugh, but it’s another thing that kinda hurts the suspension of disbelief.
— Elon is woven into this as cautiously as possible, and while he’s not very good here, he at least lands the final joke of the piece as a sketchy priest who openly admits that he murdered Beck’s daughter. The less lines you give him the better he does.— “Murdur Durdur: this is where Joe Biden’s from. Wow.”
STARS: ***½

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest & The Kid LAROI [real] perform “Without You”

Blue: I like that Miley Cyrus has reached the point where she can use her star power to bring lesser-known artists on SNL and let them share (if not borderline steal) her spotlight. I know she and the Kid Laroi were promoting the latter’s then-recent remix of her song, but this performance still feels more like a Kid Laroi performance than a Miley Cyrus performance.
— Ugh, Miley’s voice is annoying me as soon as the opening verse starts. Her enunciation and breath support could be improved.
— The Kid Laroi needs to back off the microphone. There are a lot of loud, distracting plosives in his initial verse. I also don’t care for the effects on his voice. (But I still prefer it over Miley’s.)
— I’ll forgive Miley for breathing before the last word of each phrase of the verse, because those phrases are long and seamless and it sounds difficult to conserve one’s breath when singing them. But the phrases on the chorus aren’t as long, and thus it bothers me to hear the Kid Laroi breathe between the words “without” and “you” at the end of the chorus.
— The brief moment where the Kid Laroi harmonized with Miley on the second verse was iffy. He even adjusted his in-ear monitor after that, perhaps to hear Miley’s voice better.
— On the other hand, Miley’s harmonizing on the chorus is flawless.
STARS: **

WEEKEND UPDATE
just back from Disneyland, weary mom Pauline (EGN) laments lost vitality

financial expert (host) dodges the question “What is Dogecoin?”

jacked & juiced Baby Yoda has become a mixed martial arts fighter

— Elon Musk, white nationalism, Donald Trump, and Ron DeSantis all back-to-back in Update tonight. I guess nothing really changes!
— It’s hard to say if this Update is much better or worse than usual… I feel like I tend to enjoy the Jost/Che pairing far more than some of my other reviewers, even by this state of their tenure, but this week’s feeling sort of tired, like they’re just doing their thing. And none of that is helped by how thick the atmosphere feels with Elon being in the building, either—because as per usual, SNL is stellar at taking actions that hurt its ability to be properly satirical.
— Oh, thank goodness, Ego’s here to save the day! I remember this Update feature being cut multiple times over the past few years, so it’s perhaps no great surprise that she’d finally get it on an episode that’s up to so little.
— Everything about Ego’s characterization as a weary mother enduring her darkest hours at Disneyland is absolutely perfect. I love when she gets to dig into character work this deep and key into her dramatic acting chops—I’m always a sucker for absolutely ridiculous, overly-specific writing being executed with an earnest, committed performance.
— “Sleeping Beauty… why is that hussie so tired? She don’t have kids! Y’know, I could be pretty, too… but I sleep on my feet like a horse!”
— Great twist with Ego starting to monologue while somber piano music plays, and I always love when they throw in bizarre, meta details like Che being the father to her children. (“CJ’s starting to look just like you!” “Who is CJ?!” “Che Jr.!” “Wait a minute, so his name is Che Jr. Che??”)
— “When little CJ wanted a souvenir, I showed my breasts to Goofy for some Mardi Gras beads in the French Quarter! Turns out I ain’t have to do all that, they was complimentary!”
— Such a solid piece, and it really feels like the first time anyone has actually been mentally there in this whole episode.
— Oh, good god, Elon as a financial advisor talking about how awesome Dogecoin is. It’s so, so hard to pick a low point tonight. 
— “Thank you Michael, call me the Dogefather.” Some guy in the audience: “YEAHHHHHH!!!!” Oh buddy, it’s a shame you can’t see what’s happening to the value of your crypto right now…
— There’s literally no jokes to this. Elon is just telling us about Dogecoin, how it works, and where it came from. What the fuck is going on, guys?
— Ah, okay, so the joke is just Che repeatedly asking what Dogecoin actually is. I’ll give it to Che that he’s the only person who could come close to making this sort of thing funny, but this whole bit is literally a shameless advertisement wedged in the middle of this episode. Complete trash. At least Elon seems more comfortable here than he usually is, but is that a good thing?
— The best part about this segment is that someone on reddit made a chart showing the value of Dogecoin across Elon’s SNL episode, and it was at its literal lowest point during this Update segment. Talk about failed promotion!
— To add insult to injury, now we get Baby Yoda, which shows some intelligence on SNL’s part—I bet this is the kind of shit that crypto bros find super funny.
— I hate talking poorly of Kyle because I love him so much, but Baby Yoda is, in my opinion, the worst thing he ever did. If it was a one-off, sure, whatever. But somehow, he’s appeared six times in four seasons. He was literally the closest thing to a farewell that Kyle got before leaving the show in Season 47. Why is this such a prominent character? Why has this come to define the end of his tenure? Is it seriously, like, the only thing Kyle was able to get onto the show at a certain point? Because if so, that’s really sad.
— Every installment they add some slight physical change to the character, which I guess constitutes a greater sense of character development than most recurring SNL bits have? Either way, here, he’s got jacked puppet arms, which are funny for maybe a second.
— I didn’t take any more notes… this is bad stuff. Somehow, even in a night where there’s some uncharacteristically wretched material, this might be one of the most unenjoyable segments.
— As a whole, despite one great correspondent piece, both Baby Yoda and Elon’s Dogecoin shilling drag this one down mightily, as does the tired feel of the joke-writing.
STARS: *½

WARIO TRIAL
trial reveals deeds of Wario (host), Luigi (KYM), Princess Peach (Grimes)

— Oh boy, it’s time!
— This sketch spares no time getting to its main reveal—within literally three seconds, we cut to Luigi. Even if this is a dumb sketch, I feel like if they relished in the set-up longer that could’ve hit the slightest bit more. As it is, it feels like everyone’s kinda rushing through this.
— Aaaand here we go, the image that will forever be burned onto SNL’s legacy: Elon Musk dressed as Wario. It’s a truly harrowing sight, but I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t a monstrously funny visual. Like… we’ve fallen so far over the course of the night, and this is just where we are now. 
— For the sake of explaining their premise further, Mikey is literally just reading actual quotations off of the Wario Wiki as in-sketch evidence.
— I had no memory of Kate briefly appearing in this sketch doing some very broad Italian work as Waluigi. Somehow it’s still more tame than the Frances McDormand impression she did a few sketches ago.
— Heh, at one point Kyle-as-Luigi walks directly in front of the camera (ninth screencap).
— Cecily seems to be having a blast hitting that question mark block with her hammer. Glad she can ground herself in a simple joy amidst the general dissociation.
— Grimes, Elon’s then-wife, makes a cameo appearance here as Princess Peach, to literally zero applause. I recall she made an Instagram post talking about how anxious she was to be on the live show, and seeing her in this sketch, I fully understand that feeling. I remember some people pointing out that the character’s never had an Italian accent to further scrutinize this sketch, but… it’s not like we really had to dig for things to roast here. 
— Jesus Christ, the visual of Luigi getting an erection, although heavily censored, is kind of upsetting (on top of being very desperate).
— Heh, Pete fully misses his cue to come out as Andrew Cuomo, leading to several seconds of dead air—as if we weren’t already struggling enough with that.
— Wretched ending with the sketch turning into a message from the Anti-Italian Defamation League. I will say this, though; there have been so many completely intolerable sketches in this episode, some of the lowest of the low you’ll ever see with not even a hint of enjoyment to them. But this one… it’s crisp. It’s deeply hilarious, all entirely in spite of itself, and it’s maybe the closest that modern SNL has come to reaching a level of ironic enjoyment to the degree of The Room. The complete lack of merit to the premise and writing; everyone in the cast feeling like they’re in the midst of an out of body experience; Elon, against all odds, committing to this harder than anything else in the entire episode—truly a chef’s kiss in the art of absolute trash. It’s the best that a stain on SNL’s legacy could ever be.
STARS: * (but if we’re talking ironic enjoyment, a nice ***½)

THE ASTRONAUT
on Mars, pool boy Chad’s sacrifice saves SpaceX colony

— Oh cool, more promotion of Elon’s stuff!
— Miley Cyrus is here, for whatever reason? I guess just because she likes getting involved with the show whenever she’s a musical guest, which is fair enough; I don’t mind her presence. It just feels like she’s slotted into this sketch rather randomly, and there’s kind of a bad taste in my mouth from how much she defended Elon at the time when people questioned her being the musical guest for the episode. 
— Speaking of, Pete also kinda skirted around Elon’s controversy with some general defense of how cool Elon was when he was interviewed this week on Fallon, which was worth an eye-roll but like, whatever. I can’t sit here and scrutinize everyone’s choices too much. Either way, this great meeting of the minds brings us the final Chad pretape, so… yaaaayyyy!
— Elon: “To save your fellow colonists, you’ll have to make the ultimate sacrifice.” Pete: “Heh. Sack.” You can tell how much they’re stretching that joke in this character’s tenth appearance.
— The scene between Pete and Miley, with her revealing she’s pregnant with his kid (“No thank you.”) is pretty fun, at least by the standards of a Chad sketch.
— It should also go without saying, but apropos of the quality of the writing, this sketch has some amazing set design and staging. Mad props to the SNL crew as usual for managing to do all of these effects convincingly in a week.
— There’s surprisingly less to say about this sketch than I was expecting; despite the “epic” scenario at play, the execution is very straightforward. Chad turns a knob and basically saves the Mars colony. I feel like there could’ve been a lot more to it given the labored set-up.
— The most memorable part of this sketch is Chad’s head exploding when he attempts to take off his space helmet. It’s fine. I like the touch of that being broadcast around the entire globe. It does feel weird that the past two Chad sketches ended with him dying, but at least this iteration feels like a proper end to the character. I’ve spoken of Chad before and there’s a lot that I want to like about him, namely that every sketch places him into increasingly more distinct premises which is very rare to see in recurring characters these days… but Chad is such a flat character that it doesn’t frequently make a big difference.
— Either way, it’s better than a lot of the other stuff in this episode I guess. 
STARS: **

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Plastic Hearts”

Blue: Miley’s pink dress is stunning!
— Just as I was getting into the percussion groove, Miley had to ruin it by opening her mouth. “OW!” is right… that was painful…
— Fairly impressed by Miley’s belting on the chorus. Her sense of pitch is decent, if not her timbre.
— Oops, I spoke too soon… Miley was flat on the lines that follow “I just wanna feel something.”
— Other than Miley, this song is great. The brass section, percussion, melody are really grabbing my ear.
— Miley sounds better singing in her lower register on “I just wanna feel…” When she’s belting, she sounds like she’s straining her voice. Shame this song wasn’t written in a lower key… or recorded by a different singer.
— Feeling very conflicted, because I think I love this song. Why does Miley Cyrus have to be the one singing it??
STARS: ***½

COWBOY STANDOFF
in the Old West, visionary (host) proposes ambushing a gang via a tunnel

— I think this is the least-remembered sketch of the night, but if memory serves, it’s also my least favorite. We’ll see how it goes this time. Who knows? Could be great.
— For the sake of brandishing Elon’s ego, this sketch casts him as an Old West version of himself who is obsessed with the idea of constructing a tunnel to ambush a rival gang. The sketch, of course, portrays his idea as ridiculous, because it’s so funny and cool and relatable to host SNL and let them take little baby digs at your whole deal.
— Generally speaking, I don’t like crediting writers for certain pieces unless I think they’re very good pieces, because I don’t like the idea of antagonizing writers at SNL—I respect them all, and they’re clearly good at what they do even if SNL is a show where talent can easily get squandered or misconstrued. Whereas I haven’t really put names on most of the stuff in this episode, though (it would be overly cruel)… I do have to mention that this sketch was written by Colin Jost and Bryan Tucker. Both are very talented people who have written some of my favorite sketches of all time, but Colin especially always ends up cosigning on these really butt-kissy sketches that are designed to make controversial people look good by taking very polite pokes at them that have been cautiously workshopped and endorsed by the person the pieces kiss up to. (See: the Morgan Wallen sketch from earlier this season, “Aladdin” from next season’s Kim Kardashian episode, “White House 2018” from Trump’s Season 41 dirge.) I’m just sick of the impulse; it’s like a very tacit and playful admission of, “Yeah, we get it, but we’re SNL!” As I said when writing about the Morgan Wallen piece, it’s having their cake and eating it, too. Truly horrible stuff.
— Oh right, I should be watching this sketch.
— Some mild amusement from the line about how “self-driving horses” are actually just horses. You can at least count on Jost and Tucker to get some fun lines out most of the time, even if it has to be birthed from these harrowing circumstances.
— I had to briefly check. I’ve only used the word “harrowing” two other times in this review which is kind of impressive. I’ll probably use it one more time before we’re all done here.
— I love the ongoing battle tonight between Elon and the multitude of ill-advised accents he’s had to put on for his characters. He’s not winning.
— Elon can’t laugh either. He’s literally just saying “Hohohohoho.” and “Hehehehehehe.” I’m not deliberately transcribing it to look bad, I promise.. You can hear the periods.
— Oh my god, he’s talking about crypto again.
— There’s some random sound off-screen—something falling?—that causes Kenan to break a little (sixth screencap), because this is the kind of sketch where the funniest moment is unplanned.
— Super weird beat with Elon’s character admitting that he didn’t believe in wearing masks while robbing banks in the past. Why would he try to own up to that through metaphor? That’s not really a funny thing to admit.
— The ending with it suddenly turning into a song about Kyle’s dying bartender character, Earl, is just plain dumb, though the touch of him acquiring a vulture puppet at some point to poke at his wound is mildly interesting, if not just because the sketch never draws any attention to it. (I actually missed when the vulture appeared.) Flaw or easter egg? You decide.
— Either way, such a turd. 
STARS: *

GOODNIGHTS


IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— Harrowing. It seemed like a huge mistake when Elon Musk was announced as a host, and he did nothing to prove that wrong once the night was properly executed. This felt like an absolutely miserable week; if the show succeeded at capturing Elon’s voice and “sensibilities,” it simultaneously managed to accomplish the feat of exposing how gratuitously humorless he is as a person. 
— While many are probably gonna be quick to pinpoint this episode as similar to Donald Trump’s S41 hosting gig—which is an apt comparison—I feel that this episode is somehow a fair amount worse as far as the writing quality goes. That episode was at least smart enough to contribute a handful of more functional pieces amidst its garbage that conveniently hid its host, but aside from some okay pretapes, this one is wall-to-wall trash and pushes Elon to the forefront. Plus, at least Trump won at the end of the day by hosting SNL and showing off his cool dance moves. Everyone here loses—Elon’s cryptocurrency stock plummeted, he looked absolutely terrible every time he participated, and SNL once again tainted its legacy with a horrible decision that it’ll never be able to undo. 

MY PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
Murdur Durdur
Every Conversation with People You Haven’t Seen Since the Pandemic Started
The Astronaut
Mother’s Day
Weekend Update
Wario Trial
Monologue
The Ooli Show
Gen Z Hospital
Cowboy Standoff

TOMORROW
SNL rebounds with a legitimately brilliant decision for once: Keegan-Michael Key hosts for the first time, as covered by Anthony

April 10, 2021 – Carey Mulligan / Kid Cudi (S46 E17)

by John

EYE ON MINNESOTA
anchors’ race guides perception of Derek Chauvin trial

— Written by Michael Che, Josh Patten, and Gary Richardson.
— This cold open feels like it aired much longer than a year and a half ago. 
— One of the last, if not the last, of the Alex/Kate pairings (which always seemed to involve news personalities). 
— Ego and Kenan work well here, in a pairing that is never as common as I tend to think after four and a half seasons together. 
— I’m not sure if they are meant to be reprising their Mid-Day News characters or not.
— Here is the video Chris’ character is talking about. 
— As always, Chris gives a great deal of life to his little moment of material.
— Chris’ moment would have been a good place for the cold open to end. 
— The Kenan and Ego characters arguing against the idea that property destruction is a bad thing feels like a forced way to keep this sketch going, and takes away from the original point. 
—  Ego’s  character repeatedly going out of her way to stress that Alex’s character has a very white name is also something that didn’t need to be repeated.  
— The Minnesota weather report (“rest of April, cold, May cold, June cold, July, somehow hot as hell”) is hilarious, and is the part of this sketch I remember getting the most positive response. 
— I do like the bit with the Ego and Kenan anchors assuming “the prince” who died was DMX. Good way to work in current headlines without making them seem overly shoehorned.
— A good, if slightly abrupt (as per usual with these) closer with more funny Chris moments about the Matt Gaetz scandal.
— While the performances are fine, I’m always hesitant about these types of socially conscious sketches. They can veer toward patronizing, even at the best of times, and often hit into a certain niche that amounts to Sunday afternoon think pieces about whether the show has “met the moment.” This one in particular moves so far away from the initial point that the best you can do is just enjoy the performances and be glad the sketch wasn’t worse. 
— I do appreciate that this had a shorter runtime (5 minutes) than most modern cold opens, helping to make it one of the better variations thereof in this season, but still, cutting at least 1-2 minutes off, and finding a proper tone, would have improved my score.
STARS: ***½ 

MONOLOGUE
host’s husband Marcus Mumford [real] wants to play the guitar on SNL

— Written by Anna Drezen and Kent Sublette.
— For some reason, this monologue is not on Youtube.
— I know Carey Mulligan has had a noted film career over the last decade and change, but the last time I saw her before this episode was her star-making appearance on Doctor Who. Appropriately enough, she’s dressed like a one-story companion from 1988.
— Carey erroneously believing she is the first British person to host the show is rewording the same joke used for Issa Rae’s monologue, which might give us a hint for who wrote that one.
— I don’t really see the similarity to Michelle Williams that she’s joking about, but the comparison does make this the closest Michelle (another in the “all but one hosted” club, this time for the core Dawson’s Creek cast) will get to SNL.
— The monologue so far is a bit nerve-ridden and all over the place, as shown by the audience response, but Carey hits her stride when talking about telling elaborate bedtime stories to her kids during the pandemic. I particularly like the line about being alone with her husband and kids in the countryside is how most horror movies start.
— Bit of an awkward moment when she has to encourage the audience to applaud her for saying shops are open. 
— It’s Marcus Mumford, Carey’s husband! Um…yay? 
— Seriously, I don’t have a problem with Mumford and Sons, maybe other than the one who praised Andy Ngo around this time (which may be another reason why Marcus Mumford—that’s fun to type—pops up tonight), but they rarely enter my mind. 
— Apparently the crowd feels the same way, because a genuinely funny line (when Carey asks where the kids are, he says, “I left them with the sons”) gets no crowd reaction. I have to give Marcus Mumford credit for carrying on.
— The crowd gets more into it when he brings out his guitar for some good-natured “oh he’s so dumb he’s trying to be the musical guest” jokes. 
— I remember someone saying he has youth pastor vibes, which is probably fitting given how he and Carey met
— I really like the part where he says he thinks they have a secret signal for when he should  break out his guitar, and she tells him how much this alarms her.
— This is a little twee, but also wholesome and endearing. Normally I’d just chalk this type of monologue to lack of confidence in the host, but even if that is true here, I don’t mind. And while we never know what the future holds for a relationship, the energy here is just lighter and sweeter than many of the somewhat empty, grimy, at times outright desperate vibes when these couple monologues would pop up in the ‘90s and ‘00s. 
STARS: ***½ 

WHAT’S WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE
contestants’ analyses are way off-base

— Written by Fran Gillespie, Sudi Green and Kent Sublette. 
— This is the first (and likely last, as two of the writers left the show) time I’ve ever covered this sketch, which is probably for the best, as I still often call this “What’s In the Picture?” or “What’s Not In This Picture?”
— I immediately get a cheap laugh out of describing host Elliott Pants (such an Anderlette name…) as “half-vaccinated.”
— Chris is in sketch-stealing mode from the second he appears, with his priceless delivery of “not much” when asked how he’s doing. This won’t be the last game show sketch he steals. 
— Aidy’s character saying the doctor in the picture won’t stop explaining WandaVision to his patient is a reminder of the big buzz for the show at this point (which, as per usual, would only really hit SNL long after the fact).
— At the time, these sketches generated a great deal of fan criticism for being trashy, crude, and tryhard, but they were almost always guilty pleasures for me, and I can tell you why in just one moment—Elliott’s “Look at the doctor’s clock,” followed by Chris’ character saying, “His robe is covering it.” Stupid, infantile, call it whatever you want—it gave me one of the bigger laughs I’ve gotten from SNL in a long time.
— Most of Carey’s role here fits the host-proof, restrained parts she’ll get for most of the night, but I do love her delivery of, “Are you mad at us?” followed by a Kenan outburst. We’re in the very waning days of “Kenan reacts,” but it still works perfectly here. 
— If I’m not mentioning Aidy much it’s because she’s just giving the same competent, but vampy performance you know by heart at this point in her tenure.
—  Another great moment for Chris when asked what’s wrong (with the picture): “I’m fine. Do I seem like something’s wrong?”
— Good, dark joke with Aidy’s character saying the old lady at the tombstone is Mrs. Doubtfire, although the error that focuses the camera on Carey instead of Aidy takes a little away.
— Cute wink to have a Rege-Jean Page reference not long after he hosted.
— Carey drawling, “So that’s why he left ‘BridgerTOWN’’ has been stuck in my head ever since I first saw this sketch.
— None of these were ever classics, but this may be the best, or on par with the first (from season 44’s Paul Rudd episode). Some true laugh out loud moments, and something you could easily put on Chris’ Best Of. Not a bad way to bow out.
STARS: ****

