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!

October 17, 2020 – Issa Rae / Justin Bieber (S46 E3)

by John

DUELING TOWN HALLS
Joe Biden (Jim Carrey) & Donald Trump (Alec Baldwin) town halls differ

— Any information I will be providing about dress rehearsal comes from the Standby Line podcast.
— Apologies in advance—this is going to be a long read. 
— I don’t care for the voiceover blatantly telling us what we are seeing and how we should feel about the people involved. 
— What makes this even more confusing than explaining details we don’t need explained is the decision to try to recapture moments from the Biden town hall that aren’t going to have any real impact if you did not watch, like the seating placement of various audience members. Is this for people who watched or people who didn’t watch? 
— It’s Fire Marshall Biden! Remember when that was a thing? Or an attempted thing, anyway?
— Jim Carrey gets some of the voice right, and the makeup people don’t do a bad job either, but once again I’m reminded that they had no real idea how to write Biden beyond “wacky, out of touch grandpa.” And of course, aviators and finger guns…very timely for 2012. 
— I’m not sure how to feel about the criticism of the Biden town hall voters, as I don’t want the show to pull punches, but there’s also a vibe of feeling they have to go after “both sides” even if the comedy isn’t there. 
— I have complained about this many times, and I’m going to complain again. The way that Mikey’s George and Kate’s Savannah are used—having these people speak in overly self-aware terms about who they are and what they are doing—takes away any reason for parody; it’s lazy, and suggests a real lack of respect for viewers . 
— I do like the visual of Alex with the glass of milk and blanket.
— Kate is wearing the actual suit Savannah wore in the town hall.
— Not entirely sure what to make of the segment with Savannah vs Trump. There are some good lines, some embarrassingly on-the-nose lines which can still amuse me slightly (like the “rest in power” to Epstein), and a mix of Kate going slightly overboard with Alec Baldwin being more focused than he had been in several years. 
— The return to Biden droning on, and Chris reacting to Biden droning on, is notable for the lack of real audience response (a label that stuck to this episode in particular in this batch of episodes). 
— One of the downsides of Kate playing so many leading political roles is I find myself distracted in trying to figure out who this impression reminds me of (it does not remind me very much of Savannah Guthrie). 
— The line where Trumpwin compares AAA to the KKK was, in dress, Trumpwin saying that the KKK is good at organizing. 
— The whole ramble from Trump about his one beautiful glass lung is not far off where they would take Trump under James Austin Johnson. I wish he’d been there to play this material. 
— As we move to the audience questions, Melissa has her first appearance of the season, and her last appearance of the night. As is often the case, she is setting up a laugh for someone else.
— And now we have Chloe playing some woman no one cared about by the time this aired. 
— Chloe is very spirited, but no one could save that “my parents are from Mrs. Maisel-vania” joke.
— Hello, Lauren Holt! She’s in a thankless role, with flat lines—get used to this for the rest of the season. She doesn’t do anything with this part, but I’m not sure how many could. Having her say “tee bee h” just makes me cringe, and comes across as a 65-year old millionaire writing a New York Times op-ed on kids these days…which basically describes Colin Jost.
— I know it’s something the real…person would do, but Trumpwin repeatedly mispronouncing “Savannah” is exhausting.
— Ego is also playing a presence no one cared about by the time the episode aired, but she manages to wring the first big laughs out of the crowd, and even (without really intending to) gets Baldwin to break, which is a good tension-reliever. 
— It’s Kamaya time!
— The decision to book Maya for the first half of the season was smart from a business point of view—she could help fill the void left behind by Aidy and Cecily (rather than relying on the rest of the non-Kate female cast who didn’t have star/media clout) as well as generate the natural publicity brought by her playing Kamala. 
— Unfortunately, while I understand the reason, that doesn’t make these Kamala appearances feel any less shoehorned. This one, where she just shows up to express “concern” about Ego’s character, has less of the excessive smugness and embarrassing meme overload of her other appearances, but also feels completely pointless. 
— It speaks volumes that we see her talking at us, while barely interacting with anyone around her (including Ego’s character, which was the whole reason she came onto the stage), and not interacting at all with her running mate. A big indication of just how stumped the show was at depicting these relationships, which never changes and likely never will…and also of just how unwilling or unable modern SNL is to depict relationships or interactions in political material.
— We return to increasingly perfunctory Biden appearances, this time doing a Mister Rogers homage. It’s very obvious to me they have nothing to say about Biden and the only reason they even included him instead of just focusing on Trump is because they cast Jim Carrey and had to get use out of him.
— Now we’re back to Trump and Savannah going all WWF, which had no proper buildup and sort of dies on air due to the more low-key audience response. 
Another checklist moment with Carrey-as-Biden-as-Bob-Ross. This is just stunt casting cosplay. Not only is it unnecessary, but also tonally incoherent, because the town hall audience was supportive of him in the last scene and now they’re back to seeing him as weird and nuts so we can get a Kenan Reacts moment the audience barely registers.
— I don’t mean to make it sound like the audience is completely dead. There are laughs, but never enough to sustain what is meant to be gut-busting material. When you aim your comedy to the rafters and you get some mild chuckles, the onscreen result suffers.
— Trump asking America if they’re better off than they were four years ago and a cartoon of America shouting “NO!” leaves me with mixed feelings. I appreciate the attempt at something different, but the cutesiness feels like something from Stephen Colbert’s talk show. 
— Trump blustering “just try to take me alive” didn’t make me laugh at the time, and now just makes my blood run cold…or it would if it weren’t done in such a half-assed way. This bastard ran for 13 minutes and they could not even come up with a proper ending!
— At the time of original airing, I was higher on this sketch than my lengthy comments above would indicate. The first two cold opens of the season were abysmal, with far less use of the larger cast, and absolutely no energy. While I would still put this cold open above those, the praise only goes so far. I went into this sketch assuming I would go with **, but on a second watch, I just don’t think it’s warranted. 
STARS: *½ 

OPENING CREDITS
— It took me awhile to notice when Kyle goes to look at the photos in the hallway, he’s looking at his own. A lovely touch of nostalgia.
— Ego’s shot is wonderful—it reminds me of something from the late ‘70s, and is a good match for what has so far been her strongest season. 
— I’ve always thought these credits suffer from the COVID element as well as coming right after an all-time best opener, but they are better than I realized at the time.

MONOLOGUE
host likens the four years of Insecure to being in high school

— The Hulu version of the episode (the one I am reviewing) has the dress version for the monologue. 
— As Issa mentions early on, she was originally meant to host in March 2020. I can’t imagine how different that episode would have been. 
— Good laugh when Issa claims to be the first black woman to host SNL, then roasts the audience for applauding her lie. 
— That the audience did believe her reminds you of just how few black women have hosted over the decades, although this season ends up being a high-water mark on that front.
— Issa’s material is familiar, but well-delivered. I like how she establishes an intimate connection with the audience, as if she is sharing stories with friends—it’s a very different approach to many standup hosts, who go for big, well-rehearsed sets with the audience expected to be in awe. 
— I remember some criticism of this monologue for nerves or not engaging with the audience. When I was watching the live show, I don’t remember being that alienated by said lack of engagement, but it’s been a few years and I can only go with this dress version. I think this is a natural, proper start to the night, and as I only knew Issa from some episodes of Black Lady Sketch Show, it left me feeling more confident about her as a host. 
STARS: ***½ 