TREMFALTA
irritable bowel syndrome sufferer (host) ruins a toilet

— Boy, we can pack it up after that description, can’t we? 
— Written by Seiday and Gary Richardson.
— That’s Heidi doing the voiceover, which is fairly rare for her. 
— Pieces like this are mostly about performance and escalation. For that reason, they’re lucky to have Kenan, who has a history with these.  The latter is actually one of my favorite Kenan performances. 
— I know it’s probably been done before, but I do like the choice of having the “side effects” portion repeatedly interrupted by Kenan’s character ranting and raving. His going on about the “turlet” makes me laugh more than it should have.
— Aidy is also fine, although her role is redundant to Kenan’s.
— Lauren is perfect as the woman who gave the Tremfalta to Carey’s character in the first place, only to end up terrified and threatened. Her facial expressions tell the whole story. This is my pick for the best role she had during her season, which is kind of sad, but still, good work here!
— This is much shorter than I remembered, an exception for most  fake ads on modern SNL. The tightness allows for a sharper performance from Carey and makes you less apt to notice how overfamiliar the material is. That choice is going to bump my score up by a half-star.  
STARS: ***½ 

STUDY BUDDY
via phone, Jason (AIB) guides Josh (KAM) on handling teen’s (host) regard

— Monkey’s paw, I want to see a slice-of-life sketch…
— Written by (shocker) Anna Drezen and Alison Gates. 
— I’ve had my share of complaints about Drezen/Kaidy pieces, but I did like some parts of this on my original viewing of this episode, so I’ll keep an open mind. 
— The setup with Josh and his female friend has a low-key vibe I appreciate, but, as is often the case with sketches of the last 10-15 years, this is marred by Carey looking straight at the camera/cue cards rather than her scene partner.
— As we get Aidy and Kate together (via split-screen), this piece starts to remind me of some of the quieter, character-led moments of the earlier French & Saunders series.
— There are a number of little lived-in details in this I like—Jason’s obvious lie about having a girlfriend while at design camp, Josh being in disbelief that his whispering a jellyfish fact in her ear worked, Josh worrying about whether he should tell her the plant life for her gecko is not ideal.
— Something I’m not sure I appreciated at the time, due to my fatigue over Kate’s many drag roles, is how measured Kate is in her performance. She’s doing a lot to keep this chugging along, as Carey is a spare part. 
— Aidy, on the other hand, is too obviously giving a performance, rather than committing to the character. 
— A rare touch of melancholy with Josh worried he will lose his friendship with Jason, only for Jason to reassure him they’ll always have each other.
— I’ve wondered at times about how much I do dock points just because of being bored of the Kate/Aidy combo. When this first aired I believe I said I would have enjoyed this much more if not for them. I will take that back now, partially, because I think Kate deserves the praise. 
— This is needlessly revived, as is the SNL way, in the Zoe Kravitz episode—glad I won’t have to review it.
STARS: ****

WEIRD LITTLE FLUTE
“That Weird Little Flute” in rap gets its due; Timothee Chalamet cameo

— Written by Dan Bulla, Steven Castillo, Pete Davidson, and Chris Redd.
— One of my favorite lines in When Harry Met Sally is when Sally says she doesn’t miss her ex, she misses the idea of him. When I see pre-tapes like this, I wonder if that’s how I feel about Steven Castillo.
— I appreciate that the concept of talking about flute solos in rap songs puts this a level above the usual “Pete wastes three minutes on which Hello, Larry intro he likes more,” but I’ve just seen variations of this on SNL far too many times for too many years to react anymore. 
—  Nice to see Timothee again, someone I’d be happy to see on the show much more often than he will likely ever be. 
—  Chloe in a thankless part, one of her very few roles of the night. How far we have come…
—  I do like the bit where they think Aidy’s grandma character is dead, only for her to wake up and play the flute. 
—  I also like the bit where they think they have been quietly jamming in the music shop, only for Carey’s character to show them the destruction they caused.
—  Speaking of Carey, this must be one of the most all-time pointless host additions to a pre-tape. I mostly find myself distracted by how much the wig makes her resemble Amy Sedaris…and saddened that in the nonexistent chance Amy had hosted SNL in the last few decades, she would have been stuck in the same role. 
—  Yeah. That’s over.
STARS: **

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Tequila Shots”

Blue: Incredible lighting onstage at the start of the performance. 
— Aww, I like that Kid Cudi is wearing a Chris Farley shirt.
— As long as I’m talking about Kid Cudi’s fashion choices, I also like his glittery sneakers a lot.
— Great low notes from Kid Cudi on the pre-chorus.
— Kid Cudi’s sounding flat on the last word before the chorus (“sorry”).
— I started out loving the chorus to this song, but I don’t think we needed to hear it twice in a row, at least not the first time it’s sung.
— Still greatly enjoying the lighting! The alternating red and blue is so striking.
— Kid Cudi’s voice is strong on the second verse, as opposed to his breathier delivery on the first verse and chorus. I prefer his more powerful delivery.
— I like the drum fills leading out of the chorus into the bridge/breakdown.
— Why not sing the pre-recorded vocals at the end? I’d understand Kid Cudi’s decision not to sing the chorus if his riffing/improvising was more elaborate.
— Great visual presentation, but I found myself wanting a little something more from the performance.
STARS: ***

WEEKEND UPDATE
podcast of Barack Obama (CRR) & Bruce Springsteen (BEB) is mundane

news  stripper Pineapple (PUJ) from Paul Pierce video comes to his defense

news  Iceberg That Sank The Titanic (BOY) just wants to promote his new album

— Right out with the Matt Gaetz burns, probably because you can tell that Jost is barely able to hide his absolute loathing of him.
— Che and Jost are on a roll so far, a fast clip and good energy helping even with some eye-rollers (like Biden = Clint Eastwood).
— Beck and Chris! Talk about a rare pair. Beck’s really made the Update desk his own this season.
— Written by Beck Bennett, Chris Redd, Gary Richardson, and Will Stephen.
— Beck looks oddly terrifying as Springsteen, but his gravelly delivery cracks me up. 
— Chris used to struggle with some of the thankless impressions he was given, from Corey Booker to Jussie Smollett, but he’s just right as Obama. It’s not as much about accuracy (although he’s fine) as the clear enjoyment he has for what he’s doing. 
— This could have been trimmed a little, but I can’t complain—it’s full of fun and life, which Update always needs. 
— I laughed at Che’s “Averngers” Madea joke even when I knew I shouldn’t have.
— Punkie making her Update debut!
— Written by Anna Drezen, Punkie Johnson, and Bryan Tucker.
— When Punkie was cast, I assumed she would make frequent Update appearances, given her standup background. I’m not sure if she ever had those plans too and they just didn’t work out, but seeing her slowly making her way up through sketch appearances is one of the reasons I probably feel more of a connection with her than with some people who wowed everyone in their first or second episode due to being at the desk.
— I see that Paul Pierce is a running topic tonight. 
— There’s nothing which stands out with this desk piece, but Punkie’s energy and her interplay with Che go a long way, along with a few digressions (like her talking about how hard it is to strip over Zoom, or how courteous Paul Pierce was to strippers).
— The audience member booing because Che said “will.i.am’ is on his way to being “will.i.was,” should have gotten their own segment. 
— Che’s joke about the woman who stripped naked and crawled into a man’s bed is the epitome of his Update tenure, even if it didn’t get much response. 
— Now we have what will likely always define Bowen’s tenure on the show.
— Written by Anna Drezen and Bowen. Bowen later talked about his doubts and Anna’s encouragement.
— I was initially surprised when I read Bowen’s comments about fears of the piece being overly complicated, but compared to a number of Update segments I can see his point. 
— The concept of an iceberg being indignant over being asked about a catastrophe it was involved in rather than its EDM album is naturally funny, but we know execution is what matters. Fortunately, the execution is pretty much flawless, with any number of easily quotable highlights, from “Half my ass is gone!” to “WHY ARE YOU ATTACKING ME???”
— I also like that the iceberg repeatedly lies about how many people died on the Titanic, the number lowering with each mention.
— In some ways this reminds me of what James Anderson (someone Bowen has a high opinion of, to the point of including Gays in Space references in Fire Island) tried to fuse—music and camp and vacuousness—in his Deep House Dish sketches. I generally enjoyed those, but Bowen takes the idea to another level, perhaps due to his being an openly gay artist, rather than a straight performer trying to manufacture a parody of homosexuality. 
— Other than going on a bit (I would have cut the musical performance—maybe had Jost say they didn’t have time), this is an excellent piece that deserves its reputation. In the last few seasons, especially Season 47, I’ve been critical of some of the forced, desperate nature of Bowen’s showpieces, but watching this I am reminded of just what a long road it was to get this type of voice or vision on the air, especially on the heart of the show for many fans. Bowen and Anna deserve my gratitude. 
— Overall a very strong Update, teetering on classic status, and another example of why I wish Che and Jost had left after this season. 
STARS: ****½ 

IN MEMORIAM
a photo of Anne Beatts marks her passing

— There was some expectation, and inevitable disappointment, about whether SNL would have a bigger tribute to one of its founding writers. This was about what I expected. I do feel like they let the camera linger on the card for a few more seconds than normal, lending a more haunting tone.
— If you want to have more of a proper goodbye to Anne, here is an interview conducted a week before her death.

STARCHARTER ANDROMEDA
spoiled (host) & (MID) flout spaceship protocol

— Written by Jasmine Pierce and Streeter Seidell.
— Mikey quickly doing that weird Mikey yelp which I probably enjoy more than most fans do.
— You have to love that Ego and Alex are almost immediately put on duty to explain the backstory for the Carey and Mikey characters, just in case someone doesn’t get it. I’m half-surprised they didn’t say the characters attended “Woke U.”
— There’s an interesting paradox with Mikey in that I think he looks very energetic and fresh-faced in normal guise, but when he tries to play twenty-somethings or teens, he looks about 60.
— Beck and Kate are doing good straight work here (very rare to see Kate in this type of role in her last years on the show).
— Yes, I’m continuing to enjoy Mikey’s hissy fits more than I should.
— Much as I enjoy fuller-cast sketches, and getting to see more of the cast in their Trek-pastiche uniforms, I feel like they could have combined a few of these parts, and cut Chloe (who is just parroting Carey and Mikey) or Ego (usually I wouldn’t say cut Ego but she is given nothing to work with). 
— As this is Carey’s only real character part of the night, I’m saddened that I still don’t have much to say. Her wig looks nice though. 
— I realize now one of the reasons I don’t have much to say is because Carey is just playing a part Heidi already wrote the book on. 
— The part where the “woke” youth record Kate’s character and accuse her of assault escalates the tone in a way the sketch doesn’t seem to be able or willing to address..
— Even after repeated beats of out of control “youth” annoying the rest of the crew, the ending still feels abrupt, even if the final shot of the three little figures floating in space is a nice break from the norm.
— Mikey and Streeter had a real bug up their ass this season about “cancel culture,” which is probably for the best in the long run, as it meant by the time these began to suffocate national discourse in the last two years, the show had already gotten it out of its system. I don’t dislike this as much as I imagine many fans do, but it’s also not that good, and had already been done better by Mikey and Heidi a few months earlier. 
STARS: **½ 

LESBIAN PERIOD DRAMA
prestige movie trailer has rote forbidden romance

— Written by Alison Gates, Fran Gillespie, Sudi Green, and Kate McKinnon.
— Beck’s delivery of “She’s a bummer,” amuses me. 
— Cecily, who often does these types of voiceovers, was not in the building this week. — There was some fan confusion over who actually did the voiceover. I think it’s Carey, with an American accent, but I’m not completely sure.
— This has many takes on lesbian period films. I’ll leave that to you (or Youtube commenters) to analyze in terms of validity. 
— I remember some people being upset at the name drop of Portrait of a Lady on Fire, as they felt that was a good film, not worthy of mockery.
— There are some genuinely worthwhile fake reviews in this, especially Lesbian Monthly’s “Sure, I mean I’m gonna see it.”
— I find this watchable enough, but I do think Kate, as the ex-girlfriend, belongs in a totally different pre-tape. Similar to when Kristen derailed “A Teacher” earlier this season, I can’t say the performance is in any way bad, but it’s so heavy in the energy of that performer that everything else involved is diminished.
— The part where they roast overly aggressive sex scenes as clearly directed by a man is good.
— Heidi also gives a very strong performance throughout this piece.
— File this under, “I appreciate the idea,” and, “I want to like this more than I do.”
— Green and Gillespie guest-write another version of this in the Rami Malek episode, one that also isn’t perfect, but feels much more focused, sharper, and just more entertaining. 
STARS: ***½ 

THE WAR IN WORDS
wife’s (host) baffling letters alarm WWII seaman (MID)

— Written by Mikey Day, Streeter Seidell, and Bryan Tucker.
— These History Channel Hitler intros never get old.
— We truly find ourselves in the Great War—the war between Mikey and British accents.
— This has never aired so late in the show before, which may suggest a lack of confidence. 
— Another concern with airing so late in the show means that we’ve already seen Mikey yelping and shouting in another sketch not long before.
— As this goes along the usual beats, I get my first laugh at Mikey’s wife sending him a vial of coke after he asks for something naughty. 
— This is just hitting the beats of previous installments—a wife with Nazi ties, Mikey’s character learning his parents are dead, etc.
— Carey’s performance is fine, but not memorable.
— Not sure how I feel about the joke of Carey’s character being the woman on the cover of Life, considering some of the debate and controversy over the image.
— I do like the ending with Mikey just giving up and deciding to do a line of coke. 
— I was somewhat kinder to this sketch on first viewing, partly because I’m not a huge fan of the Claire Foy version either (the jokes do hit harder that first time [not counting the Maya and Mikey sketch as that wasn’t on SNL] but otherwise it feels leaden in places), but watching now, it does seem very gassed out. The Phoebe Waller-Bridge version contrasts her icy bite and Mikey’s escalating hysteria to a tee. This, in contrast, just feels like something they dug out because another white British actress was hosting. 
— Unless we get a twist (I was sort of hoping they’d bring this back last season, with Benedict Cumberbatch as Mikey’s lover), I’m good with never seeing this sketch again. 
STARS: **

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Sad People”

Blue: With Kid Cudi up front and center behind the microphone on a darkened stage, while wearing a lovely dress, I’m getting the impression that he’s about to sing a torch ballad.
— Apparently the dress was designed for Kid Cudi in the style of Kurt Cobain, who was once photographed wearing a similar dress. With that in mind, I find it touching that Kid Cudi chose to use his performances on SNL to shout out both Cobain and (during the first performance) Chris Farley. I’m guessing they were influences on him.
— This song sounds similar to the first song Kid Cudi performed.
— Love the track’s heavy low end. 
— Nice touch with the multicolored lights flashing on the floor, and how the fog is diffusing them.
— I’m not loving Kid Cudi’s delivery on this song. It sounds like he’s letting the melody carry his singing, without focusing on the delivery of the lyrics. I would love to hear him sing with more emotion in his voice.
— The way Kid Cudi is swaying back and forth as he sings is a bit distracting, and unnecessary. Still, I guess if he’s feeling the music…
— Great drumming at the end of the second chorus! I wish the camera had been focused on the drummer at that moment…
— Kid Cudi’s laid-back delivery on the breakdown, and the prominent pure “ee” vowel on the word “people,” are both getting under my skin, and not in a good way.
— Haha, I was hoping Kid Cudi would curtsy at the end, and he did.
STARS: **½

L’EGGS
(AIB) & (host) try to sell teens on the bygone appeal of L’eggs hosiery

— Written by Celeste Yim and Aidy Bryant. 
— What a passing of the torch—Kyle and Andrew as teenagers, with Andrew wearing Kyle’s other teenager wig!
— Carey looks shockingly like Joan Allen, one of the most underrated SNL hosts of the ‘90s.
— This is my favorite type of Aidy role—a woman who is completely absurd under the facade of normality (another reason I’m so fond of “Overnight Salad”).
— Carey isn’t quite in step with Aidy, but she’s doing a decent job. She’s having to force the American accent though.
— Andrew getting the reaction moment when Aidy’s character calls the students 9 years old reminds me of just how natural he is at these elements, which is probably why we don’t have fans who go on about how tired they are of Andrew Reacts! 
— Oddly, Heidi’s performance here reminds me of Kyle. 
— The visual presentation manages to not seem like padding, helped by Aidy’s fervent reading of likes like, “Then came the nightmare whore trends of the early 2000s.”
— I love the blissfully daffy part where we get a closeup of Carey and Aidy showing off their hosed legs to the camera, complete with ancient you’re-on-hold music in the background.
— I also love Andrew’s very exacting pronunciation of “L’Eggs.”
— This is just so goofy and clunky in all the right ways for me, even as Aidy and Carey are barely able to keep it together by the end. 
— Whenever I want to rewatch a sketch that reminds me of why I enjoyed Aidy as a cast member, this is one of them. 
STARS: ****½  

IN MEMORIAM
a photo of DMX marks his passing

— Is this the first time an episode has two in memoriam photos?

GOODNIGHTS

— Very sweet to see Carey hug her husband after she says her farewells.
— Not so sweet to see Melissa, shut out yet again this season (so much so by this point that she briefly decided to leave the show), struggling to hide her disappointment. 
— A rare goodnights appearance for Pete, presumably due to his friendship with Kid Cudi. 

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— Carey is a real throwback to the type of hosts who were often seen in the mid-late ‘90s through much of the ‘00s—likable enough people who truck through, are mostly kept out of the way, and are clearly never going to host again. 
— I have a soft spot for the main two host-proof episodes of this season (Carey and Nick Jonas). There’s some forgettable stuff here, to be sure, but also some creativity and fun, a breakout Update, one of my favorite Aidy roles, and generally just a pleasant, breezy vibe that fits a spring episode, the last breathing moment before the runup to the finale. 
— This episode is also important for spotting trends—namely, just how vital Chris Redd was becoming to the show by this point, and also how much Bowen would capture the audience with his sheer showmanship. This episode also serves as a reminder of what a touchstone Aidy often was for episodes, in lead or support, even if by this point she only seemed to get broader attention for playing Ted Cruz.
— I’m so glad the next episode is going to continue these positive vibes…

MY PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


RATED SEGMENTS FROM BEST TO WORST
Weekend Update
L’Eggs
What’s Wrong With This Picture
Study Buddy
Monologue
Tremfalta
Eye on Minnesota
Lesbian Period Drama
Starcharter Andromeda
Weird Little Flute
The War In Words

TOMORROW
Mighty mighty Matt chats about Elon Musk, our final review before he buys out our site for $44 and crashes it into the ground.