BONJOUR HI!
Montreal morning news show has French Canadian quirks

— I have a faint memory of some fans assuming Mikey Day and Streeter Seidell were involved in writing this due to the “Mikey is confused and has questions” crutch. However, this was written by Sudi Green, Celeste Yim, Bowen Yang. I believe this is Celeste’s first piece to get on the air. 
— As always I invite any of the few people actually reading this to chime in on whether or not these accents are accurate. 
— It’s interesting to see Bowen and Kate paired up, because they are both similar in having a large number of vanity pieces you are more likely to enjoy if you are a big devotee of their work. If not, well…you’re just shrugging through this along with me.
— Issa has the usual generic host role as the plucky reporter, obsessed with Drake, but she’s giving me a few laughs, like her reminding herself Drake was only paralyzed on his TV show, and telling Mikey’s character to “go to town” on the bagel.
— Mikey gets a lot of criticism for his role in these types of sketches, often blamed for ruining them, but honestly, his sticking his tongue on the bagel and then saying, “I regret doing that on camera,” gives me my only real laugh of the sketch.
— As is often the case, the most innocuous pieces cause controversy, which Bowen responded to with grace and humor. This whole brouhaha was the only part of the sketch I remembered. Watching again, I can see why. I do appreciate the goofiness at a time when many needed the relief, but it’s just not for me.
STARS: ** 

5-HOUR EMPATHY
(BEB) won’t partake of the Black experience 5-Hour Empathy would provide

— This was originally in dress for the season premiere. 
— One of a number of attempts by SNL to tackle the George Floyd/racial justice protests.
— Beck has a number of strong pre-tapes this season, and while this isn’t one of the best, it’s a great example of just how much the show relied on his skillset by this point.
— The concept of this pre-tape is interesting, simultaneously in line with the show’s usual take (making fun of “liberal” whites) yet being framed in a way that doesn’t feel like something we’ve seen 50 times in the previous 3-4 seasons. The tone feels closer to In Living Color than SNL, especially Kenan’s narrator role.
— The reveal of Beck not actually caring about empathy beyond lip service feels somewhat rushed. 
— Very good brief turn from Heidi (like Beck, maybe the best pre-tape actor SNL has ever had) as his wife, who turns down the pill because being a woman is the same as racism. 
— Kenan’s reaction to that wasn’t really needed.
— There are various details in this I like (Beck’s character pretending to take the pill and being called out, trying to dial back when his wife asks if he’s upset about the football players kneeling).
— Beck’s character jumping out the window rather than taking the pill seems like it should be a strong ending…
— More telling-us-what-we-know narration from Kenan when Beck’s character jumps out the window. 
— And Ego pops in at the end to reinforce the point yet again. Why not just have her as the narrator?
— I’m trying to figure out just why this doesn’t work more for me than it does. I think the main reason is the lack of tension or proper pacing. We feel strangely uninvolved from what should be a volatile subject. The piece suffers from a certain deadness to me in spite of the best efforts of those involved.. I wish they had tried this in a live sketch format, where the rawness (and the smashing-through-window finale) would have been less cut by gloss. 
STARS: ***

FIRST DATE EXES
(host)’s eccentric Times Square exes interrupt her date with (CRR)

— A slice-of-life sketch, rare for modern SNL.
— This is an example of how being live can benefit some pieces. There’s a certain hesitancy here which adds to the believability of two people having their first date. The quieter audience adds something of an atmosphere for me as well..
— Chris is doing a good job toiling in the usual straight man part. 
— A part of me thinks Issa is somewhat wasted here, but she’s bringing charm and a grounded quality to her role.
— It’s somewhat forgotten now, due to Pete barely even appearing in his final season, but he did have a real spark back in his performances in 46, as shown to good effect here. 
— I’m always glad to see Bowen get a weirdo character part, as he does here, rather than more arch camp. A rarity. 
— More interplay with Bowen and Chris, including Chris asking Bowen to stop calling him “chocolate daddy,” appears in the dress version.
— More “titty meat” mentions than you will ever find anywhere else.
— Punkie has a great walk-on at the end that nearly steals the sketch.
— This gets a little bogged down near the end (when Issa’s character is talking about her job) but it is still a refreshing, offbeat construction. I wish I knew who wrote it. 
STARS: ****