April 3, 2021 – Daniel Kaluuya / St Vincent (S46 E16)

by Anthony

OOPS, YOU DID IT AGAIN
Lil Nas X (CRR), Pepé Le Pew (KAM) & Matt Gaetz (PED) are judged

— The return of this sketch from the Regé-Jean Page episode. I wasn’t particularly into that one, not just because of Aidy Cruz (though obviously the show can fuck off with that nonsense—which, yes, we finally get a reprieve of that after 4 straight episodes), but mainly because the writing felt pretty pandering and more content getting easy applause from the audience and creating GIFs than actually being funny. 
— Not a huge fan of this impression from Chloe either. I know the dead-eyed, robotic nature of it is the point, but it also seems (understandably, given the public support behind Britney at this point) afraid to mine that emotionlessness for laughs, which just leaves it in some kind of uncanny valley area.
— The photoshop on that Lil Nas X pic tries to make him look more like Chris, but he just ends up looking like a chipmunk (third screencap above). 
—Continuing my issues with the last Britney sketch, the writing has felt really soft and obvious, like something you’d see on the lesser late night shows. A lot of these jokes feel culled from the type of viral tweets I hate.
— Chris feels a bit self conscious in his portrayal of Lil Nas, especially in the ‘lap’ dance portion where he’s about a full yard away from making contact with Mikey’s crotch (he’s basically just doing push ups in front of him).
— Kate now enters playing Pepé Le Pew, who was famously cut out of Space Jam 2 for making non-consensual French jokes. Her appearance here is mostly an excuse for her to do some oh-so-whacky Kate accent work. 
— I did like Pepé complaining that there’s no parts for old French skunks, and that it always comes down to him and Gérard Depardieu. 
— Pepé says no one ever calls out Speedy Gonzalez, as if we don’t go through the same round of discourse every couple years of people pointing out how stereotypical and potentially offensive the character is and then getting the same response about how he’s actually beloved with Latin culture. For the record, I have no take one way or another on these characters, they’ve never been the Looneys I cared about (gimme my man Wile E. all day).
— Chloe just did an out-of-nowhere Cardi B style “okurrr”, because we’re just doing anything to get the Yass Qween crowd into this one I guess. 
— Pete comes out as Matt Gaetz, literally doing fucking Quagmire from Family Guy’s catchphrase. This is what I mean with this feeling like lazy Twitter writing. A tweet comparing Gaetz to Quagmire, by showing their pictures side by side or doing some bit of audio manipulation, could be worth a smirk and a like and gather up a few hundred thousand of those because we’ll like anything on Twitter that doesn’t aggravate us or actively remind us of our own impending doom, but SNL should really have higher standards.
— I enjoyed a lot of Pete’s work this season and like everyone was surprised at how strong stuff like his Cuomo was, but I’d still have much rather seen this role go to a less overexposed cast member. He’s fine here, but he’s also not doing much of an impression or even a character.
— And now Kate is squirting her skunk juice all over Pete. It reminds me of that classic moment in the Debate 76 sketch where Aykroyd’s Carter took a big shit all over Chevy’s Ford.
— Pete sticks his tongue out after he finishes his LFNY. Yea, I need to get the taste of this one out of my mouth too, bud.
STARS: *½  

MONOLOGUE
host discusses his roots & recounts his Zoom-muted Golden Globe win

— Daniel comes off very charming right off the bat here. He commands the stage with such ease I remember wondering if he had any standup experience. 
— The crowd is also super hot tonight. Not quite on the insane level of Regé-Jean Page a few weeks ago, but they’re still eating up everything Daniel is offering. I imagine the cast was ecstatic to have these types of audiences following the crowds from the first half of the season, which were truly dead—though to be fair, that’s because they were inhabited by people who spent their days watching people truly dying. Hard to get too excited about Jim Carrey as Joe Biden with that in the back of your mind. Or, you know, in general. 
— Lot of broad racial humor in this monologue, but this writing staff’s more lived in perspective, along with the bolster Daniel gives the material, helps it from feeling forced or hacky like a lot of SNL’s past attempts at such humor have been.
— “My mom is one of 22 kids, and my dad is one of 49”—hot damn! 
— A hilarious clip of Daniel delivering his Golden Globes acceptance speech on Zoom not realizing his mic was on mute. Also, I’ll be the one to say it—my guy looks so high there.
— We get our inevitable Get Out reference with Daniel saying his muted speech had him feeling like he “was in the sunken place”, a line that leaves him looking rather proud. 
— Really lovely moment with Daniel saying he wrote a play when he was 9 based on Kenan and Kel. Also just appreciate anytime the show references Kenan’s Nickelodeon roots. 
— Daniel actually had a hand in writing this monologue, along with Streeter, Jasmine Pierce and Celeste Yim. There’s definitely a level of care in this you don’t see in many monologues. For once, the jokes are actually landing, and there’s more consideration in showcasing the charms of this particular host than we typically get. While it didn’t go above and beyond with some bit of conceptual ingenuity, or the fine tuning we might see from a standup, this is about exactly what you want from your average monologue. It introduced the host and showcased just what makes them likable, got in some solid laughs and kept the energy high for the rest of the night.
STARS: ****

WILL YOU TAKE IT?
(host) urges relatives’ vaccination via cash prizes

— So there was quite a bit of controversy surrounding this sketch and uhh…yea I don’t wanna touch that with a ten foot pole. There are conversations worth having about the more difficult and thorny issues this sketch brings up, but I am not the man to have them, and frankly this website, as well as its comment section (let’s be honest about the main demographic of people reading online reviews of sketch comedy) is not the forum for them. Remember that lived-in perspective I was just talking about? I do not have that. I do not have the necessary tools for this one; I am fully throwing in the towel on this and highly advise you all to do the same. So no talking about the sociopolitical or cultural aspects of this sketch, we’re just gonna focus purely on the comedic element of this sketch. We’re going to examine what does and doesn’t work comedically, and that’s all (see you again in literally 4 episodes for another round of “Wading Through the Waters of Sensitive Twitter Discourse: With Tony!”)
— I like that Daniel reveals the main gag of the sketch in his first line. I remember a writer talking about how Smigel would always shit on scripts that didn’t reveal the joke until a couple pages in, saying “don’t hide why your piece is funny”. I would tend to agree with his philosophy there.
— Having said that, once we get into the main gag here the sketch has a bit of trouble finding places for it to go. A majority of the sketch basically just amounts to Daniel offering his family money to take the vaccine and them refusing.
— I praised Daniel in the monologue and will continue to as the night goes on, but something about his performance here seems a little off to me. He’s not bad, and sells some of his annoyance with his family well, but I I think he’s trying to split the difference between a cheesy game show host and a straight man getting increasingly frustrated with his surroundings, and doesn’t end up committing hard enough to either feeling. It’s certainly not a bad or distracting performance, and it is a demanding one to throw him into right at the top of the show, but it feels like it could be more keyed-in for sure.
— The rest of the performances don’t feel like particularly new ground for anyone in the scene, though they’re all doing fine. Punkie and Kenan come off best; Punkie simply because we’re less used to her particular flavors and Kenan because he can do this kind of charmingly bemused old timer role in his sleep.
— I actually wonder if this piece wouldn’t feel fresher if we swapped Daniel and Chris’s roles. I mentioned Daniel feeling slightly off in the role, but he could be a lot of fun in the less demanding role of “dumb brother” here. Meanwhile, it’d be interesting to see Chris anchor a sketch like this, instead of being used in a function we’ve seen so so often from him in his tenure. 
— “I’ll take it when white people start taking it.” “White people are taking it.” “Man, you can’t trust white people.”
— We get a few mentions of the Tuskegee study here, which doesn’t get much of a reaction from the audience. I’m guessing, depending on demographics, that lack of reaction is a split between not knowing the reference and wondering why you’d joke about such a thing (not that touchy subjects can’t be joked about, but the joke here just seems to be the reference itself).
— The ending has the family balk at Daniel dating a character played by Heidi. Heh, not getting me to open up that can of worms either, sketch. 
— Che wrote this Gary Richardson and Bryan Tucker, and he would expand on the ideas presented here in an episode of his HBO Max show. It was clearly given more thought there, but ultimately felt similarly muddled both comedically and in what it was trying to say, as a lot of that show did.
— I enjoyed this more when it aired (though I was never huge on it) but watching it now I really didn’t find a ton to take with me. The central premise never gets explored very interestingly, we don’t get much in the way of memorable lines, and the performances are solid but rather boilerplate for this crew. 
STARS: **½ 

VIRAL APOLOGY VIDEO
problematic YouTuber (KYM) apologizes & harms fellow pranker (host)

— A very ‘online’ sketch, referencing the recent glut of cringeworthy apology videos from social media stars as well as the general cycle of online discourse that turns some internet rando with some silly bit of newfound notoriety into the internet’s villain of the day. Pieces like this are a way less forced way for the show to adapt to the social media age than having the cast dress up as senators and read memes you found on Twitter for 6 minutes. 
— To that point, when this came out I sent it to my 19 year-old cousin, who is generally under the impression that SNL is ‘cringe’, and he actually enjoyed this one. Progress!
— This type of self-important dumbass performance is nothing new for Kyle, but it’s still strong work from him, both in the parts where he has to preen about like a cocky little shit, and when he’s trying to bullshit his way through another apology (“It was cool and it was funny, but it was wrong“).
— I enjoy the detail of Kyle abbreviating sorry to “sor” but still trying to hit it very sincerely whenever he says it. 
— “Y’all have let me know that some of my past videos could be considered offensive and/or crimes.”
— The idea of a racist fart is both hilarious and horrifying.
— Solid ending with Daniel’s character knocking Kyle out in the same way Kyle had done to him earlier, and then turning to camera and immediately launching into his own apology before running away. In general he was a fun foil to Kyle here. I maybe wish he was given a bit more to do, but then you run the risk of this dragging, as so many shorts this season have.
— One of my favorite Kyle pieces in recent seasons. This felt like it found a relatively new lane for a type of role we’ve seen him do plenty of times, and kept a genuinely solid progression going so that it wasn’t just watching Kyle awkwardly screw around for a couple minutes, as some of his worst pieces can come off. 
STARS: ****½  

SCATTERGORIES 
mom (KAM) gets passive-aggressively noisy after Rummikub is shelved

— As many have pointed out, this feels a bit like a spiritual successor to Kate’s commercial shoot sketch from the previous season’s Will Ferrell episode that I reviewed.
— I think this is the type of sketch many would expect me to hate, with it mostly focusing on late season Kate sucking up the energy. But I can excuse it in a sketch like this, where the writing and performances feel far more toned down and—dare I say it— slice of life than we usually get on the modern show. Even Kate, for all her banging around, isn’t doing any big mug eyes or knowing smiles to sell the material.
— A laugh from Kate just tossing dishes into the dishwasher indiscriminately. This sketch is mining solid humor from the aggressive ways Kate can be passive-aggressive, like listening to “You’re So Vain” with her headphones on (“but you’re playing it from the speaker”). 
— This is starting to slip into a more typical Kate performance as she gets into more of a meltdown, which is a shame because the lines are still good (“Last year on my birthday we all watched Deadpool”).
— Even for SNL, a pretty weak ending. 
— Against all odds, I actually enjoyed a late season Kate sketch of her being whacky and everyone reacting to her. This isn’t one for the record books or anything, but it was a fine, quieter (even with all the clanging dishes and such) little character piece that didn’t feel the need to stuff the script with tangential details or some song or something. This is the type of thing the show loves to trot out these days, and it could definitely stand to keep more of them in the tone of this one.
STARS: ***½

PROUD PARENTS
(CRR)’s parents bewail his decision to drop pre-med for creative writing

— Yesss, this is one of my favorite Ego sketches ever (which is saying something)! 
— I mentioned earlier how leaning into that more lived-in perspective allows the show to do racial humor that feels more natural than it has in the past, and this is a perfect example of that. Ego, who co-wrote this with Dan Bulla, is of Nigerian heritage, much like the woman she’s playing here. And, as we’ll see in a couple of episodes (hi Elon! Can’t wait for you to stop on by!) Ego’s real mother does have an accent similar to the one used here and is a doctor. Not only does all of this obviously inform the material, but you also can see how much more at ease Ego is here than, say, Ellen Cleghorne being forced to talk bad jive for a Kim Wayans impression.
— A directing mishap, when Ego and Daniel are supposed to be talking and the camera stays on Kate, Beck and Andrew, and then cuts to Kenan and Aidy before finally cutting to where it was supposed to be. I’ll have a bit more to say on the direction later on in this review…
— I will say though I remember some fans saying that direction mishap ruined this sketch for them, which seems like a bit of an overreaction to something that happens before they even get out the main premise of the sketch.
— A great reveal of Chris wanting to change his major from medicine to creative writing, and Daniel and Ego reacting in horror. This stereotype of immigrant parents is one that’s been explored comedically countless times, and yet I can’t think of a time before it’s been done on the show fully from an inside perspective.
— Once this sketch gets going it’s pretty much non-stop laughs, both from the strong, committed performances from Ego and Daniel (I love the way Ego goes “Okay, Mr. Linda Pine”) and some genuinely killer one liners (“yes, if there’s anything the pandemic taught us it’s that the world needs more poets”).
— I like the twist that Chris really shouldn’t be a writer. The little moment of him getting up, pulling out his piece of paper, delivering one of the dumbest lines imaginable (“My emotions are as blue as blue paint”), looking like he’s about to continue and then just confidently sitting back down is one of my favorite things Chris has ever done on the show. Classic Kenan delivery on the following line too (“Ya know, ain’t nothin’ wrong with being a doctor”).
— Great callback to end this on with Daniel and Ego crushing their glasses in their hands in frustration and calling out for a poet to help them with their wounds. 
— Although the direction was, as is common for a lot of Don Roy King years, a bit wonky and staid (just move those cue cards over a little, buddy), the writing and performances on this piece are so on point that it pushes into classic status. Possibly my favorite sketch of the season. 
STARS: *****

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Pay Your Way In Pain”

Anthony: As much as I loved Jack White coming in on short notice and just owning the place, these are probably my favorite performances of the season. I’m a bit biased as a huge fan of Miss Clark, but the energy her and her backup singers bring to these is just electric. 
Blue: Right from the start, St. Vincent cuts a formidable, fashionable figure with her classy green jumpsuit, sly expression, and confident stance.
— I was hoping we’d get to see St. Vincent play guitar on this song, but her movements are fun enough to watch.
— That thick synth sound is great. Feel like the backing vocalists could be higher in the mix, though.
— I love how St. Vincent and her backing vocalists are swaying in time together. Nice subtle choreography.
— Cool call and response between St. Vincent and her backing vocalists.
— That’s an intriguing mic that St. Vincent is using.
— “I wanna be loooOOOOOVED!” St. Vincent hit that high note with as much passion as she does on the record, while staying perfectly in tune.
— Oh hell yeah, now St. Vincent is playing a guitar turned on its side WITH HER MICROPHONE. I’ve never seen any musician do that before.
— Despite me lavishing praise on her previous high notes… I don’t believe that last note was sung fully live.
STARS: ****

WEEKEND UPDATE
Starkie sisters present Easter meats from animals that deserved to die

Guy Who Just Bought A Boat gives obnoxious post-quarantine dating tips

(MID) rejects gold-digger label despite having married 106 year-old (HEG)

— A lot of jokes from Jost about the Matt Gaetz scandal to start off. As is typical for both him as a writer and modern SNL in general, he finds a much stronger balance with the material on Update than in the open.
— Jost would go pretty hard on the Gaetz references over the next few episodes. I’m cool with the show continuing to take a total creep to task, though it does feel a bit like one of those free space edgy jokes Carson was talking about yesterday. 
— A fun self-deprecating joke with Jost saying Gaetz looks like a “caricature artist’s drawing of me”. 
— Another strong Gaetz bit with Jost mocking the hypocrisy of QAnon followers not believing these allegations.
— Ugh at the return of the meat vendors Kate and Aidy play. The first time they came out on Update, in Season 44’s Mulaney episode, was a ton of fun, as you saw the bit completely devolve as Kate and Aidy couldn’t conceal their disgust over how bad the meat they had used for the bit smelled. Bringing it back in next season’s Kristen Stewart episode, with the horrible smelling meat now an intentional part of the game, was already as good a sign of the follies of trying to reproduce spontaneity, a classic fixture at SNL, as you could ask for. To bring it back again is just ridiculous, and another testament to how indulgent the show will let this pair get. 
— Bringing this back is one of those foolhardy propositions like having Tim Kazurinsky act opposite a live monkey for several sketches. In that case, they’d eventually have to sedate the monkey and remove its teeth. Here, Aidy and Kate opt for the more humane option of doing that to the comedy itself. 
— Since they know what’s in store for them, Aidy and Kate start to break before they even bring the food out. Once again, this just robs us of any fun spontaneity that might cause this thing to work.
— The actual conceit of the appearance itself is the same as the other two as well, that Kate and Aidy are selling meat from animals that ‘deserved to die’, so we truly are just watching a rinse-and-repeat version of what we’ve already seen. I went back and watched the first installment, and the examples of what the animals were doing were funnier too. It’s much funnier to imagine a farm animal “holding its owner at gunpoint” than “contributing to a toxic work environment”. 
— I did like Aidy ad-libbing, after a vial of blood was weirdly included on the platter, “I don’t know, maybe you’d drink this or something.”
— Only four jokes in between our first two correspondents, but they all hit, especially Jost’s Johnson and Johnson line.
— Hey, it’s Guy Who Just Bought a Boat! Not my favorite character but love seeing a chance for Alex to get all goofy on Update. As I mentioned last season in my Ferrell review, this is always a fun performance from Alex, and I mostly enjoy the dirty wordplay, though come up more mixed on the running gag of Alex insisting he’s bad at sex and has a small penis.
— Inevitable that our first post 2020 GWJBAB appearance has him referencing his “Johnson and Johnson”.
— “I treat COVID tests like I treat foreplay: 15 seconds on each side.” (Jost: “Each side?!”)
— I always enjoy Colin’s flat-out disgust for GWJBAB (like in the quote above) and think it’s something they should lean into even harder with this character.
— The standard stuff from GWJBAB. Nothing too memorable, but I got some chuckles out of it, and it’s always nice to see Alex get some time to shine.
— Groaner joke from Che about a woman taking nude selfies on a rock, making it hard. I see how Che could sell that more than anyone else, but it was still too cheesy to work. His next joke, about combining National Peanut Butter Day with National Ferret Day with “one very dangerous trick” did give me a guilty laugh however, and is another type of joke only Che could sell as well as he could, only this time it actually landed.
— Mikey and Heidi have come out as a couple where Mikey is the 26 year old trophy husband to Heidi’s 106 year old billionaire. They’re both performing the material well, with Mikey tapping into some great barely hidden frustration while Heidi gets some laughs out of doddering about, but there isn’t much on the page here. I did chuckle at Heidi’s maiden name being “ExxonMobil”, but this is mostly a bunch of cliché old people jokes.
— It’s revealed Mikey’s character has to have sex with Heidi’s character often despite her age, which could be seen as a comeuppance for him, but it also still relies on the audience laughing at how disgusting it would be to have sex with an old lady, so it doesn’t really give Heidi the victory. 
— Jost and Che were in fine, if not rare, form tonight, but the correspondents had an air of familiarity that ultimately let them down. Even GWJBAB, while fun, gave one of his less memorable appearances. That’s the worst thing about this Update, it was just rather forgettable. It never dragged particularly much; even Kate and Aidy, for how absurdly indulgent it is to bring back that bit, brought some level of energy to it that made it easier to watch than their worst stuff. If I could break these Updates down more when I grade them, I’d probably give Kate & Aidy a 2, Mikey and Heidi a 2.5, GWJBAB a 3, and Jost & Che a 3.5. Put that all together, and I suppose it just barely scrapes by on the passing side of things.
STARS: ***

FRAT TRIP
fraternity brothers get stoked about inviting their moms to weekend bash

 — Gotta love Lil Baby Dismukes in his bonnet.
— Fun energy from Bowen as the guy who’s a little too eager to try cocaine. 
— Speaking of fun energies, the premise of a frat guy insisting everyone bring their moms along on a weekend getaway is a bit creaky, but Daniel totally sells it with his goofball energy here. I know I mentioned some minor issues with him in the vaccine sketch, but he’s really just crushed it in every role since. One of the big positives of this otherwise very shaky season is the amount of first-time hosts who come in and feel totally at ease with the show. While I can’t quite say Daniel is on the top tier of those first timers—Burr and Keegan truly deserve to become perennials—he’s in the next category with Chalamet, King, Page (I didn’t like either of their episode’s but still came away very impressed with them as hosts) and Taylor-Joy as hosts who can come back anytime and I won’t be too upset. 
— Daniel is a bit stumbly here, and throughout the night, but that honestly isn’t something I mind too much from a host if I can engage with the rest of the performance.
— I like the gradual progression of all the guys accepting that their moms are coming. I could do with Mikey doing less of his Mikey Day thing though (“This absurd premise you’re pitching is absurd!”
— Pete seems to be sleepwalking through his couple lines here. He got a lot of praise for this season, and he did put in a lot of good work, but you also get episodes like this were he pops up twice, once to wear a suit and say he’s Matt Gaetz and a second time as a bit player in a sketch where he looks like he just wants to be done already. 
— More really fun energy from Bowen, getting way too into the idea of the guys renting a pontoon boat. This type of sketch shows how effective Bowen can be when you pepper him in in smaller doses.
— Nice to see Punkie included with the Forever Girls as the moms, though of course they get all the laugh lines. Still, they feel fun in their little scene at the end here. Although the very end of the sketch falls a bit flat, because this is SNL and that’s just standard practice.
— A very silly sketch, written by Dan Licata and Streeter Seidell, two writers I can enjoy but can also have major issues with. I think this brought some of that fun goofy sensibility you can get from Licata but also got weighed down a bit by Seidell’s tendency to walk the audience through his scenes, usually with Mikey as a vessel. Still, a fun sketch overall, with Bowen and Daniel especially putting in work to sell the material.
STARS: ***½   

DOG PARK
at a dog park, (EGN) & (AND) object to the pooch voice imputed by (host)

— A dog being used in a sketch and the whole joke doesn’t just center on “OMG, how crazy that we’re doing a sketch with a dog”? I will not allow it!
— Although it ends up being part of the premise, it’s nice hearing Daniel use his natural British accent in sketches. I don’t need British hosts having to do American accents in every sketch as much the show thinks I do, especially when they don’t sound particularly natural (*cough* see next episode’s host *cough*). 
— Ego is a lot of fun when we get to the turn of her being insulted by the voice Daniel puts when impersonating her dog. She hits a line like “you made him sound like a damn fool” with a sense of verve few others could. 
— “When you do Katt Williams, you make him British too?” “I don’t do Katt Williams.” “Okay, well now that’s two things I hate about your ass.”
— Love the blunt switch in tones when Dismukes first interaction with Daniel after his bubbly back and forth with Ego. He’s had a number of supporting bits this season but this is one of his first big live roles and he’s a ton of fun here. You can see why the show would start relying on him more and more next season. His final confrontation with Daniel is especially great.
— Another sketch tonight that feels more restrained than what we typically get on the show these days. This is written by Stephen Castillo, and there’s a quiet absurdity throughout this that kind of makes it feel like his take on a slice of life sketch. 
STARS: ****

MUSICAL PERFORMANCES
musical guest performs “The Meeting Of The Sun”

Blue: St. Vincent’s seated position with that big fluffy coat reminds me of a monarch on their throne. Good to see her with her guitar, too.
— Very cool riff on keys during the first verse. I wish it lasted longer.
— The backing vocalists sound phenomenal on this song.
— I wish we could get a better glimpse of the musician playing sitar guitar. Would love to see St. Vincent play that part herself
— The lyrics to this song, which reference who I assume to be St. Vincent’s heroes- Joni Mitchell, Marilyn Monroe, Tori Amos, Nina Simone- always give me chills. 
— Shame I can’t hear St. Vincent’s guitar very well.
— Although none of the musicians are given much of a chance to show off here, their technical prowess is still impressing me. They sound great together and I can imagine they have great offstage synergy.
— Awesome psychedelic guitar solo from St. Vincent.
— I like how everything drops out at this point except for St. Vincent and her guitar. It gives this section a more mournful flavor than the album version.
— It took me until now to notice it, but man, I love that bassline.
— “Proud Nina got subpoenaed singing Mississippi, good goddamn…” I tear up every time I hear that line, thanks to the strong entrance of the backing vocalists, and this time is no different. 
— The vocalists’ “ooh’s” are another change from the recorded version, one that adds a lot to the song.
— Very strong ending with the vocalists surrounding St. Vincent and singing while she whips out a laid-back guitar solo. 
STARS: ****

HALF BROTHER
(host) & (CES) jazz up (KET)’s birthday with an upright bass & poetry

— Ah, James, you’ve returned. I see you’re making a habit of coming back for the episodes I review. …How wonderful.
— Another direction mishap tonight, this one far more detrimental to the sketch (not that I’d be grading this any higher without said mishap). Before we get to the big reveal of a sketch, that Cecily and Daniel have brought a big upright bass (oh man, what a reveal!!) the camera cuts to a wide shot of the room, showing both the bass and a peak of boom mic (third screencap, in the drapes above Aidy), and spoiling the joke. You can see Kenan and Aidy sort of react to this in the fourth screencap. This is just another example of the flat and sometimes outright inept we’d get pretty often in the later King years. Thankfully, this is his final season as the show’s main director. 
— Not to once again get too into the nitty gritty of the Ebersol years in this review, but I remember a story about the script editor in those years getting the first Whiners scripts and not understanding what the joke was supposed to be. You see, without the silly voice, there’s no real joke there. But if you do the silly voice, and hit the rhythms of a sketch, you might just convince the crowd what they just saw was comedy. Just something that came to mind watching this.
— There’s a runner about Cecily and Daniel getting a divorce, but it isn’t up to much. This sketch is just an excuse for Cecily and Daniel to do silly scat noises that are leaving me stone faced. 
— The part where Cecily and Daniel talk Aidy into asking for an encore was almost something.
— The inclusion of Beck as a perverted friend of theirs is also just resulting in nothing but a bunch of eye rolls from me.
— Now Cecily and Daniel have left the room to have make up sex, Needler style. I can’t get such pleasures from this sketch, so it can just go fuck itself instead. 
STARS: *

GOODNIGHTS

— Heidi and Bowen seem to be wearing matching Sonic shirts here, which is both cute and totally dope. Same can be said for Punkie wearing a shirt that says “Funkie Punkie”. 
— Interesting choice for Daniel to use Jerry Springer’s sign off.

CUT FOR TIME: THE HERO
marine captain (host) briefs a group of soldiers (CHR, KET, ALM) on an urgent rescue mission

— Unlike the live sketches, we actually get some strong direction in this tape, mirroring the feel of these Vietnam flicks nicely.
— Weird to see Pete in a totally silent background role here that could have been played by any extra. He does dance a bit at the beginning, but you can’t even see his face or make out that it’s him while he’s doing it (guess even the more professionally-directed sketches this episode have their faulty moments.) 
— This is one of many Chris sketches over the years that really isn’t up to much at all on paper, but that he manages to sell through sheer will of performance. Chris has these over confident dumb guy roles down to a science, and while it can often feel tired, its managed to be pretty durable in filmed pieces such as this.
— Enjoyed Chris’s aggravated reaction to finding out they aren’t even entirely sure where the soldier he’s been sent on a death mission to recover is being held.
— Good ending with Chris grazing himself in the leg off camera to avoid a much worse fate on the mission he accidentally signed himself up for. 
— Again, not up to much, but Chris made this fun enough.
STARS: ***½

CUT FOR TIME: SALT BAE
a group of friends (host, CES, MID, EGN) enjoy an interesting dinner with Salt Bae (BEB) as their server

— Written by Fran Gillespie and Sudi Green, and based on an idea apparently pitched by Daniel. Daniel pitching sketches and helping to write his monologue makes me think he was a very involved host, which is another reason I’d be happy to see him return. 
— Based on the guy from the famous Salt Bae meme. From what I can tell his restaurant seems to be food of mixed quality, and that the real reason to go is to see the celebrities hanging out and Salt Bae do his Salt Bae thing, if either of those sound appealing to you for whatever reason.
— Beck is a decently fun presence as Salt Bae (yes I’ve decided that’s his proper name), though the main joke of him being aggressively sexual with how he treats the female diners isn’t doing much for me. Mikey getting into it and Daniel being the straight man makes it feel a little less tired than if it were the reverse at least, since I’ve seen Mikey do enough exasperated straight man roles for a few lifetimes.
— I like when Daniel tries to order a drink and Beck just slams the meat on the table and spins away without responding to him.
— Mikey: “I like to watch.” And Mikey Day’s cuck fascination continues. 
— Okay I hate to admit it but Beck shoving the gold coated meat down Mikeys’ throat made your boy laugh. I especially loved his initial refusal of “no, I’m not beautiful like them.”
— Ha, Alex’s David Beckham impression sounds like Ringo sucked a tank of helium. 
— The ending is a solid capper, even if it won’t go in the hall of SNL’s great blood spurting bits. 
— I’ve arguably overused the word energy in this review, but that’s what this sketch had enough of to make up for a kinda wonky premise. This isn’t anything special, but the energy was high and there were a couple solid laughs.
STARS: ***½

CUT FOR TIME: BEANIE BABIES
employee (host) pitches bios for Beanie Baby tags to his colleagues (AIB, BOY)

— Written by Bowen and Celeste Yim along with SNL great Julio Torres. Julio is one of the most original minds to ever come through the halls of 8H, so there’s a certain, probably unfair, standard a piece with his involvement is held to. I think that made me a little harsh to this sketch when I first saw it (though I still liked it fine) so I’m going into this with the mindset that he probably just came back to have some fun writing a sketch with two writers he liked, and isn’t trying to add to his SNL resume in some grand way. 
— We’ve seen this type of premise before (“Sara Lee”, another piece Julio worked on, comes to mind) but there’s a specificity in the writing of the blurbs here that makes it really hit. There’s a specific game here to the weird insecurities each Baby has, it’s not just each of the Babies doing various odd or offensive things.
— Love the detail of Kaluuya including the Babies’ birthdays at the end of each of their upsetting blurbs, especially when one recounts a sad sexual encounter and ends it with “my birthday was that day”.
— At one point Kaluuya says ‘modom’ where the blurb says ‘router’, guessing this was a last minute change they forgot to include on the cue cards. 
— The sketch doesn’t really do anything to justify why Aidy & Bowen let Daniel keep going, which they sort of lampshade by having Aidy go “I know the next one will be really good” after a particularly offensive one. 
— Nice easter egg with one of the Babies being named Julio. 
— Another great add-on to the birthday runner with one of the Babies getting depressed after remembering they’re turning 50.
— Another day, another sketch I gotta tell ya has a weak ending. Also Aidy’s performance started to get real loose there as we were wrapping up.
— Matt mentions this was written for Dan Levy’s episode, and that it would have worked even better with him in the role. And yea, I’d have to agree. (also this got cut over that fucking wedding sketch? My God.) 
— Not a classic by any means, but there was a specificity in the lines here and it had enough of an absurdist bent that it ended up being a real fun piece. This could have gone further with how sad and depraved the babies got, and it needed a tighter ending, but it definitely earned its place in the live show. I actually think Salt Bae would have slotted in nicely in the lead spot over Will You Take It since it has such a crazy energy to it, and this would have slotted in well at that final spot, since it has some true ten-to-one absurdity layered in there. 
STARS: ****

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— An extremely solid episode, the first one from this season I enjoyed overall since Chalamet. It both starts and ends on a weak note, but in between is a lot of really solid, character based material. We also get a nice mix of tones, with some topical humor, some more quiet and relatable stuff, and some slightly more absurd material. 
— Although he remained a bit stumbly throughout, Daniel always seemed locked in with his performances and ready to give whatever energy the show needed of him. He especially seemed at ease in the monologue, letting loose with the crowd, and in Proud Parents, getting to really sink his teeth into a good character role. If he returns, and as I’ve said I’d be happy to see that, those are the types of modes I want the show to lean into further with him.

PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


RATED SEGMENTS FROM BEST TO WORST
Proud Parents
Viral Apology Video
Dog Park
(CFT: Beanie Babies) 
Monologue
Frat Trip
Scattergories
(CFT: The Hero)
(CFT: Salt Bae)
Weekend Update 
Will You Take It?
Oops, You Did It Again
Half Brother

TOMORROW
After an uncharacteristically strong outing, Season 46 is back to the land of meh, as the illustrious John takes a look at Carey Mulligan’s turn as host

February 20, 2021 – Regé-Jean Page/Bad Bunny (S46 E13)

by John

OOPS, YOU DID IT AGAIN
Britney Spears (CLF) offers a forum for apologies

— Written by Colin Jost, Josh Patten, Kent Sublette. 
— Chloe reprises the Britney impression she debuted in the third At Home episode. 
— The most interesting part of this sketch happens early on, when Britney shades Justin Timberlake for his Notes app apology—“a lame apology, 20 years late.” Considering how up Justin’s ass SNL was for too many years, I’m surprised this got through. I guess he doesn’t exactly have anything to offer them these days. 
— Aidy Cruz. Yippee…
— This is one of the more fitting uses of Aidy Cruz, due to the scandal at the time, but doesn’t do very much to change how smarmy and tedious these appearances are— SNL political coverage at its worst. 
— Aidy’s awkward dancing as Cruz is probably the best thing she did in the role. They should have focused on that physicality more often.
— The debut of Pete’s Andrew Cuomo impression.
— At the time I wasn’t even sure SNL would say much of anything about him, aside from some Update jokes, given his power, power which helped them get back on the air. That and their general lack of interest in NY politics over the previous decade, aside from gassed out jokes about Bloomberg.
— There was inevitable fan debate over whether or not this was a good impression, or just good if you go along with the low expectations for Pete. The show has had far worse political impressions than Pete’s Cuomo which have gotten a pass just because of how popular the cast member is (including multiple people in this cast, one of them sharing a seat with him). To me, even taking that into account, this is a lively impression that gives a somewhat flat sketch some momentum, and never really gets overused (the four appearances he goes on to make are misleading if you just see them on a list, as only a few of them contain substantive roles). 
— Cecily isn’t getting Gina Carano’s voice right, although that doesn’t really matter. What matters more is there was no real need for this segment, particularly since the murky writing, as well as the choice to minimize her comments. just led to confusion over how SNL felt about her behavior and meant we were fully taken out of the moment to focus on the show itself…never a good thing.
 — We wind this down with a near-fatal case of senioritis, as Aidy just decides to throw the sketch away entirely by cracking up, with Cecily barely able to stop herself from joining her. A lovely thing to do to a still-new cast member getting one of her first showcases.
— Last season, when Britney was even more in the news than she was at this time, there was some fan discussion over why SNL didn’t do more with Chloe’s impression (aside from one more forgettable installment of this, and a walk-on in a godawful season 47 cold open, along with another small cut role in a season 48 cold open). I have no real answer for why, only my speculation: I think Chloe is a very calculated performer, aware enough to know too much of this impression would lead to a great deal of backlash from Britney fans, backlash that I doubt Chloe, who has smartly traded off her SNL work for media coverage and increasing parts in films, would want to deal with. And, to be honest, I don’t think we lost much by only seeing this impression a few more times. 
— Season 46 had enough outright terrible to mostly lifeless cold opens that on first watch I had a higher opinion of this one than most of the others. I still do. I also appreciate that this is slightly different in structure than most of the cold opens which surround it. However, even with the brief saving grace of Pete’s spark as Cuomo, that still isn’t good enough for a rating which goes above average. 
STARS: ***

MONOLOGUE
host’s Bridgerton role leads AIB, EGN, CLF to throw themselves at him

— Written by Fran Gillespie and Sudi Green.
— Regé-Jean Page is something of a rarity for modern SNL hosts, in that he blew up out of nowhere thanks to Bridgerton and then was asked to host not too long afterward (the show only premiered a few months before this episode). I’m not sure how much of that choice is based on a more limited host pool at this time, or just that a season whose quieter audiences led to some fan and cast discontent knew it needed a more responsive crowd, even just for one night. 
— There was, unsurprisingly I suppose, some backlash over just how raucous the crowd ended up being in this episode. It doesn’t bother me in cases like this, where the response feels natural, rather than an obviously prompted applause break because Téa Leoni wanders into a 10-minute cold open about Trump soiling his Depends.
— Regé seems very at ease from his first moments, which is apparently down to some advice he got from friend (and very good one-time host) Sterling K. Brown.
— Such heavy emphasis on a male host’s sex appeal being remarked on by female cast members inevitably ends with, “What if this was a woman and they were a man?” discourse. I do get the criticism, although I feel like these types of pieces aren’t done that often by the show in the last few years. 
— Chloe is well-cast for Bridgerton cosplay. Some remarked on her resemblance to his leading lady, which will come in handy later tonight.
— Aidy blowing way too hard when he asks her to make a wish is amusing.
— The horned-up section goes on for too long, but overall this is a passable enough monologue.
STARS: ***

ACTORS SPOTLIGHT
adulation-seeking Ice Cube (KET) pretends to be British

— Written by Jasmine Pierce and Bryan Tucker. 
— I totally forgot about this sketch.
— Funny to see Chris Redd playing Daniel Kaluuya, who would go on to host in a few months.
— Not the first time Kenan played Ice Cube this season, although the impression originally debuted in season 35. It was the earlier season 46 appearance that the man himself wasn’t thrilled with.
— The whole controversy over black British actors taking the roles of black American historical figures is not something I expected to see SNL tackle, but choosing to focus on Ice Cube faking a British accent means you don’t get a great deal of exploration of the theme—for better or worse.
— Kenan’s delivery when Ice Cube says his name in the UK would be “Coldy Squares” cracks me up.
— Chris’ “real” British accent not being that much better than Kenan’s deliberately terrible one makes this more fun, intentionally or not. If only Mikey and his wandering British accent could have made an appearance…
— Ego is doing fine work as the straight woman, as she so often thanklessly does. 
— Kind of a non-ending with Hugh Grant recognizing “Coldy Squares.” I feel like more could have been done here, but it’s always nice to see Alex, and better to end before all the life in a mostly good-naturedly goofy concept is gone. 
STARS: ***½ 

LOCO
homebound by the pandemic, (EGN) & (PED) are starting to lose it

— Written by Pete Davidson, Ego Nwodim, Gary Richardson, Will Stephen.
— Ego Nwodim raps!
— Inevitably, big cheers for Regé even though he just has a small (albeit clever) part.
— Pete is much easier to take in these raps when he is in a supporting role.
— A rap about Tenet. The movie that was going to save the cinema experience…
— Bad Bunny pops up for his first cameo tonight, with bars (“mentally mentally mentally ill”) that are about as direct as these let’s-talk-about-how-miserable-your-life-is pieces ever get. 
— This is just another version of material we got so many times on SNL at this point, from the laser focus on people who stayed in during the pandemic to Pete Pete-ing, but this one still works for me. A big reason is seeing Ego in the central role, but there have been others with her I haven’t cared for, so I’m just going to put it down to many factors—a good beat, a crisp running time, and the portions doled out to Ego, Pete, and Bad Bunny each adding different tones. Overall, one of the hip-hop pre-tapes of recent years that I have more of a soft spot for than I possibly should.
STARS: ***½

DRIVER’S LICENSE
guys playing pool have an emotional appreciation of “Drivers License”

— Written by Gillespie and Green.
— This sketch is based on the Olivia Rodrigo/Joshua Bassett/Sabrina Carpenter triangle and Rodrigo’s song about said triangle. If you are reading this, you either already know all the details, or you absolutely do not give a damn. 
— At the time this aired, I was surprised to see such a large cast in a sketch, especially not a “turn”-based sketch like a town hall meeting. Still feels rare now.
— The audience’s cheers and laughter get in the way of the setup of the sketch, although they don’t seem to be affecting the performances.
— I know it’s not hugely original, but I do like the concept of average guys (or SNL 2021’s version of them, anyway) being moved by a teenage girl’s romantic ballad. 
— Yet another drag role for Kate, but one of her better turns in male garb for me, as she mostly just fits into the group. 
— Mikey is getting the most dramatic-comedic work here, and is selling it well. 
— I remember some people being upset about the line where Mikey’s character compares Carpenter to the “bastard” who took his lady…another bizarre mini-controversy only this show can offer.
— Nice, creative (for modern SNL) shot of Mikey on the pool table.
— I’m glad that this keeps to a brisk path and doesn’t try too hard to be overly loud, or turn into camp, bad gay jokes, and the usual.
— This sketch, along with another on the way, got some fan backlash for pandering and chasing a demographic who have no real use for the show. There are certainly moments which can come across that way, but I feel like this is a decent, if not great ensemble piece which manages to acknowledge a budding moment in pop without being too desperate. I’d like to have seen just a little more breathing room and a much quieter audience, but it’s not a big deal.
— This is no longer available on Youtube, for obvious reasons, but I promise it did go viral at the time, as was presumably the intent. It also led to Rodrigo performing later in the season, so a win for everyone involved. 
STARS: ***