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest & Chance The Rapper [real] perform “Holy”

Blue: Interesting to see Justin Bieber displaying a spiritual side.
— Justin is in fine voice.
— I like the piano chords at the start, and the playful rhythm change towards the end of the verse.
—The bass guitar sounds great!
— Hello, Chance the Rapper! I would say it’s nice to see him but unfortunately he isn’t adding much to this song.
— Chance and Justin’s voices don’t blend very well.
— Justin’s movements while Chance is rapping are so awkward, like he’s letting Chance have his moment but still wants the spotlight on him.
— I wish they had an actual gospel choir onstage singing the backing vocals. That would really enhance the moment.
STARS: ***

WEEKEND UPDATE
Donald Jr. (MID), Eric (ALM), Tiffany (CLF) don’t doubt pa Trump will win

alone in a pasture, AIB hasn’t found undecided voters

’80s cocaine wife Carla (HEG) bemoans the state of NYC nightlife

— The Hulu version again has a mix of dress and live.
— We start right off with Trump clips. Yay…
— Love Che shitting on his own network with that Cosby/Lauer/Trump photo.
— The joke about Biden and Trump being so bad that people are tempted by Kanye lands with a thud, for me as well as the audience (as Che acknowledges), because it just makes no sense—Kanye never had any real chance and was an afterthought the whole time. I get the feeling he just wanted to tell the Kennedy/Nixon/Little Richard joke, which might have gotten laughs in 1989, not 2020 (no wonder it feels like a Dennis Miller bit).
— The way Jost is reading his Rudy jokes comes off like he’s never seen them before, although I did like the “That’s Rudy” sitcom joke.
— Step right up for the last go-round of the Trump bros! 
— Written by Emma Clark, Mikey Day, Chloe Fineman, Alex Moffat, Jasmine Pierce, and Streeter Seidell.
— Even though these impressions had made fewer and fewer appearances over Trump’s Presidency, Alex and Mikey have lost little of what made them possibly the only worthwhile impressions of this fallow-on-paper-shallow-onscreen political period. They’re even in sync (mostly).
— Alex in particular is so endearing, whether in wearing the mask wrong, looking at Mikey’s hands, or drinking the hand sanitizer. “Drunk” Eric also gives Alex another very rare chance at the physical comedy he excels at. If you ask me why I am not critical of this impression while I am with Kate in similar roles, I would just say call me a hypocrite.
— In the live version, the hand sanitizer dripped on Alex’s microphone and screwed up his audio.
— Mikey, as always, is doing terrific straight man work as Don Jr. 
— For the first (and last) time, the brothers are joined by a guest.
— Chloe sounds a lot like Miley Cyrus, which is fitting, as when Tiffany made the news several days after this episode, some called for SNL to stunt cast Miley, either not knowing or caring that Chloe had just played the role.
— Chloe also sounds a bit like Goofy, which is fitting enough for the part.
— The jokes about Tiffany being “Notvanka” and keeping social distance from her father may be cheap, but they still amuse me.
— I enjoy the turn of Eric and Tiffany bonding over both blurting out the wrong thing. A rare example of Chloe and Alex getting to work together. 
— With that we say goodbye to the Trump siblings, aside from a few appearances from Mikey’s Don Jr (just one, really, as the other is a quick audio cameo in Chappelle’s last episode). That last appearance, in the fever dream known as the Ukraine telethon cold open, is closer to the relative reality of Don Jr, but much less effective. I’d say because no one watching ever cared about the real Don Jr, just as they never really believed Gerald Ford looked like Chevy Chase. At least we have these five seasons of a quality double act, and ideally, we’ll never be seeing them again. 
— Aidy! At the time, it was a real surprise to me to see Aidy pop up, as she was away filming the final season of Shrill, and I thought Cecily’s pre-taped appearance in the premiere was a one-off. 
— Written by Sudi Green, Fran Gillespie, Rob Klein. 
— Seeing a correspondent out in the wild, and for the first time in a long time, actually being out in a very different location rather than just on the street, is something I wish we got on Update more often. Or even just a few times a decade. 
— Aidy plays the mix of frustration and anger perfectly, and this is kept short and sweet.
— If you’re wondering why I have little to say about most of the jokes, it’s because many are similar to Che’s Neverland joke…hacky groaners.
— I did laugh at Jost’s attempt at a deep voice, followed by Che quickly responding, “Is that voice blackface?”
— The interplay between Jost and Che, and between them and the audience, still carries some of the more predictable material, like Jost chiding the audience for laughing too much when Che calls him a racist. 
— We’re finally getting into a good flow here with the jokes, less because of the wit and more because of how loopy Jost and Che are in delivering and reacting to them (like Che cracking up at the “beaks only” KFC photo). 
— Heidi, making her first of many appearances on Update this season.
— One thing I appreciate about Heidi at the desk this season is she retired the last of her old characters (Bailey Gismert) so you never knew what you were going to get..
— I’m seriously wondering if Heidi is the first correspondent to “do drugs” at the desk and not just reference them. Amazed we got through the ‘70s and ‘80s without this happening…
— The prop work here (a gun, a purse, a compact, a gun, and a play phone) feels much more expansive than usual. 
— The moment where Heidi cries out in pain and mimics being slapped around (complete with sound effects) gives this a stage show feel you rarely get with Update correspondents (similar to Bottle Boi a season earlier).
— At the time, there was some criticism of Heidi just doing a variation of her other Update characters (especially Angel). While I see the point, Heidi is still adding some unique touches, as well as tapping into her capabilities as a dramatic actress. 
— This isn’t quite as strong as I remember it being, but still, effective, a good sign of just how confident Heidi was this season, and a good way to close out Update. 
STARS: ****