MR. CHICKEN LEGS PAGEANT
scrawny gams of (MID), (AND), (PED) celebrated

— Written by Mikey Day, Dan Licata and Streeter Seidell.
— Many of these pageant sketches involved Anna Drezen, so I was surprised she wasn’t on this one, but the tone does feel different. 
— Right off the bat, Cecily, while giving a very intense performance, feels extremely out of place in the sketch. This would be the case any number of times in her last few seasons (still surreal to type that final part out…).
— Chloe’s co-host role also feels distracting. Regé would have been fine as a solo host.
— Mikey rarely fails to entertain me in batshit roles. His legs reveal as he shriek-bellows, “I become…AN EIGHTH-GRADE GIRL!!!!” is one of my favorite moments he’s ever had on SNL.
— Andrew shouting, “DON’T BELIEVE ME, JUST WATCH!!!” is, for whatever reason, burned into my brain whenever I think of his tenure on the show, or of seminal SNL moments of the last 3-4 years. 
— I’m curious as to what decisions were made for which men should be in this sketch. As this is not the last time we’ll be seeing Andrew give a gam show tonight, I’m amused at the thought of him saying, “I’ll do it! I’ll show off my legs, dammit!”
— You just knew Pete would be in this one…
— Great visual image of Pete as Jack Skellington. He almost breaks at one point, but I don’t care as it’s all genuinely fun anyway.
— No idea why we needed the mixup over Olive Oyl being a prostitute. Maybe that was a Licata addition.
— A cute bit with Aidy as a judge near the end…this is the part which feels closest to Drezen.
— This doesn’t really work as a sketch, due to poor/overpacked construction, but the parts I like, I absolutely love, more than a number of pieces I know are technically better. Just plain goofy fun, which is something this era of the show tends to be better at than other genres.
STARS: ***½

THE JOB INTERVIEW
(host) has an absurd meeting with an ad exec (BEB)

— Written by Colin Jost.
— This is a role utterly suited to Beck, between his skillful wordplay and ability to navigate smarm and sincerity, and also just what a natural he was in pre-tapes.
— There are lots of little touches of craziness in here which could feel tryhard, with rapidfire lines that work for me, even when I know they’re a bit cheap (like the “4D Doritos” with the blurred penis photo — “the fourth D is a D”, or a Maxwell House logo with Ghislaine Maxwell).
— Due to Jost avoiding the easier route of Regé’s character just being a straight man, this is the first real chance at comedy he has in this episode. He does a good job with some goofy imagery—my favorite is probably the drawing of a Chevy Bolt running over Usain Bolt.
— As this goes on, you also get to see how much charisma Regé brings to the part. 
— Good use of Bowen as the hapless assistant. 
— I like the anticipation of guns being drawn turning into them hitting each other with pool noodles. 
— Not a big fan of the ending, although Bowen’s character saying Regé’s character took his hat is cute, and I laughed at boss Beck demanding to get “Kevin Netflix” on the phone.
— Jost and Celeste Yim wrote a variation of this pre-tape for the Owen Wilson episode (remember when we got to see cut sketches?).
— This was another fairly divisive piece, but I tend to lean more toward the strongly positive side, even if I can’t quite give it the full five stars. One of Jost’s stronger sketches of recent times.
STARS: ****½

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest & Rosalía [real] perform “La Noche De Anoche”

Blue: Featured artist Rosalía opens this song with her beautiful voice. Then we get to Bad Bunny, and his voice is… all right.
— Has an SNL musical guest ever performed a song entirely in a language other than English, like Bad Bunny and Rosalía are doing here? I’d be surprised if this was the first instance of it.
— Rosalía’s lovestruck delivery of “Dime, papi” with a side glance to the camera sure got a reaction from the audience, but I couldn’t help but crack up a little.
— Rosalía and Bad Bunny’s flirty choreography is going back and forth between working for me, and feeling forced. I kind of wish there was more to it.
— I continue to enjoy Rosalía’s voice a lot more than Bad Bunny’s. She sounds lovely.
— Also continuing to feel disappointed that there isn’t more to the performance. Bad Bunny and Rosalía have undeniable chemistry, but chemistry alone doesn’t make this song interesting to me.
— Pretty adorable ending, where Rosalía and Bad Bunny hug, break apart, and then go back in for another hug, as if they can’t keep their hands off each other. Though I suspect they’re playing up their intimacy for the sake of the performance, they definitely appear to be good friends at least.
STARS: **½

WEEKEND UPDATE
spending Valentine’s Day with his mom convinced PED he needs to move out

Freddy Krueger aesthetic overshadows mutual aid worker’s (HEG) message

— So many Ted Cruz jokes…
— The highlight of all this is when Che reacts to one of the people in the audience who got the Michael Irvin joke. 
— It’s Pete time. 
— Written by Pete and Dave Sirus.
— Now that he’s gone, it’s even stranger looking back at how many of Pete’s appearances were just life updates with a few one-liners and jabs at Colin thrown in. 
— He does get an especially cutting line in when comparing his relationship with his mother to SNL: “No matter what I do, I’m never asked to leave…also, they’re both really old, and noticeably fatigued.”
— With that said, the joke was funnier before he half-heartedly hung on for one more season…
— Pete’s barbs about the type of area Colin lives in (including “Pepperidge Farms”) make me laugh.
— This is full of comments that aged in odd ways, from going on about being single (with his highest-profile relationship yet to come), to roasting Colin for living in a place with more boats than people.
— Pete closes this out by asking viewers to watch Kenan, which worked well enough to at least get the show to a second season. No one’s power is limitless…
— This is one of Pete’s stronger Update appearances, both in good spirits and with some genuinely good jokes. 
— Weird seeing a Kim and Kanye joke so soon after Pete’s appearance.
— There aren’t many standout Che or Jost gags here; they also don’t seem to do much for the crowd. 
— One Che joke did get a whole other response, which the show ignored…probably for the best. 
— Heidi returns to the desk, in a piece co-written with Yim.
— Jessie Raunch? Somewhere, James Anderson is smiling…
— This is a tricky piece, because it’s clear the show does not have a great deal of trust in the audience to get the joke—Che has to point out she’s dressed like Freddy Krueger, and when she says she wants to be a part of kids’ dreams, Che has to point out Freddy Krueger again. The lack of faith makes me surprised this got through at all.
— I do like Heidi’s very natural performance, where she even manages to believably play someone who has never been on Update before. 
— As this gets more and more blatant with Freddy references, the audience starts to respond, particularly when she starts waving the Freddy glove a little too close to her face. 
— A slightly lazy, puzzling choice to end with her wearing a Jason mask. 
— I’m a little warmer on this Heidi piece than I was at the time, as she was still in the middle of what turned out to be her most creative season, one where she felt confident in giving more layered performances.  In contrast to the somewhat desperate (if at times entertaining) performances she’s had on Update and the show as a whole in the current season, I appreciate this moment all the more. 
STARS: *** (for the commentaries)

SONGS OF THE SEA
whalers’ shanties describe a miserable marine existence

— Written by Seidell, Drezen and Alison Gates. 
— This is the other piece of the night which received criticism for pandering to a youth demo, but other than the pointless tiktok tag at the start, I don’t see any of that in the actual sketch. 
— Another heavy male ensemble piece, rare for this point in the show, let alone twice in one night.
— Andrew, and his short pants, appear in a Mulaney-reacting role which at the time I thought might become a norm for him, but peters off after this season. 
— Bad Bunny makes a live cameo to join his pre-taped appearance, although it’s difficult to just call this a cameo as he has a fairly large comedic role (complete with cheers) he struggles through somewhat. At the time I wondered if this was testing the waters for a hosting stint, but that has yet to happen (he has not yet been back even as MG, although his duet partner Rosalía has).
— As per usual by this point, when Kate makes her appearance, she gets just as much applause as the host and cameo.
— Alex sells the line about a blanket in a barrel being his wife for all its worth, and then some.
— A sign of how horny some in the audience are for our host is when they go “whoo!” after he says he has sex with two jellyfish. 
— I want to like this sketch more than I do, due to the ensemble element and the sharp performances from Alex and Beck, among others.  I can say with truth in my heart that it’s certainly better than many other ship bound sketches over the years. However, the shift from singing to regular dialogue never fully works for me, the reaction part isn’t necessary, and I wish they’d had a theme more interesting than “lol these guys are idiots.” An actual ending might have helped too. 
STARS: **½ 

LET’S SAY GRACE
inviting Black neighbors to dinner leads to grace-saying one-upmanship

— Written by Ego, Richardson, and Tucker. 
— I’m not sure just what happened backstage, but Beck only gets to the set after the sketch has already started…and is noticeably out of breath in the early section of this.
— Soon after we hear a crash off-set. Jon Rudnitsky’s belated revenge for Space Pants, maybe…? 
— We’re quickly getting some very solid (if overly broad) performances here, from newer performers to those who can do these roles in their sleep. Regé also fits in well.
— There’s a certain school of thought about how much SNL has overused comparisons or conflicts between black and white characters in recent years. I can understand the criticism, but these moments are also among the few to give us slice-of-life perspectives, and usually involve some of the stronger writers at the show at the time they’re made. 
— I also remember a comment about Aidy’s mother character saying daughter Heidi is “post-pubescent,” and “busty,” is an example of the weirdness/crudity which is often a part of this era. I can see why the line might rankle. 
— The Aidy/Beck/Heidi/Andrew side of the divide doesn’t mesh quite as well as the side with Regé/Chris/Ego/Kenan/Punkie, but it’s interesting to see Heidi and Andrew together, believable as brother and sister. They wrote together before Andrew was in the cast, but since then have only sporadically appeared together, in pieces like the pimp walk sketch from Billie Eilish’s episode (one of those so-bad-it’s-good sketches for me, but not a big audience favorite).
— The escalation in the showing off between families is well-paced, even if I might have added just one more round between them before the finish.
— I adore the end of this sketch, with the vibrant praise singing and Beck’s character overtaken by the spirit enough to dust off some of the physical comedy skills that were a highlight of Beck’s early years in the cast. Seeing a positive, warm close rather than nihilism, hostility, or no ending at all is a real treat. 
— I was tempted to give this a full 5 stars, but the pacing isn’t quite there and the tone and performances aren’t quite enough. This is still a sketch I’m extremely fond of, one of my favorites of season 46, an example I often use when praising Gary Richardson’s contribution to SNL, and one of the first I think of when I remember Beck’s time in the cast. I wish we had sketches like these—oddly wholesome and character-driven, with some laughs peppered in—more often.
STARS: ****½ 

BRIDGERTON INTIMACY COORDINATOR
on the Bridgerton set, (MID) & (PED) are substitute intimacy coordinators

— Written by Seiday and Licata. Big night for Dan Licata! Maybe his biggest in his two-season tenure.
— The whoops start immediately once the Bridgerton credits appear. I’m surprised this is airing so late in the night. I wonder where it aired in dress. 
— Kate’s really been working out the accents tonight.
— Pete and Mikey appeared in a number of pieces together (most notably with Mikey as an angel in a cut-for-time Chad pretape), but this is the only time I can remember them as both playing broad characters.
— The running gag of the intimacy coordinators assuming this is an incestuous relationship makes me keep waiting for a Game of Thrones joke that never arrives.
— Another weird audience cheer moment at the suggestion of Chloe’s character being given a man’s nipples. 
— The loudest cheer of the episode when Regé and Chloe get on the bed.
— Chloe in another very straight role, as was often the case in this season. 
— Likely the first, and the last, time you’ll ever see Mikey and Pete assuming sex positions. 
— I don’t feel the Seiday cliches as much in this sketch, possibly because Licata has a stronger voice (you usually don’t have Seiday sketches with jokes about “the wrong hole”).
— It’s a bit of a change of pace seeing Kate thrown into this type of material. Yes, one of her most popular characters (also written by Seiday) went around talking about her “cooter and tooter,” but this is just more of an aggressive crassness.
— A very abrupt ending.
— I remembered this as being crazier and funnier. I suppose I was just surprised to see Mikey and Pete in these types or roles. Not especially bad, but nothing memorable. 
STARS: **

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Te Deseo Lo Mejor”

Blue: The guitar riff that opens this song reminds me a LOT of some 90’s (?) alt-rock song I’ve heard on the radio before. But I can’t figure out what song it reminds me of. This is going to drive me crazy.
— Bad Bunny seems to have been thrown off at the start of the performance, because he stifles a laugh, glances over his shoulder, and stops singing for a moment. It’s possible that he couldn’t hear the pre-recorded backing vocals, which come in at the time that he briefly stops singing.
— Bad Bunny briefly goes sharp when he sings “yo se que fui lo peor,” but he recovers quickly. 
— I’m impressed that Bad Bunny is belting the higher notes of the chorus so well in his seated position, with one leg folded, no less. 
— Seeing Bad Bunny displaying his WWE 24/7 Championship medal while singing a song about accepting a breakup is amusing me. The humility of the lyrics is at odds with the sentiment of the medal.
— I don’t speak Spanish, so I don’t know if Bad Bunny’s pronunciation of certain words is due to the language itself, or if it’s the way he sings. But I’m definitely noticing some interesting vowel sounds, particularly on the words “mi” and “feli,” which he pronounces with an “ooh” sound (as opposed to my assumption, when looking at the words, that they would be pronounced with an “ee” sound).
— At the end of the performance, Bad Bunny set his microphone down… and it made an audible clunking noise. Oops.
— It’s a shame, since I like Bad Bunny as a person, that his music doesn’t do much for me. These performances did little to elevate my opinion of the music, as both were pretty straightforward performances with him standing/sitting in place.
STARS: **

THE GROCERY RAP
maskless (KYM), (BEB), (AND) disruptively shoot a grocery store rap video

— *wipes tear* Our last Beck and Kyle pre-tape. 
— I think this is their first pre-tape to make it to a live episode since “The Race,” over three years earlier. 
— Their co-writers here are Andrew Dismukes and Dan Bulla.
— Regé, similar to most of his roles tonight, is in pure straight man form, but this is his best use in that role. 
— Andrew’s very odd delivery of “to go viral,” will stay in your head, along with his rapping, “yummy in my tummy.” 
— At the time I felt like this was the passing-of-the-torch moment from Beck and Kyle to Andrew that I’d been assuming would happen. Instead, Kyle stayed on one more season, and Andrew has rarely tried to create material similar to what they did, with Please Don’t Destroy (sort of) carrying on that tradition.
— “Bill Gates invented [the pandemic] to sell more computer games.” 
— This concept is very simple, simple enough to where your enjoyment will depend on how much you enjoy Beck, Kyle and Andrew making stupid faces and doing stupid voices, but it’s very well-paced and has an ending that makes me laugh whenever I watch it. And the sheer silliness means the heavy focus on masking and the pandemic don’t completely date the material to the point of being difficult to watch.
— Not a bad way to go out for what is probably my favorite pre-tape team on the show, two ingenious comic talents who always gave all of themselves to parts big and small. They were one of the main reasons I got back into SNL in the first place, and for all my inevitable complaining about the show, I’ll always be grateful for that. 
STARS: ****

GOODNIGHTS

— Weird seeing Lauren at center stage for most of these when she was shut out of the episode (and to be honest I had forgotten she was still in the cast—sorry, Lauren).

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— When this first aired, I had never seen Bridgerton, and any limited knowledge of Regé was based on talk about the show’s sexual content. As a result, I was very impressed with how much he threw himself into the hosting role. On rewatch, I am still impressed, but I see more now how safe many of his roles were (which isn’t a big judgment against him—that’s the case for most first-time hosts, especially those who are not as known to the wider viewer base). He did embody all of his parts with authority, and the few glimpses of more (like the job interview pre-tape) make me wonder what we’d get in the slim chance of his hosting again.
— With the breaks Kate, Aidy and Cecily took for various parts of the season, I remember wondering whether Season 46 would seem more male-dominated than most recent years. That never quite happened, but the usual shut-outs for Melissa and Lauren, and the relatively limited airtime for Aidy, Cecily, and Kate in this episode make it a window into what might have been.
— This episode was very important for establishing Andrew’s future on the show, as well as serving as a final feather in the cap for Beck, but then, as now, the highlight was likely Pete. At the time I said I thought this was his best episode. I’d still say that now. Every aspect of his time at the show (Update, hip-hop pre-tapes, sketch work) is on display here, and all find him in good form. If only he’d stuck to his guns and left at the end of the season.
— As I said above, this episode was somewhat divisive at the time, some loving the energy of the crowd and some of the material, others seeing the whole thing as desperate and hollow. I’m a little cooler on the episode now than I was at the time, but it still works well enough for me, and more importantly, starts a somewhat rocky season off on a very solid decent-to-good path…up until you-know-who hosts, anyway. 

MY PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
Just Say Grace
The Job Interview
The Grocery Rap
Mr. Chicken Legs Pageant
Loco
Actors Spotlight
Weekend Update
Driver’s License
Oops, You Did It Again
Monologue 
Songs of the Sea
Bridgerton Intimacy Coordinator

TOMORROW
The always superb Vax Novier covers the solo double duty host of the season, Nick Jonas.

February 6, 2021 – Dan Levy / Phoebe Bridgers (S46 E11)

by Matt and Carson

Carson: Hi everybody, everyone’s favorite reviewer daddy, Carson, here. Matt has done a wonderful job reviewing the Dan Levy episode and their insights will resound as you dig into the writing below. That said, as the only Canadian on the “staff” (and I mean real Canadian, not that Vancouver bullshit), I feel like I may have some unique perspectives on the work of a Canadian icon (OK, the son of a Canadian icon). So that’s why I’m here—to offer the Canuck perspective (I’m allowed to say it!!). Also, I just love piggybacking on other people’s reviews. Thanks to Matt for being such a gracious host.

Matt: Here’s a little throwaway fun fact for all of you: I wrote this review aaaall the way back in 2021. Hot damn! I feel the review’s a bit rocky in some places because I was still figuring out how all this review stuff worked at that point, but that’s also why I appreciate Carson coming into the equation and beefing things up with his own insights. I still maintain dominion of the final grades for every sketch, though! Hope you enjoy 🙂

SUPER BOWL LV
NFL roundtable discuss the big game and interview dueling coaches (AIB)

Matt: With the exception of the R. Kelly cold open from Idris Elba’s S44 hosting stint, this is the first non-political cold open since… I don’t even know, S43 at least? Maybe the Mother’s Day cold open from the Schumer episode? It feels like it’s been ages, though whether or not this is a truly rousing piece to break those patterns is up for debate.
— Right off the bat, there’s an embarrassing gaffe: when the camera is supposed to cut to Beck as Boomer Esiason (apropos of nothing, Wikipedia says this is really a real person’s name), the screen is instead taken up by the first frame of a football video to be played later in the sketch (second screencap). There’s also some continued sloppiness after that as they don’t flick to the right name on-time for Mikey’s character.
— I promise it’s not just that I know so little about football, but this sketch so far is just complete white noise. Cold opens these days tend to have a very similar issue where instead of sticking with one topic and trying to find an angle, they writhe around and try to make every possible joke in a way that leaves things feeling super over-extended. It’s impossible for me to describe a singular conceit to this sketch, or even multiple conceits; it just feels like it’s firing blindly at anything it can make a joke out of (Nickelodeon slime effect on injured players? The Super Bowl on Bravo?), but none of them are strong.
— The parade of fake ads in this sketch should be a good chance to send off some fun, rapid-fire jokes, but all of them fall pretty flat here.
— God, Mikey is really playing a Mikey role in this sketch.
— Aidy is in male drag yet again, playing the opposing coaches in the year’s Super Bowl. I actually kinda like the idea of doubling up the role, since a lot of people online pointed out that they looked eerily-similar at the time… but the fact that Aidy is doing this with the usual lack of commitment leaves it feeling indulgent and tacky.
— Chris playing around with how fast Aidy can perform a quick-change, I’ll admit, feels a bit more charming and natural than those sorts of “hee-hee, I hope something goes wrong!” moments usually do.
— Welp, it just goes to show you that even if it isn’t outright political, a seven minute-long modern SNL cold open is a seven minute-long modern SNL cold open.
Carson: “Over-extended” is exactly the right word for what’s going on here. And even though I don’t find the individual parts as miserable as Matt (in fact, I was charmed by the Aidy segment, a far more interesting way of doing the tired gender-swap joke), you can’t simply try to make every joke. Or that should say, a million jokes won’t make up for an unclear premise. The writers throw everything at the wall here and it’s perfectly marginal and inoffensive, but all that joking can’t cover the fact that the sketch lacks a solid foundation. You can’t make a Frankensketch out of one-liners. Honestly, having Aidy play a million coaches would have been premise enough, especially if it was played loose and silly. Then the sketch has a common premise (NFL coaches are interchangeable—or interchangeably white if you want to get satirical about it) and a fun game (watch Aidy flop around with wardrobe changes). Cut the runtime in half and you’re almost golden. It’s actually NOT. THAT. HARD.
STARS: *½

MONOLOGUE
host takes a backstage tour of his COVID-era SNL production; Eugene Levy cameo

Matt: Dan’s center-stage portion of the monologue is about as written as most SNL monologues are (about half-written), but he’s helping to sell the sub-par material with his charisma and legitimate excitement—a big and unfortunate theme for the night, if memory serves.
— I will say, I really like the concept of a backstage tour at SNL under new COVID restrictions.
— Melissa gets her only role of the whole episode, being decontaminated at the NBC page desk. Her giggling at least put a smile on my face, though it’s the usual, thankless work.
— The backstage llama!
— Kenan’s bit, mishearing what Dan is shouting at him, is simple but good, sold on Kenan’s great, low-key delivery. I’ll take those sorts of cast interactions over this monologue’s repeated bit of Aidy’s safety officer hitting Dan with a pool noodle.
— Even more delightful: a Eugene Levy cameo! As with the rest of the monologue, he’s not given much, but it’s great to see the guy on SNL at long last, and I love that they put him in an Alan box.
— Ultimately, this monologue didn’t have much of value, despite the unique premise. I at least respect the ambition.
Carson: This monologue would be my Exhibit A (along with maybe the first couple of standup monologues) in how the COVID-era audiences could torpedo a sketch, or at least the perception of a sketch (read John’s fabulous Issa Rae review for more on this phenomenon). What we have here is a fun, ambitious, throwback monologue that should hit reasonably well with the audience. I’ve honestly never seen a backstage monologue that bombed, but this one bombs and I really don’t know why. The piece has energy, a couple decent bits and a legitimately cool cameo and yet… nothing really takes off. Not with this audience, anyway. I’m not saying that every moment of this is an absolute hit—the timing between Levy and Aidy seems a bit off, for one. But damn, it feels like this audience was shipped in from the Jean Doumanian era. Modern SNL crowds are often generous to a fault and this fun piece would have been an absolute breath of fresh air if it even had a fraction of that generosity. I think a more experimental sketch can navigate around an icy audience reception, but a supposed crowd pleaser like this shouldn’t have to go up against absolute silence. This gets an “A” for effort and would probably earn a four star rating in a better environment.
STARS: **

UNIVERSAL STUDIOS TRAM TOUR
caffeinated (host) waxes inappropriately on his inaugural Universal Studios tram tour

Matt: This is a good premise to make use of Dan’s energy, but slotting this sort of character into a classic Seiday formula (with exasperated Mikey reactions aplomb!) feels like an uninspired approach that kneecaps its potential.
— Tonight’s relatively tough crowd is nicely stirred by Dan’s fan theory about Doc molesting Marty in Back to the Future. It’s fine, I guess, but the joke is more sold by Dan’s performance—the way he leans into his headset whenever he says the word “molest”—than the written material, which is pretty much just a straight recitation of something off the Internet.
— Even though she’s as baked into the formula as Mikey is, I do admittedly love Ego’s approval of the inappropriate things Dan’s talking about.
— Dan’s spiel about “softeners” is pretty fun, even if, again, it just feels like something culled from the Internet. Kenan’s very earnest response of his softener being “Dobby the Elf from Harry Potter… nasty!”, though, is priceless.
— I don’t think it’s intentional, but I’m amused by the green screen footage of the Universal Studios tram tour and how it drives into a tree at the exact moment that Ego looks away from the wheel.
— There were a few things here that worked, but for the most part, this was a pretty unremarkable lead-off sketch. 
Carson: If the monologue was a piece that underperformed what it was setting out to do, I think that this sketch far outperforms what was established on paper. Yes, Kenan reacts. Yes, Mikey explains. And yet…and yet it all really works for me. From Levy’s performance, which transcends the limitations of the premise, to Ego’s interjections (“Goofy dudes don’t get it slick for me”), which are all hilarious, I am far more sold on what’s being presented here than Matt is. In a way it reminds me of the job interview sketch from Drew Barrymore’s 2007 episode, another soft premise sketch that largely relied on the liveliness of the host’s performance. That one, like this one, was also gently shrugged off by the reviewer, deemed a largely negligible mediocrity. But both these sketches give their host room to do the kind of work usually reserved for castmembers, unencumbered by too specific premises. Here, Levy gets helpful assists from the rest of the cast, but he also proves himself capable of corralling the energy needed to push this thing over the top. For me, this delivers.
STARS: **½

ZILLOW
adults in their late thirties choose Zillow to satiate their sexual appetites

Matt: I’ve always felt the reveal of this sketch was enjoyable enough, perhaps even clever, but I personally don’t get a ton of latitude out of the execution. This is another piece sold largely on presentation (the editing here is particularly stellar) and performance, so my mileage varies.
— Dan: “I’d never live in North Carolina, but if I did, I’d buy a big, gross mansion.” Hey, I gotta quote ‘em when they shout-out my homestate.
— A minor detail, but it feels nice to see a gay couple portrayed by two openly-gay performers on SNL in the form of Dan and Bowen.
— Dan: “The guest house has its own little kitchen!” Bowen: “Oh, FUCK!”
— I do really like the touch of Cecily playing a RE/MAX agent who you can call if you need an immediate softener (I’m learning new phrases!). Cecily’s always great at this sort of earnest character work when she’s given a shot at it, which feels increasingly rare these days.
— This piece was a bit more fun than I remembered, but I feel like it still could’ve worked better for me. It’s not that there are aspects I outright dislike; perhaps it’s just that the premise doesn’t really speak to me or progress. While I can pinpoint bits that I enjoy, for the most part it feels very repetitive for a bit which doesn’t have quite the depth to keep hitting the same beats without losing momentum.
Carson: As of this writing, I am in my late 30s (though I’m guessing by the time it gets published I’ll be in my mid-50s). That’s my shorthand way of saying that this premise really speaks to me. OK, I actually don’t use Zillow, but I have definitely had bouts of house horniness (“Ooh, mid-century modern!” I blurted). In fact, my wife and I have been known to drive to other parts of town just to check out the real estate. Is that, like, swinging according to this sketch’s logic? Suffice to say, I’m feeling this one. Is the piece essentially one joke? Sure, but it’s one really good joke that feels simultaneously specific and relatable. You can hear it in the audience’s heightened response at the reveal. They’re getting it too. Maybe, like the much-vaunted Weezer sketch, you sort of had to be there, but I think the premise is golden and the execution does everything necessary.
STARS: ***

SUPER BOWL POD
(BEB)’s Super Bowl party has many red flags

Matt: Now that we’ve all but exited the fevered pitch of the pandemic (though maybe I shouldn’t jinx that), I do feel like there’s some interesting value in looking back on these very COVID-specific premises. This one has a very simple premise, but a functional one that feels like it should have promising escalation.
— I like the bit with Beck living with his extended family and an entire nursing home.
— Dan: “What about you, Shell? Single guy over there—you look lonely and depressed.” Kyle: “Absolutely.”
— Alright, even though the jokes are coming from everyone’s ignorance to how dangerous they’re being, the bit with Dan “taking the vaccine” as in taking a physical COVID vaccine everywhere he goes feels a bit too dumb for this sketch.
— Strong All That vibes from the gross chili gag, not that I’m against that.
— Oh god, I completely forgot about the ending with Kate as Fauci doing a PSA alongside Bowen as PSY. Would you believe that it doesn’t work even a little bit?
— Usually I’m a fan of ending sketches with everyone prancing off-set, but I can’t say using “Gangnam Style” as a button in 2021 is particularly effective.
Carson: It’s like a tale of two sketches, isn’t it? A simple, but relatable COVID premise plays out nicely enough, but runs out of track in a hurry, leaving the writers to cobble together a sweaty conclusion that implies “Anything can happen,” but really only communicates “We had half a sketch written.” And don’t get me wrong, I don’t typically hate Hail Mary endings (SNL has pulled off more than its fair share of semi-successful text crawls), but this one was neither punchy enough, nor suitably offbeat enough to really justify itself. Like really, Psy? But to go back to the beginning, I like what’s happening for the meat of this sketch’s runtime. The premise is relatable and escalates at a reasonable pace, though the chili portion does have strong All That vibes and I am against it. I differ with Matt in that I actually didn’t mind Levy’s “take the vaccine” bit. I’d focus my nitpicky notes on Kyle, who once again makes character decisions that feel…forced? Incongruent? Distractingly specific? I don’t know, I’m a Kyle guy, but he has a tendency to add unnecessary spice to normie sketches. This is one such example, though it is really a minor issue. I’ll save my ire for the tacked on ending, which fits with this piece like a rejected skin graft. 
STARS: **½ (minus half a star for that ending)

LIFTING OUR VOICES
(KET) interviews white allies who straddle the line with their advocacy

Matt: Even though I know where this premise is gonna go right away, I dig the concept.
— Giving Aidy’s character the last name “Dinwiddie” feels rather on-the-nose. 
— With that being said, Aidy is always great at playing characters who don’t realize how wince-worthy they sound, and her delivery of “I rep my black she-roes, y’all!” was perfect.
— Dan is great as a white BLM activist who is grossly overstepping the line. I especially like the bit about how he threw a brick at a Wendy’s window, causing police to arrest his friend.
— Kyle is even more phenomenal with all of his skin-crawling comments about Ego, his “mahogany queen” with her “shea butter kisses.” Any time Kyle plays some creepy weirdo with a ponytail, he knocks it out of the fuckin’ park.
— Hahaha, Ego quietly breaking at all of Kyle’s horrifying monologues is great. I also wanna mention how miraculous it is that Kyle seemingly has great, sneaky chemistry with everyone in the cast. Combined with his appearance alongside Bowen last episode, this was a moment that made me realize just how solid of a team player he actually is, however niche his characterizations are.
— Wow, our first really solid sketch of the night! A fun idea with good, satirical bite anchored by excellent performances.
Carson: NOT our first solid sketch of the night, but one of many (Matt’s going to drop a “Carson, you ignorant slut” retort at any moment). If there’s one satirical lane that SNL has improved upon in the modern era, it’s racial satire. Sure, the show can pander from time to time, but it is also more well-resourced for this kind of material. Taking aim at well-intentioned, but clueless white allies is a strong source for humor and this sketch capably heightens its premise with each segment. In fact, SNL is generally more able-footed when they tease the left. That’s likely because it’s easier to find the real humor in the areas you relate to. When SNL takes on right-wing politics, it’s just potshots and ghoulish caricatures. It’s understandable, but outright contempt for your target makes for a less thought-out portrayal. It’s like when the right takes shots at the left, it’s abysmal (currently trying to find an example of the right teasing itself…). Levy is terrific with his clueless character but it’s Kyle that steals the show. I just talked about how the specificity of Kyle’s character choices can be a distraction, but here, his character is so perfectly unctuous it will make your skin crawl (or in the case of Ego, lock into a rictus grin to prevent from breaking into a fit of laughter). Aidy and Levy are playing clueless, but Kyle can do douche chill-inducing oiliness like no one else since Will Forte. And the chemistry with Ego works too! Kyle may be a niche performer, but he can weave through the cast pretty effectively when he needs to. Anyway, it’s not an all-timer, but it’s a reasonably hearty piece of racial satire. 
STARS: ****

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Kyoto”

Blue: While the indie world went nuts for Phoebe Bridgers’ Punisher in 2020, I gotta say: I liked that album, but I didn’t love it. Still, it feels great to see that the buzz for the album led her all the way to SNL. 
— I love Phoebe and her band’s Halloween-esque attire. Skeletons are rad! The stage set is also really nice to look at, with a galaxy projection behind the band and matching blue lights on all the mic stands.
— What I remember most from the first time I saw this performance was how terrible the sound mixing was. It’s sad to see that I remembered this correctly. Phoebe’s vocals are way too low in the mix. 
— I can hardly hear Phoebe’s guitar, or the trumpets off to stage left. It’s a shame, because the horns add so much to the song.
— What made me first take notice of Phoebe Bridgers (although I’ve always been a casual enjoyer) was how personal and specific her lyrics were, and that quality is on full display with this song. Great stuff.
— I love whenever Phoebe cuts loose and adds some power to her voice, instead of utilizing the breathy, laid-back delivery that she relies on for most of her songs. We’ll get to more on that later…
— Phoebe’s bassist is having a blast towards the end, hopping up and down to the beat. Phoebe also appears to be having fun, if her smile is anything to go by. 
— To keep this review relatively unbiased—I don’t like Phoebe’s approach to the last couple lines (“who lies,” “I’m a liar”), where she paused in the middle of the last word, making it sound like she took a breath where she shouldn’t have.
STARS: ****

WEEKEND UPDATE
(MID) and (HEG) cancel little kids for transgressive juvenility

Twinsthenewtrend (KET) (CRR) hear some iconic bops for the first time

Matt: This Update so far seems to be really relying on those jokes about how specific Republican politicians look before segueing into the relevant news stories, but I did get amusement out of Che’s description of Marjorie Taylor Green as someone who “looks like the mugshot of a former child star.”
— Love all the groans Che gets for the punchline of a joke being that Stevie Wonder is pretending to be blind.
— Colin: “Former social media influencer Donald Trump…” Ah, so this is when Twitter banned him. Good times.
— Alright, I could easily file another complaint of SNL having its cake and eating it too in regards to the Morgan Wallen joke, especially considering how much the show fed into his redemption arc… but it’s a really good one.
— Mikey and Heidi are always a reliable duo, but I can’t say I’m too sold on this premise. I feel like whenever Mikey is in a piece designed to spoof some part of modern culture (like, say, the upcoming Star Trek sketch in the Carey Mulligan episode), there’s a tendency for the result to feel thin or misguided.
— I like Heidi feebly attempting to get the crowd to applaud her and Mikey canceling a young child.
— The first fake cancel tweet was the best. All these others aren’t holding much of a candle to it or keeping the energy up.
— Interesting to see Kenan and Chris portraying the real-life YouTube duo TwinsthenewTrend as opposed to labeling them more parodically.
— The visual of Chris and Kenan gettin’ down to “Baby Shark” is fantastic, though it doesn’t quell my frustration enough that I had to hear that goddamn song again.
— Another funny minor detail in Chris expressing surprise not just at the song “Baby Shark,” but at the concept that sharks can be babies. (“I thought they were born full-grown sharks already.”)
— Kenan, after hearing the alphabet: “Yo, I have never heard letters lined up before.”
— Cute, meta bit to end with the SNL theme song. 
— I enjoyed this Update commentary more than I thought I would—it’s really simple stuff, but lots of fun and infectious energy between Chris and Kenan. (Also, if you’re curious, here’s how the real duo reacted to being spoofed on SNL!)
Carson: It’s kind of amazing how the Jost-Che Update pairing remains enjoyable despite how predictable and formulaic their segment can be. It’s not just in the joke structure (“Pictured here…” or “Said [insert funny person to say something given the context]”) but it’s also in the trajectory of the typical Update. Che and Jost are perpetual slow starters. Never do these two seem as ambivalent as when they are having to hit the requisite political punchlines. Sometimes the momentum of the moment can mask the checked out delivery, but typically Update starts at a crawl and opens up to a full sprint once they can shake the political shackles off and just tell some damn jokes. I think that’s a bit of the case here. These guys really like jokes, but neither are inherently political animals, at least not in the macro way where you have to come up with jokes about Mitch McConnell. Once they open up their stride, the Jost-Che combo belongs with the all-timers. Too often, however, they are forced to play in the satirical slow lane. As for the commentaries, I like them! Heidi and Mikey’s bit is a great idea performed excellently (particularly Heidi), but it never really escalates in the way it needs to. Imagine if they had gone full Iraqi Pete and just bathed in the vocal antipathy from the crowd. That would have been special. SNL needs more bad guy characters. Like almost every other Kenan piece over the last two decades, the Kenan-Chris commentary is thin, throwaway fun. Nothing more, nothing less.
STARS: ***½

HOT DAMN
(host) and (CES) entertain bemused football fans with obscure “Hot Damn”

Matt: The most recent iteration of the “What is that song? Stop playing that song. We don’t know that song. Oh wait, we do know that song! Let’s sing that song!” series. I’ll admit that I sort of liked it on some earlier iterations, but by this point, I just don’t know why this is a well to keep pulling from.
— To this episode’s credit, Dan definitely feels like a more charismatic host for this sort of premise than some others in the past. He’s got solid chemistry with Cecily and he’s really, really trying to sell this.
— Kenan and Ego are doing a good job reacting to Dan and Cecily’s confusing act, even if it’s just another obligatory part of this sketch template. 
— Alright, I do like the very Broadway style of the song more than these sketch’s songs usually sound.
— The staging and choreography feels a bit more awkward than as joyously goofy as I feel the show is intending.
— A strange twist with Beck pointing out that the television at the start of the sketch (which spurred “Hot Damn”) was never plugged in, and then Cecily and Dan threatening to kill him.
— Hmm… while there are some parts of this that I was won over by in people’s performances, and while it’s arguably the most elaborate of these sketches, it’s still hard to be all that excited about the fifth (?) iteration of this idea.
Carson: It’s tricky because I think this is pretty definitively the best of these types of sketches, but, yeah, five iterations in, it might be too little too late. It’s always been a slightly confusing premise, but I can also see why this would have been a joy to conceive in the writer’s room. There are some fun jokes here and some really really silly lyrics that will make you chuckle if you can strain your ears to hear them. But unfortunately, the difference between a recurring character and a recurring premise is the same as the difference between talking to the same person over and over again and having the same conversation over and over again. This is modern SNL’s curse. Some fun details in the margins here, though: check Alex pulling out his phone to look at some porn and Beck’s extremely goofy trumpet dance at the end of the piece. 
STARS: **

WEDDING FRIENDS
(KAM) and (host) refuse to weigh in on groom (MID)

Matt: I get the specific characterizations that Kate and Dan are playing here, and they’re playing them well, but man… what is the point of this sketch? What is the real comedic thrust of it? Their half-answers about whether or not they’re objecting to the wedding are, sure, perhaps well-observed caricatures, but they’re not fed into this sketch in a way that progresses to an interesting place, or any place at all.
— Punkie’s involvement as the mother of the bride is… just sort of rehashing the same bit, which debatably constitutes as escalation. It’s at least nice to see her getting material that she can actually chew on a bit.
— Kate mugs a lot, especially by this point in her tenure, but some of her mugging here feels almost jarringly off-brand. I mean… look at some of those faces she’s making.
— Dan and Kate being turned on by Mikey’s groom telling them off is, uh, a choice. Even Dan’s enthusiasm couldn’t buoy this one—there’s a stark difference between being frustrating in a way that speaks to the audience comedically, and just being plain frustrating.
Carson: There are reasons to hate this sketch—Kate’s mugging is preposterous, especially when isolated in a screengrab, and there is little in the way of real momentum occurring here (including a couple of dead spots to boot), and the oft-comatose audience delivers accordingly. But while it’s not a great sketch, it’s not really a bad sketch either. The premise actually feels somewhat relatable despite the fact that I’ve never actually been witness to a real live “Or forever hold your peace” spiel at a wedding. There are choices that I like here too, especially Mikey actually playing his character in a grounded way, which provides a nice contrast to Kate and Levy’s bug-eyed overperformances. Also, whatever, Mikey’s serious defense of himself followed by Levy purring “Ok, rail me daddy” is a turn I more than enjoyed. I’m not saying this is an unheralded classic, but there is too much working here for this to be discarded on the trash heap.
Matt: Carson, you ignorant slut.
STARS: *

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “I Know The End”

Blue: I love how Phoebe hasn’t entirely lost her skeleton outfit, trading it out for several strings of pearls arranged in the shape of a ribcage.
— That guitar that Phoebe’s using has an awfully long neck. (The better too… oops, spoilers.)
— I didn’t hear any backing vocals on the first song, but these vocalists are blending well with Phoebe’s lead.
— Oof, the initial entrance of the violin was flat.
— As the tempo picks up and Phoebe’s strumming gets faster, the guitar’s tone starts sounding worse. Of course, that’s not going to matter in a couple minutes.
— Love the texture that the violinist is adding to the song. I’m glad at least this instrument is prominent in the mix.
— Love the entrance of the trumpets. They remind me of Illinoise-era Sufjan Stevens.
— Phoebe is smiling up a storm as the song reaches its intense outro. We love to see it!
— Now Phoebe is kneeling at the feet of her guitarist and beaming as he rocks a distorted solo. I’m loving this.
— And there it is: the guitar-smash that set indie music Twitter aflame for a weekend. Leaving aside how baffled I am that this is what counts as controversial nowadays, I’ll just say: I understand the intent and statement behind the gesture, and I don’t think there’s anything wrong with it as a theatrical presentation. It’s just a shame the guitar didn’t actually break, thus rendering the whole thing less impressive than it should have been. Still: what a performance! 
STARS: ****

IT GETS BETTER
a decade removed, the It Gets Better campaign hasn’t prepared its grown-up audience for their present lives