YOUR VOICE CHICAGO
(host)’s vow to only back Black candidates is tested

— This sketch got some comparisons to “How’s He Doing,” the black-cast sketch which appeared a few times in the early ‘10s, but as you will see, the comparison is mostly surface level. 
— This starts out with a wink to Issa Rae’s viral “I’m rooting for everybody black,” comment, which isn’t a bad way to establish the concept, but the lack of audience response deflates the air from the tires ever-so-slightly.
— Kenan being a real pro goes without saying, but his excellence at navigation is key to making this work as well as it does.
— The audience is pretty much dead from the start, but to her credit, Issa just powers right through, and eventually, as we see the increasing amount of knots her character ties herself into, she does earn some laughs from the crowd.
— The part with Chris isn’t bad (even if it feels somewhat hollow), but it shuts off some of the momentum building up to that point. 
— I haven’t talked about Ego, but she’s doing strong support work, with great poise. Her ease here is one of those indications of just how important she would be to the show in a season where so much was in flux.
— We now cut to Maya’s other guest appearance of the night. As someone who has a very mixed opinion on Maya’s tenure as a cast member, I have to say that I truly do enjoy most of the cameos she made this season when not playing Kamala. She could play this role in her sleep, but she still has good energy. 
— I also appreciate seeing a beloved vet side-by-side with a featured player, one only in her third episode—such a contrast to the frequent know-your-place vibes the show exudes. 
— This is the sketch that truly sold me on Punkie. Going into the season, I assumed Punkie would be introduced via Update and win people over with some variation of her standup act, as Leslie, Pete, etc. did. Instead, she does not appear on Update until near the end of the season, and instead spends these early episodes having to make a fast impression in support. Her presence and ease with the camera under such difficult circumstances never really got enough credit, but I’m glad it at least got her asked back for another year. 
— The part where Issa’s character slowly and desperately manages to convince Ego’s character to support the Diamond and Silk knockoffs is probably my favorite part of this, especially when she just settles on saying they need employment. 
— The real Diamond and Silk reacted to this sketch. 
— After a steady buildup, the good joke at the end (Issa’s character, after “voting for everybody black” to pained effect, straight up says “Eff Kanye”) feels rushed, and gets no response from the audience, although it got a response from Kanye which goes about how you’d expect.. 
— I remember this sketch, more than any other of this episode (and possibly of the season) being singled out for the near-complete lack of audience support, with some using this to claim the sketch was bad, others saying the audience just didn’t understand the material. This is one of those occasions where I truly do wish the crowd had been more involved, and I think on some nights, they would have, but I’m going to try to grade in spite of them. The sketch had a few bumps, but overall I think it is Issa’s best showcase of the night, one with a good concept and mostly well-executed; I’d say it deserves a reevaluation. 
STARS: **** 