Matt: You know how I commented on how cool it was to see a male couple normalized in the “Zillow” sketch? This sketch does that one better: we have enough openly-gay performers on the show that we can do something like this. Beyond the low-key nature of the premise, there’s a wonderful naturalism and earnestness to the performances from Dan, Bowen, Kate, and Punkie, no doubt etched by their own life experiences. And that’s cool as shit! To think only a decade before we’d get shit like Fred or Taran doing mincing gay stereotypes—it’s wonderful to see how rapidly the show’s evolved over the past decade at a time like this.
— In regards to the sketch itself: it’s great! I’ve always had a soft spot for this sketch. Some bits are better than others, but every performance feels so rooted that it’s hard not to appreciate.
— I love getting to see the performers’ actual child photos, which is always a treat.
— Bowen runs away with the absolute best bit of this sketch, detailing how while he no longer gets bullied by straight people, he gets viciously tormented by gay people for his opinions about music.
— Although it’s less centered with the premise, I also really like Kate’s bit about how an iguana has taken over her life and effectively held her captive. This is the sort of Kate performance that I love to see—deadpan, and very poised—and which SNL so rarely shoves aside for her to get hammy or play dress-up.
— Bowen: “It’s scarier when gay people are mean because they’re so organized. I tweeted one vague opinion about Chromatica and I had to move. Not just apartments, like cities.”
— It doesn’t get much of an audience response, but I liked Punkie’s line about how if you wear basketball shorts, people think you’re the one that fights. Well-observed stuff, which I have to assume she had direct input on.
Carson:  I’m a little conflicted with this one. It’s a very good piece, well-written and well-executed. I love the low-key absurdist bent that Kate’s character veers into and Matt is right with this being an ideal example of how to harness Kate’s energy. But I do find the piece slightly imbalanced. Not so much that I would quibble with the score, but it does seem like Kate’s portion takes up the lion’s share of the sketch. That’s not a total complaint—it is the segment that is the most silly and comedically buoyant, but a part of me feels like everything else (particularly Punkie’s portion) should have been afforded similar room to breathe. Don’t get me wrong, what’s there is very good, and I’m not mad that Kate’s very funny portion is given prominent positioning, but I do believe there was more to work with across the board. 
STARS: ****½

GOODNIGHTS


CUT FOR TIME: MEN’S COSMETICS
Man Stain cosmetics’ machismo marketing belies feminine conceit

Matt: SNL rolling the dice again on this concept. This one notably has a writer’s credit from Dan, at least, though it’s his only known contribution to the episode.
— This sketch reminds me of the “Brolay” sketch I covered from last season’s JJ Watt episode, though this sketch is far more pointed. The joke is still simplistic, but it’s making more of a direct point of the veiled nature of the aggressively, stereotypically-masculine advertisement, and Dan is doing some fun deconstruction work. (Meanwhile, the closest we got to a satirical tinge with the last one was JJ assuring us that his product was “just gay enough” to be cool, which… yeah.)
— Pete makes an appearance here, which made me realize he was shut out of the live episode. Strange, but not particularly felt, however much I can enjoy Pete.
— A lot of enjoyable prop comedy here, between the beer can of base, rouge gun, and eyeshadow pizza box.
— There are still some jokes that ostensibly seem to just be “haha guys in make-up,” but with Dan as a writer on this sketch, I’m assuming good faith. 
— A cute touch of Dan quietly coaching Alex on how to apply mascara. It’s those sort of moments that are making this more tolerable than the usual, desperate efforts SNL has made with this same premise.
STARS: ***

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
Matt: A weak episode. Dan does his absolute best, but it just makes me wish that he could reign over a better night than what he ultimately received. He was at least given chances to shine alongside the cast in select pieces (“Lifting Our Voices,” “It Gets Better”), but by and large this felt like a waste of his presence.
Carson: I knew this one would be an uphill battle for me. At the time the episode came out, consensus seemed to poo-poo it. Maybe I was just in the right mood. But even the cold open, as flawed as it was, showed a more refreshing, playful kind of lousy that I found amiable enough. The monologue failed to connect with a sleepy crowd, but not for a lack of actually trying (unlike almost every other monologue in this era) and I could say that for a few other pieces too. But in the end, I think there were simply a couple pieces that connected with me far more than they connected with Matt (Universal Studios, Zillow) and that happens. Sometimes that’s simply a matter of point of reference, other times it might be me happily removing my critical eye and enjoying a piece for what it is. If anything, I felt this episode deserved a defense. I felt like it earned a second opinion or at the very least a sympathetic rewatch.

MY PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
It Gets Better
Lifting Our Voices
Weekend Update
Zillow
(CFT: Men’s Cosmetics)
Universal Studios Tram Tour
Super Bowl Pod
Monologue
Hot Damn
Super Bowl LV
Wedding Friends

TOMORROW
John takes a look at Regina King’s hosting stint

January 30, 2021 – John Krasinski / Machine Gun Kelly (S46 E10)

by Kabir

WHAT STILL WORKS?
frazzled KAM seeks non-dysfunctional institutions

— When this started, I thought maybe my copy of the show was massively truncated, and the usual lame political-cameo-fest cold open had been chopped off (along with the monologue)… but I see this is the actual cold open. Nice change of pace. It’s worth noting that the show had been off for six weeks at this point—the longest break since the 2007-08 Writer’s Guild Strike. During that hiatus, of course, supporters of former President Trump had stormed the Capitol during the January 6 insurrection, and Biden had been sworn-in as president.
— Funny line when Cecily offers her gun like a piece of gum.
— Lots of good, quick back-and-forth with Kate here. And I like the mumbled “she’s this lady I work with now” about Nancy Pelosi.
— Another great line: “I regret not taking that gun.”
— This is moving along really well and Pete is giving a good understated performance. I guess the six-week break allowed the show some time to rejuvenate.
— “Stonk market”—ha.
— Interesting seeing Twitter Founder Jack Dorsey, since Elon Musk’s purchase of Twitter is all over the news at the time I’m writing this.
— “Is my chin beard working?” “It’s working in that it’s keeping me a lesbian.” The dialogue in this sketch isn’t groundbreaking, but it’s making me laugh and everyone’s deliveries—which I would also describe as understated—are working well.
— Nice to see John Krasinki finally make it to 8H, as his hosting stint the previous year was canceled due to COVID.
— Kate, in reference to the Buccaneers being led by Tom Brady: “No one believes there is anyone else on the team.”
— Even though Kate is playing herself here, this feels like a FAR superior version of her “Dr. Wenowdis” bits, where she’s emotionally drained about what’s happening in America.
— I also like her very spirited LFNY.
STARS: ****

MONOLOGUE
binge-watching audience members want host to “do The Office” & “kiss Pam”

— Great entrance from Krasinski.
— His Paw Patrol story was cute but not terribly funny.
— Someone running behind Alex.
— Did he just call the host “Jim”?
— Oh, I see, he’s a fan of The Office.
— These comments are kind of lame.
— Now I see that it was Pete running behind Andy earlier, based on the sweatshirt.
— And now John and Pete kiss. One could see this as SNL being homophobic to get a cheap laugh, as in “look how outrageous it is to see men kissing”—something the show has been guilty of at times in the past. However, I feel this isn’t being treated as gross; it’s being treated as perfectly fine and the “joke” is that Pete Davidson is not Jenna Fischer. That’s it. Not a great joke, but at least it’s not offensive.
STARS: **

BLUE GEORGIA
Georgians upend conservative southern stereotypes in the newly-blue state

— I’m dreading this since, two-and-a-half months after the election, it must be dated.
— Wow, right off there are actually several great lines, mostly from Aidy.
— John’s “a-woman” (instead of “amen”) was clever.
— “She/ma’am.” This, like the cold open, has some good political commentary without being the usual heavy handed history lesson.
— I assumed Andrew’s character was going to be like Barney Fife, given the look. Missed opportunity, but it probably would have taken a lot to shoehorn that into this sketch.
— The audience is dead for this. Maybe they don’t get the joke?
— Nice twist of the way they’re treating Alex’s character, but this is going on a bit longer than needed.
— Weak ending about the masks.
STARS: ***½

THE LOSER
(AND)’s brother’s (host) bully rejoinders are unflattering

— This took a quick, funny turn but might fall on its face if John’s comments don’t stay ridiculous.
— “Alcohol—party time.” Andrew’s asides are good.
— I liked this, and it was short, but some of John’s examples weren’t as strong. This could have been even tighter.
STARS: ***½

THE DIVIDEND
economist’s (host) creepy kids (MID) & (KAM) spook (BEB) 

— I like the painting and creepy doll and his explanation.
— The look and demeanor of the kids seem like something that’s been on SNL many times, but I can’t place them.
— The audience is dead for this, and the structure of this is fairly conventional, even if the subject matter is not.
— Okay, the audience finally woke up but this still isn’t that funny.
— Again, this just feels like a retread of a previous sketch—but what? I can’t place it.
— And now the sketch just ended with the twins popping up on the news set, which I think we all knew was going to happen. Very humdrum sketch which took off quickly after showing the baby doll, but then just hovered in place.
STARS: **½

NOW THAT’S WHAT I CALL THEME SONGS SUNG BY THE STARS OF THE SHOW
compilation CD contains TV theme songs with lyrics sung by shows’ stars

— Interesting production design to this, and I like the concept. However, why is Frasier included? Not only is it much older than the other programs, but Kesley Grammer really did sing the ending theme. I assume someone is going to imitate him.
— Good impressions and lyrics from everyone so far. My favorite is Pete as Cousin Greg.
— Hold it—Chloe is spot-on as Samantha from Sex and the City.
— Now I see: they included Frasier simply because it’s begun streaming. I was confused because this sketch predates the announcement that Frasier would be rebooted. Alex’s Kelsey Grammer is entertaining, as are his lame updated lyrics.
— Krasinski is committed but his lyrics are just so-so; he could have done more than just narrate the show’s famous opening sequence. However, the audience goes nuts at the end, so I’ll not be a grinch about this one.
STARS: ****

PANDEMIC GAME NIGHT
most members of a suburban pandemic bubble were Capitol insurrectionists 

— Beck having some trouble with his lines it seems? And was his “I think I hear the pizza man” just an ad-lib to cover a missed sound effect?
— Nice reveal of the FBI showing up. Surprised it took the show this long to start addressing this story.
— “I wasn’t just in the bathroom that day.” Nice bizarre line.
— Okay, now the camera cut to Heidi when Cecily spoke. Lots of technical issues with the show suddenly. Although earlier, there was that issue with Pete running during the monologue, and I thought the camera might have gotten a slight bump during Krasinski’s “Paw Patrol” story.
— “I’m a patriot; unlike this bubble of cucks.” He’d been dead 27 years at this point, but that was a total Mr. Mike line.
— Good work from Bowen, as usual. He can make even the tiniest role stand out and be amusing.
— When Bowen holds up the photo, there’s enough glare that it obscures Cecily’s face (and the joke of her chest being censored). No one thought to print the photo on matte paper, instead of glossy, “for a good look”? (That’s a reference to a Kodak commercial which is older than I am. Why do I know these things?)
— Ha, nice shot of Krasinski taking the podium.
— “But I’m a state senator!” Just like the cold open, this moved along nicely and was political satire instead of a boring political history lesson.
STARS: ****

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “My Ex’s Best Friend”

Blue: I like MGK’s outfit.
— I do not like MGK’s voice, particularly his vowel pronunciation, which is heavy on the diphthongs. I might enjoy his pronunciation more if his timbre was naturally higher.
— Enjoying the sight of the pink microphone.
— The enthusiasm with which MGK is strumming his guitar is amusing me.
— That drummer is ROCKING OUT! Excellent moment where he stands up at the end of the chorus to quickly mute the cymbals.
— Odd abrupt moment where MGK jumps up on the kick drum, then jumps off. At least he’s having fun?
— The one moment where MGK breaks into a rap is the only moment that I’ve enjoyed his voice and delivery. He has great flow in that moment, but it’s sadly fleeting.
— Officially naming the drummer as the MVP of this performance.
— That song was decently catchy, but I think it deserves a different vocalist. 
STARS: ***

WEEKEND UPDATE
seditious & unrepentant Mike Lindell (BEB) spews conspiracy theories

quintessentially-NYC Fran Lebowitz (BOY) cracks up Martin Scorsese (KYM)

Cathy Anne thinks white supremacist insurrectionists should be in prison
 

— Good opening joke: “And now the terrorist watch list includes white people. It’s nice to see yourself represented.”
— Maybe I’m missing something with Colin’s speech about making 2013’s “Now You See Me” a hit… because that film was a sizable hit when released, if memory serves. And it’s not as though he’s in it or has some connection to the movie. What am I missing here? The audience seems to agree with me: his inflection sounds like he was building this up to get some clapter… which never materialized. He ends with a kind of meek “thank you.” Strange.
— Che’s jokes are solid, as usual, but the audience is a little dead for him, too.
— The audience woke up a bit for the speech about attacking Rand Paul, but then had no response to the Logan Paul joke. Odd.
— OUCH—that Jewish Space Laser joke was horrendous. What’s going on with Jost?
— Beck as Mike Lindell—perfect casting.
— Not too many great lines here, but it’s still entertaining because of Beck’s commitment.
— “That night was a year—the end.”
— Che and Jost’s jokes are even weaker than before the Lindell commentary.
— Okay, seeing Bowen and Kyle is cheering me up.
— Well, this segment is falling flat. Maybe it’s because, to me, this just sounds like all the older people I know from New York? And Kyle’s spastic Scorsese is a little repetitive.
— Kyle struggled to pull his eyebrows off, and the audience had no reaction. I got a chuckle at least. Meanwhile, Reviewer Matt says this is one of their favorite bits all season. I guess this is another case of me viewing things through a different prism. At the same time, I can acknowledge that Bowen and Kyle are keeping the energy up, but also that Matt is a bad person for disagreeing with me. (KIDDING)
— Some slightly better jokes.
— Oh no, Cathy Anne. She hits the same notes every time, and she always garbles some lines. Not my favorite.
— Cecily’s performing well but her dialogue is boring.
— That was a rough WU. Considering everything that had happened in the world since the last episode, I expected more.
STARS: **

SUPERMARKET SWEEP
lesbian couple (KAM) & (AIB) dominates 1991 episode

— Ha, Krasinski is actually wearing an outfit like the kind Host David Ruprecht would’ve worn in 1991.
— Nice little mix-up with Chris and Ego saying something different when asked about their relationship.
— The characters played by Aidy and Kate feel just like the fruit-picking sisters we saw in the previous season’s Woody Harrelson episode (and other episodes, I’m sure).
— Funny lines from Aidy toward Kate (“Go, my provider!”).
— Nice, bizarre line that Aidy has a “Doctorate in Grocery Riddles,” but it seems like this sketch is moving too fast by amping up the strangeness of everything.
— The list of previous contestants was lazy, especially “Ellen and Portia” since most people realize that neither of them was well-known in 1991, nor were they a couple. I just looked it up and Portia would’ve been 18 at that time.
— This could have gone further—Aidy’s character needed to be fully creepy and stalkerish, and not just have an over-the-top delivery, to actually be funny. Also, it’s 2021: same sex marriage isn’t shocking or daring as it might have been 30 years ago. If they had wanted to make this a “look how everyone reacted to this in 1991” sketch or “look how no one notices,” they failed. Matt feels the joke is that same-sex couples were so far out-of-the-norm in 1991 that the host is oblivious… which I still think is too pedestrian.
STARS: **½

SUBWAY MEETING
out-of-touch Subway ad men (host) & (BEB) belittle (AND)’s protein bowl 

— This looks promising just from the cast members involved. Kenan has had a light evening.
— I like the little detail of the way John and Beck pronounce “burritos” and “sandwiches.”
— Honestly, the Protein Bowl doesn’t seem that far-fetched or strange.
— I had forgotten about Jared-from-Subway. Yikes. I showed this sketch to two 16-year-olds and they’d never heard of him. Which is for the best.
— That alternate jingle had an unexpected old-timey charm.
— Kenan looking more-and-more amused.
— That ended abruptly; the show must be running long.
STARS: ***½

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Lonely”

Blue: This is the second time a song called “lonely” has been performed on this season of SNL.
— Supposedly the darkened stage isn’t just a dramatic effect to suit the song’s subject matter– according to MGK, all the stage lights shorted out before he was meant to perform. If that’s true, it was certainly a serendipitous accident.
— I’m finding it uncomfortable to hear MGK singing in such a low range at the start of the song, as it doesn’t suit his voice. I’m sure he’s had some amount of vocal training, but I feel like his lower range needs to be more developed for him to properly utilize it in this song’s opening.
— Now that MGK has moved into his mid-range chest voice, I’m enjoying his delivery a little more, though I’m still not a fan of his timbre.
— This song is a little more interesting to me than the first one. I like the melody and the lyrics are drawing me in.
— MGK sounds pretty emotional on the bridge. Given that he’s singing about talking to his father on his deathbed, no wonder.
— Really appreciating the passionate reprise of the chorus at the end. Though that’s not enough to save the performance from getting an average rating.
STARS: ***

RATATOUILLE
sex rat (KYM) controls coitus from atop (host)’s head

— Gross reveal of Ratatouille. Anyone reading my reviews knows I enjoy SNL sketches that poke fun at Disney.
— Bugatoulie? That was pointless. I got a chuckle from the line about telling a Blu-Ray from a game disk, but that was it. This feels rushed, again making me think the show is running long.
— Pete’s playing Anton Ego, the critic from the film—which I haven’t seen (although I have been on the Ratatouille ride). This brief coda was entertaining enough in that odd 10-to-1 way. The audience enjoyed it.
STARS: **½

IN MEMORIAM
a photo of Cicely Tyson marks her passing

— A memorial photo of Season 4 host Cicely Tyson, the first black women to host SNL. Unlike many cases when a former host passes, NBC did not rerun her episode in the 10 p.m. “Vintage” slot earlier that night… probably because it was subpar and contained a lot of racially problematic material when viewed 42 years later. The best thing about her episode, in fact, was the musical guest (Talking Heads).

GOODNIGHTS

— Pete and Machine Gun Kelly start playfully wrestling and topple off the stage, leaving Bowen looking shocked and John coming over to help. They’re fine, though.— These are running quite long, so why did the last two sketches feel so rushed?

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— Not a bad episode, and it had a different “feel” because of the lack of heavy-handed political material. It almost felt like the post-9/11 shows, where the show tackled political material with some subtlety and made points through humor. A refreshing change. Unfortunately, though, not much stood out for me beyond the cold open and the fact that it was nice to see John Krasinski doing comedy again.

MY PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


RATED SEGMENTS FROM BEST TO WORST
What Still Works?
Pandemic Game Night
Now That’s What I Call Theme Songs
Blue Georgia
Subway Meeting
The Loser
Supermarket Sweep
Ratatouille
The Dividend
Monologue
Weekend Update

TOMORROW
Dan Levy continues his Schitt’s Creek/Emmy victory lap and finally fulfills his family’s promise by hosting SNL, reviewed by Matt

December 12, 2020 – Timothée Chalamet / Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band (S46 E8)

by Matt

THE SITUATION ROOM
Anthony Fauci (KAM) & Deborah Birx (HEG) detail Covid-19 vaccination plan

— Ah yes, the fun of turning pandemic news into comedy! I barely remember this sketch so we’ll see how it trudges along. I will say, though, that cold opens like this… they’re certainly not made for durability. They burn out like a match—having served their purpose, arguably, when the episode aired, there’s now not a ton of splendor to examining the debris.
— Comparing the Pfizer vaccine to a PS5 is reeeealll 2020.
— The debut of Kate’s Anthony Fauci impression, presumably because Brad Pitt couldn’t get the wig back on after he ripped it off. It confuses me, really; I assumed part of the “point” of Kate playing crusty conservative politicians in male drag was to make fun of them and their values with the intrinsic idea of a young, openly-gay woman playing them (a slight idea, but one that has maybe some potency). But Fauci… we like Fauci. Why is Kate playing Fauci? The unwritten rule that Kate just needs to play every single person in politics is absolute poison.
— Also, she’s basically just doing the Giuliani voice. Couldn’t even try at a new angle, huh?
— Heidi is also here as Deborah Birx, and SNL at least has the common courtesy to wink at her relative obscurity: “And I am also the reason for the cheers.” I think she only does the impression this one time? It’s not super memorable, as with the rest of this, though I do like seeing Heidi be a focal point in a cold open on the level of Kate, as she certainly deserves it.
— Cutting to a real clip of Fauci making a terrible opening pitch at a baseball game in comparison to the underwhelming vaccine roll-out (incredibly funny clip, by the way—no credit to SNL for that) feels strangely like a joke more fitting for Weekend Update.
— I like some of the little jokes throughout here, like the regional variations of the vaccine and Fauci saying that his ultimate goal is just for everyone to forget who he is, because that’s a sign that he did his job. Really, the writing isn’t too atrocious, and there’s enough of a quick pace that it never feels too cumbersome. We’ve had some awful cold opens so far this season, so I suppose I’ll be relatively generous to this one as a step up.
STARS: ** 

MONOLOGUE
NYC natives host & PED share memories of growing up in the big city

— I think I’ll be the first and last person to ever say this: Timothée kinda sounds like Mike O’Brien.
— A surprising and cool little fact about how Timothée’s mother was a background extra in the classic “Massive Head Wound Harry” sketch. (“Yup! That’s my mom. She almost got spit on by Chris Farley.”) I always love when hosts share little, personal SNL connections in their monologues.
— I’ve never thought that Chloe’s impression sounds a lot like Timothée—something I’ll hit on a bit more later—but you can get little glimpses of accuracy whenever Timothée titters away from the cue cards or laughs.
— Suddenly, this becomes a surprise Drezen monologue as Timothée slinks behind the piano and rattles off some absurd little one-liners, something of a spiritual sequel to Harry Styles’ last season. It feels a bit less effective than Harry’s monologue, but he’s selling his strange childhood memories of a New York Christmastime/childhood to surprisingly sweet effect. (“Nothing like eating Cheetos on the F-train on Christmas Eve, mmm. You eat a handful, then you hold a pole, then you lick your fingers! I miss that!”)
— “Aaahhhhh, New York! The city so nice… they named it New York!”
— Pete walks in on Timothée’s monologue, making the first of many team-ups tonight. He does some good work here; it lets Pete rely on his stand-up instincts, and Drezen’s writing is surprisingly well-channeled through his voice.
— Overall, pretty charming.
STARS: ***½

A RONA FAMILY CHRISTMAS
uninfectious son (host) is the rebel in a family of coronaviruses

— I don’t remember being super hot on this sketch when it first aired, though knowing quite a few people enjoyed it I’ll try to keep an open mind.
— Nice to see the newbies getting a moment in the spotlight! It honestly feels sort of shocking to see Lauren getting any lines at all, even if they’re the sort of soft pandemic jokes that this sketch so far has been entirely predicated upon. Andrew also gets a nice moment where he reveals, somewhat bashfully, that he’s the covid that took down Tom Hanks. Isn’t it funny to look back on the early days where Andrew never got anything to do?
— Funny little pop-up cameo from Bowen and Chloe as two herpes neighbors: “I’m Oral and this is my wife, Genital.” “Please, call me Jen!”
— I like this turn with Timothée as a rebellious, ne’er-do-well son who scornfully drinks disinfectant and refuses to further the spread of the disease. It makes for a nice showcase of his acting ability, and like the “Marrying Ketchups” sketch from Adam Driver’s episode, there’s something that just pops about putting a strong dramatic actor into the most preposterous scenario possible and making them sell it. Cecily and Beck, too, are the perfect scene partners. 
— Melissa’s short appearance as Timothée’s grandmother, Spanish Influenza, offers a nice little jolt even if she doesn’t quite succeed in stealing the sketch.
— The turn with Beck saying, “WE WOULDN’T BE HERE WITHOUT TRUMP!” is adding some surprising bite to this mostly stupid (if in a self-aware way) sketch. Stuff like that definitely leaps out at me more than “Dancing With The SARS.”
— Also, Lauren has continued to be an active presence in this sketch?? I’m aghast. Good for her.
— As a whole, I think I’ve warmed up to this one a bit, if not a HUGE amount. Part of that is just how goddamn timely it is; it feels like it was designed for this moment in history only, and while there were still laughs to be had, it’s less of an evergreen comedy piece than an intriguing time capsule. 
STARS: ***½

LEXUS
on Christmas, jobless (BEB) impetuously surprises his family with a Lexus

— A great, swift reveal after the usual saccharine Lexus commercial setup of Heidi immediately reacting in bewilderment at the idea of her husband (Beck, SNL’s perpetual meathead middle-aged dad) buying her a new car without asking.
— I love Beck weakly trying to defend his purchase by spewing the sort of Lexus “December to Remember” language that these commercials always use, only for Heidi to shut him down immediately.
— The thing about a sketch like this is that it’s so overstuffed with priceless reveals and absurd turns that simply listing all of them in order would not just be excruciatingly boring, but a disservice to how briskly this sketch is paced with every new piece of information. There’s not a single move that falters, and I love how every little detail only serves to create more of a fracture in the family. Having Timothée there as their innocent son, too, is a masterstroke; watching his heart shatter at all of his father’s depressing truths lends it a strange, captivating realism which sells the insanity even more and keeps us invested.
— All of Beck’s little unsure looks as the people in his life call him out for his hidden problems are another subtle, ace little touch. I’ll admit that I don’t usually think the most highly of Beck’s tenure—he was an everyman that sort of emerged at the right time and seldom got to flaunt his absurdist, pre-SNL style once assigned that mold—but this is the sort of sketch that shows just how exceptional he could be.
— I know some people feel the beat with Mikey as Beck’s neighbor isn’t necessary, but I like it. It’s always nice seeing Mikey get roles that aren’t just as the audience surrogate, and him informing Beck’s family of all of the things he’s vented to him about (wanting to look cool in front of his son, being anxious about his wife cheating on him with everybody) is offering a strong surge of cringe comedy to end things on.
STARS: *****

THE DIONNE WARWICK TALK SHOW
The Dionne Warwick (EGN) Talk Show- Timothee Chalamet (CLF) stops by

— Ah, the first installment of this very fun recurring sketch and a great showcase for Ego!
— Right off the bat, Ego is killing it, even if all she’s done so far is laying the groundwork by reading real Dionne Warwick tweets. It’s one of those lazy tricks SNL keeps up its sleeves sometimes when it can’t figure out how to write in a character’s voice, but I think it’s fair game here; it catches the audience up on where this sketch came from (Dionne had just joined Twitter and was posting all sorts of gloriously flippant things) and the sketch is quick to move into crafting some snappy, original dialogue.
— Punkie appears as Dionne’s daughter and social media manager Brittani. She’s not given too much, but she sells her very sunny and patient demeanor in a legitimately charming sort of way.
— Timothée kicks off the wheel of impressions by playing Harry Styles, which I’m sure made a certain contingent of the Internet absolutely lose their shit
— Heh, the random Wendy Willams slams. Well-deserved.
— Andrew gets another of his trademark, early S46 “not really doing anything at all” roles here, playing a chef whose cooking segment gets completely overrun by Dionne singing. Soon, buddy… they’ll all know soon…
— I don’t want this review to be me just hitting up every single impression as it comes, but it’s fun watching how all of them give something new for Dionne to play off of; her asking Melissa’s “William Eyelash” (Billie Eilish) if she can place a hex on Wendy Williams, as well as immediately shooing away Pete’s Machine Gun Kelly (cathartic) are probably my favorite beats.
— Okay, yeah, so Chloe’s Timothée… I never really saw it. I always tend to have a hard time with Chloe’s impressions, to be honest. The best SNL impressionists have imbued their impressions with a unique sensibility that brings the people they’re impersonating to life as a comic character—think about Bill Hader or Phil Hartman. Chloe’s impressions tend to feel very mechanical and overacted without a ton of her personality shining through, if they feel accurate at all. At the very least, she has energy, and I’m glad the show restrained from doing one of those sketches where they cast her opposite of the real Timothée, and then he has to act different to make the impression look better.
— Dionne announcing for everyone to look under their seats, only for there to be absolutely nothing—“That’s right! I don’t owe y’all anything!”—is a perfect capper, balancing the irreverence of Ego’s impression with the legitimate love she has for Dionne’s acerbic social media presence.
— I’ve always felt that S46 was when Ego really came into full power as a shining light of hope for the future of the show, and landing these recurring sketches is one of the greatest reflections of that. Even though the future installments repeat the same basic beats, to perhaps not the greatest effect (until the real Dionne Warwick shows up, which is… adorable), it’s exciting to see the show’s newer talent given this sort of chance to become a part of the machine and define SNL. That’s how SNL should be, even if the power struggle persists.
STARS: ****

TINY HORSE
farmboy (host) serenades & frees his tiny horse; JIF cameo

— Our second pretape tonight casting Beck, Heidi, and Timothée as father, mother, and child. I guess it’s fair enough considering that Beck and Heidi probably have the best dramatic acting chops of the cast, but it still feels weirdly repetitive… fortunately, the sketch moves into different territory pretty quickly.
— It’s a very subtle choice, but I like the decision to have the set be obviously fake, with the starry sky being made of little LEDs. It makes the staging feel very dreamy and theatrical.
— Hilarious, bizarre reveal after the very serious set-up of Timothée’s claymation-animated tiny horse, whom he proceeds to lovingly serenade.
— Like the “Rona Family” sketch from earlier, we also get good use out of Timothée’s intensity; him tearfully screaming at Tiny Horse to “Git! Git out of here! Git!”, followed by a cut to a wide shot of Tiny Horse making very little distance because of his microscopic size, is probably the most memorable little beat of this whole sketch.
— The escalation of this sketch is a bit strange, but I do think it works well, unfolding into a quick dream sequence-y montage of Tiny Horse’s post-farm life (graduating top of his class, being on Fallon, marrying AOC). Things are loose, plot-wise, but loose in a very fun way that allows the premise to run down several strange little avenues… and really, I think that’s what Tiny Horse deserves. It’s a very pure, silly sort of piece, free of cynicism, and I think that plays to its strengths.
— To that point, the sketch actually has a very sweet ending, with Timothée deciding to let Tiny Horse go, because “he belongs to the world.” (Naturally, he rides away on a normal-sized horse.) Per writer Steven Castillo, Lorne advised him to “make it sweet at the end” rather than take a dark turn. It’s a great note, and it gives the sketch as a whole a nice, wholesome aura that feels rare in these modern years. It’s always easy to do something subversive and earn a shock laugh, but I dare SNL to relish in its moments of sweetness sometimes instead. Look at how well it works!
STARS: ****½

COMMERCIAL BUMPER

— Heh, I can see a little Tiny Horse standing there! Nice touch.

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Ghosts”

Blue:  Right from the start, this sounds like a Bruce Springsteen song.
— So far, Bruce has sung flat every time he reaches the melodic peak of each line (“coming in FROM the mystic far,” “stone and the GRAVEL in your voice,” etc.).
— Bruce’s backing vocalists aren’t blending very well.
— Bruce’s sense of pitch has improved a bit on the second verse, but it’s still not perfect.
— I’m glad that the third verse makes a slight change by having the band drop out while the vocalists sing the last line. I was starting to get bored by how similar all the verses were.
— Enjoying the fourth verse’s stripped back approach, especially the pretty piano part, but I’m also starting to long for a bridge– anything that changes up the melody.
— Saxophone solo! This is exactly what I expect from a Bruce Springsteen song. Unfortunately, I’m annoyed that the solo is just repeating the melody of the verse. It also sounds like Jake Clemons forgot to tune his instrument beforehand… 
— Bruce Springsteen’s music has never done much for me, and this song is more of the same.
STARS: ***

WEEKEND UPDATE
KAM again uses her Dr. Wayne Wenowdis persona as a means of self-therapy

MEV does her Dolly Parton impression instead of singing Christmas songs

— Politics, politics, politics! So topical! So little to say! I like Colin and Michael, I really do. They’re not always perfect, but as I’ve worked my way through some of the earlier seasons of the show (Chevy… Charles… Brian… Brad… Christopher…) I’ve reached the conclusion that they’re some of my favorite anchors to ever helm Update. It’s still inconsistent, but when was Update ever that good? They provide the laughs and relief you need in the given week, and if you’re lucky, their jokes might work all the years later. It’s all very comfy, if not the most exciting to break down.
— Why did they bring Dr. Wenodis back? Who wants to see Dr. Wenodis back? I mean hell, I liked the first installment when I saw it live, and it had the exact effect on me that it intended to: it surprised me. The entire bit is built on that surprise of Kate breaking, and ruminating on her mental health in a somewhat-personal, somewhat-cathartic way. Doing it again doesn’t even allow for any potential fun in swapped variables; it’s just the same damn thing except Kate is looser and more wild, which is definitely not a plus. Maybe the prop is funnier, I dunno, but it’s not enough to carry this. All this does is retroactively make the first one feel disingenuous and insincere as Kate and Colin “stifle” “laughter” and things “go off the rails.”
— Also, two snafus: for some reason, one of Kate’s “vaccines” doesn’t have water in it to squirt Colin which is real awkward, and then another one hits Colin’s mic and completely fucks up his audio for the rest of Update. I swear, they’ve destroyed so many mics with water over the past few seasons that it’s gotta be some weird side-mission for the writers.
— Mm, this second run of less political jokes isn’t that great either. Update’s not doing so hot this episode…
— “A new study by astronomers finds that the galaxy is ‘not as black as previously thought’ after it was seen dating a white lady.” Alright, we got a fun Che joke at least.
— Heh, Melissa gets a correspondent piece to talk about Christmas music and randomly comes out dressed like Dolly Parton, complete with her “regular, big ol’ things.”
— This premise is basically a redo of Melissa’s amazing Lady Gaga bit from S44, though with the addition of the great, condescending little one-liners to Colin that littered her “white male rage” piece last season. I know we just talked about repetitive recurring bits, but I can never be angry at Melissa getting a chance to show off more of her uncanny impressions (that Dolly is incredible), and she sells it so gleefully.
— Love that her rendition of “Jingle Bells” slowly turns into “Jolene.”
— Always love to hear “9 to 5,” too, which Melissa gets really into. It’s a good, cheerful note for this Update to end on, and it gives things a festive boost.
STARS: ***

HOLIDAY BAKING CHAMPIONSHIP
seasonal cakes are disgusting failures

— The third installment of this sketch. This is where the diminishing returns start to set in.
— It’s so strange to see Lauren playing one of the contestant roles, though I think that’s more because it feels strange to see the show giving her anything. She can’t sell this as well as someone like Leslie or Cecily is able to, which is fair enough because those are big shoes to fill. (I believe Sarah plays that interchangeable non-host contestant role next time, and it’s… a little better.)
— Uh-oh, her cake looks AWFUL!! Whoopsie!
— Yikes, Timothée’s anecdote about getting hit by a car (he got in a drunken fight with Lightning McQueen at Disneyworld) absolutely died with the audience.
— Oh nooo, Timothée’s cake looks bad too!! What has befallen this poor baking show??
— Serious sidenote: I do like the constant story beat of the host’s cakes coming to life, but it’s definitely a sign of how labored that beat is that after we’ve had cakes that begged to be killed or were possessed by Satan, this installment’s is… a puckering, wildly-shitting asshole. Not much of a pop to that one. Just kinda gross and politely “boundary-pushing.”
— Wowww, Heidi’s cake looks so beautiful! But… but what’s this?? The judges don’t care about it?? That’s so cruel and unexpected! What an outrage!!
— Okay, I do like Alex throwing to Kyle by saying, “I think this one’s yours to lose, pal!” The audience doesn’t pick it up, but it’s a fun one-liner.
— OMG, why is Kyle’s piece so randomly sexual?? And he just says that it is in a very nonchalant way?? This sketch is crazy!!
— Sarcastic comments aside, these sketches are too templated for their own good, and the show seems like it’s reached an impasse trying to figure out ways to top previous iterations. (Heck, the only reason the last one really worked was because Eddie Murphy was involved.) There’s too much of a sterile, assembly-line feel to this sketch, and it’s frustrating that it beat out more original ideas simply because there will always be some guaranteed audience reaction. It’s not offensive, but it’s just not interesting anymore. SNL needs to learn to quit when it’s ahead with its recurring pieces.
— Anyway, they do another one of these next season.
STARS: *½

RAP ROUNDTABLE
Questlove [real] can’t abide rappers (host) & (PED)

— A very popular sketch from this episode. I liked it at the time, though I can also see where other people’s complaints could come into play, so we’ll see what I think of it this go-around.
— Hey, it’s Questlove! I love how incredibly obvious it is that SNL’s just getting cameos from one floor down because you gotta adapt to pandemic times.
— I’m sure, as soon as Pete learned about Timothée’s history of dumb comedy raps (Dumb in a complimentary way or not? You decide), that their entire friendship was preordained. Fortunately, it feels like Timothée brings out a level of commitment within Pete that lets all of their team-ups in this episode flourish. The characterizations he and Timothée have aren’t especially nuanced, but they don’t have to be, and their chemistry as they moronically shout “yeet” and “skrrt” makes for some good, dumb fun.
— Sidenote: Guaplord and $mokeCheddaThaAssGetta are disconcertingly good SoundCloud rapper names, by which I mean so atrocious that they are perfect. Pete and Timothée nail the look, too—I hate these two already!
— Ego: “The two confident white boys raise an interesting point.”
— The main thing that holds this sketch back is simply that the format is so… staid. I get that this is a vaguely satirical venture, but I feel like there’s a better way to make a point out of Pete and Timothée’s failure to pay due diligence to the culture that created their precious rap music than having Questlove and Punkie’s Queen Latifah talk reverently about the genre and then react with very patient befuddlement at the yeeting and skrrting. Pete and Timothée do a lot to overcome the format and energize it (as does Ego’s expertly-played disapproval), though, so I’ll award them the credit as performers for pushing this sketch over.
— Funny detail that Timothée recognizes Questlove from appearing in a single episode of Yo Gabba Gabba! On a similar note, I like that their biggest inspirations were Fall Out Boy and the Kia Gerbils.
— Fairly memorable, awful performance of “Yeet” from Pete and Timothée, with a nice cathartic button of Questlove getting up and slapping both of them across the face. It’s a good place for this sketch to end.
STARS: ****

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “I’ll See You In My Dreams”

Blue: Very touching lyrics on the opening verse.
— I like that the verse ended a line earlier than I was expecting it to. That’s a good trick.
— I’m enjoying Bruce’s singing more on this song than on “Ghosts.”
— I also appreciate that there’s an actual guitar solo in this song. Though I don’t care much for Bruce’s music, I’ve always thought he was a great guitarist.
— Ha, I always get a kick out of unnecessary mic-sharing.
— Love Bruce’s unaccompanied “I’ll see you in my dreams” at the end of the song. Something about that is giving me the warm & fuzzy feelings.
STARS: ***

SPORTSMAX
Newsmax spin-off Sportsmax claims the Jets & Knicks are actually winners

— Political satire in this era of SNL—and I’m sure I’m gonna shock some people in saying this—is not one of the show’s strongsuits. So often it feels like SNL struggles to find any interesting angles, preferring to run down the checklist of news items in the given week if not just write a few different lines into an actual thing that happened. It’s exciting, then, that this episode has a surprisingly fun satirical piece that actually works by addressing something we’re all too familiar with—fucking Newsmax (brilliantly-named by real people)—and taking shots at its pathetic nature in a more imaginative way—advertising a new off-shoot channel called Sportsmax that espouses the greatness of the New York Jets.
— Beck is very good at playing a blowhard goober, so he folds into this sketch particularly well even if his portion feels a bit on-the-nose.
— Pete and Timothée make their third team-up of the night as two panelists who blab away while scarfing a big ol’ plate of cheese fries. It’s a great opportunity for Timothée to scream at the top of his lungs about the Jets as if channeling the spirit of Tim Robinson, which is the sort of energy I’ll always be down for in the 10-to-1 slot. 
— Not sure I understand the random photo edit of one of the non-kneeling football players having goat legs but… sure, it’s almost 1 AM.
— I could do without Kyle’s bit at Weathermax; Andrew and Punkie as two Knicks fans espousing the greatness of Jeremy Lin feels similarly expendable, though it’s always nice seeing them get some airtime. This sketch definitely could’ve ended sooner, but for all of its bloat, there’s still something to appreciate about the endeavor.
STARS: ***½

GOODNIGHTS

— Timothée fills an allotted 30 seconds of the goodnights with a message about being kind which… okay, fine, I can see some of the validity of Chloe’s impression, lol.

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— A very solid episode for this inconsistent season. Timothée lends the night a solid energy with his amiability and commitment, and it gives even the most uninteresting material a nice push. It’s also nice to see Ego and Melissa have some nice highlights, as well as offering more opportunities to the perpetually-underused Andrew and Punkie; it’s every time the show clings to its exhausting conventions (Kate’s two pieces, the tired baking championship sketch) that things lurch back.

MY PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
Lexus
Tiny Horse
The Dionne Warwick Talk Show
Rap Roundtable
Monologue
Sportsmax
A Rona Family Christmas
Weekend Update
The Situation Room
Holiday Baking Championship

TOMORROW
Kristen Wiig returns for the third or fourth time (depending on who you ask) for the Christmas episode, as covered by Anthony

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