DANCER
hoping to impress musical guest, KYM & host demonstrate dance moves

— Written by Kyle Mooney and Will Stephen.
— You know Kyle has been on SNL for a long time when he has pre-tapes called “Dancer” andDancing”.
— At the time, I was pleasantly surprised to see Kyle and Issa teaming up for a pre-tape, as it felt very different from the increasingly narrowly-focused Kyle backstage pieces (that focus often being, “Kyle’s a loser.”). This is also something of an acknowledgment, intended or not, that both Issa and Kyle started out making online shorts around the same time and parlayed those into larger careers.
— Interesting how Justin Bieber’s SNL sketch journey has gone from appearing in several gross and bad pieces, to hosting a somewhat infamous episode, to only appearing in a few seconds of a pre-tape.
— Kyle’s horrible rendition of “Respect” is done just right.
— I like how Issa now goes from the straight observer of Kyle’s nonsense to jumping right in with her own nonsense. It’s a nice subversion without being treated as a subversion.
— A good turn into a fantasy sequence with Issa and Kyle in what looks like a combo of the “Scream” and “No Scrubs” videos. Kyle’s pre-tapes usually don’t indulge in these flights of fancy. 
— Glad to see Chance pop in briefly to remind us of his strong comedic skills. Up to the time of his arrival I wondered if this was one of those muted pre-tapes, as the audience was completely silent. 
— The end, with Andrew forcibly shutting down Kyle’s attempts to be cute for the camera, is an interesting meta piece on several levels, even more than I had remembered. This is the first time in the sketch they even acknowledge they are on camera, which adds a vaguely unsettling feel. 
— Andrew’s biggest role of the season (for a few more minutes, anyway). At the time, it felt like a big passing of the torch moment. Little did I realize that would not quite turn out as expected—Kyle would stay another season, but Andrew, rather than waiting his turn for any type of “weirdo” gap to open up in the cast, carved out his own place, often on a completely different sphere of the show to Kyle. 
— I am not overly fond of the tone and quality of a number of Kyle’s backstage pieces from season 44 on, but there are several exceptions. This is one of them. It’s more than a little underwritten, but the lo-fi vibes and offbeat use of the host draw me in. I think it holds up well enough on a repeat viewing. 
STARS: ***½

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Lonely”

John: At the time of original airing, I appreciated the backstage tour aspect of this performance, but until recently I did not realize Bieber was recreating the video for the song. The melancholic atmosphere works for me more than I would have expected. 
Blue: This is the second season in a row that’s featured a musical performance which opens with the artist singing from backstage. 
— Great shift from falsetto to a mixed register on the second verse.
— I never liked Justin Bieber, but if these lyrics are at all autobiographical, I’m starting to feel sympathy for him.
— Excellent vocal runs on the repetition of the pre-chorus.
— Huh, that was a remarkably short performance.
STARS: ***

JACK FLATTS
restaurant fans (BEB), (KYM), (AND), (KET) threaten governor kidnapping

— One of the infrequent live sketches of modern years to not have the host. 
— Melissa in a very rare, and in this case, thankless voiceover role. 
— I sometimes think of Beck/Kyle/Andrew as a golden trio we never got. By this time, Beck and Kyle were only a duo on special occasions, so the three of them together was—and is—a treat. I’m glad we get another trio piece for them coming up later this season.
— Opening on three men just bellowing, Will Ferrell-style, is one of the first strong signs of the show shifting away from the more female-dominated balance of recent seasons (helped by two of them being elsewhere, admittedly).
— The tone is also a huge jolt back to mid-late ‘90s SNL, which is jarring to experience in 2020.
— There’s something funny in Beck and Kyle screaming nonsense and then suddenly getting very quiet when it’s time to say, “I’ll kidnap the governor.”
— Apparently the mumbling was essentially inaudible in dress, due to sound issues. This explains why the Lovecraft Country sketch I will be reviewing later down the page has such weird audio problems.
— Beck whining about not liking masks because he “can’t see smiles” makes me laugh.
— Kenan’s performance in this is… maybe not something one should think too much about, but they don’t overdo the “Kenan reacts” mode, and he serves as a good contrast to Beck’s boisterousness. 
— Speaking of that—while Kyle and Andrew are very good here, this sketch is just made for Beck. Few, if any, in the cast over the decades could play man-children so perfectly.
— Nice to see Lauren pop up. At the time I was happy to see all the new people getting a chance to shine (as is often the case, that did not last very long). I just wish we’d gotten more of Lauren, Punkie and Andrew together
— Lauren weaves in and out of the sketch, but she still finds a certain core, helped by the understated bleakness of the waitress who is so desperate for money. Her resigned despair feels more “real” than the usual mode with a performer shouting out what their character is feeling and doing. 
— While Andrew was not “new” to the show, due to being a writer since season 43, just watch some Mike O’Brien (a fantastic writer and pre-tape performer) sketches from early season 39 to see how writers may not translate to the live format. Andrew is with three longtime vets, and he’s still giving a confident, charismatic performance, even while ranting nonsensically about George Washington wanting to be teased. 
— It’s notable that this is the sketch, so close to the end, that wakes the audience and mostly keeps their support. I’m not sure if it’s the constant switch from shouting to defensive muttering, or just the raw nature, but even when this goes on a minute or so too long, the audience doesn’t give up.
— I appreciate that this got on the air more than I love the sketch itself, but there’s still a great deal of energy, a throwback feel, a different use of cast, and just a general mirage of something far away from modern SNL. If this had just been trimmed a tad I think it would be wonderful. As it is, still good, with sparks of brilliance…and it’s always important to just let SNL be weird.
STARS: ****

EBAY
eBay is ready to address broken promises of pandemic self-betterment

— This was also in dress for the season premiere.
— Cecily voiceover, meaning she’s there even when she actually isn’t. 
— Great premise, likely relatable to a number of their viewers without trying too hard to seem relatable. 
— Ego, Heidi and Chris were all smart choices for their roles.
— After a night where some of Chris’ work in the sketches bordered on, “say comedy line, widen eyes,” I’m glad he gets a chance to show his mettle here. The moment where he says no one told him that playing the guitar hurts is my favorite part of the whole thing.
— Kind of neat to watch Heidi listening to herself (it sounds like her, anyway) in silly voice mode for “Selling Sunset.” 
— I don’t think this needed the extension of the “Prebay” section, but if we’re going to get another padded short, we could have done worse. 
— Cecily saying “bail” reminds me of the “Fashion Coward” pre-tape.
— Ego has the least to do of the three performers, but this is mollified by a wonderful visual image of her trying to bubble wrap a harp. You don’t usually get such great images in these fake ads. 
— I like the ass-covering “doesn’t apply to you if you worked or had kids,” closing. 
— This suffers from many of the same sins as most modern fake ads (explain, explain again…fill more time…), but is still a worthwhile watch that doesn’t play out the same beats as most pandemic material this season (often “lol alcoholism”) and allows for some quality performances from the players. 
STARS: ***½ 

GOODNIGHTS

— Issa pleading with people to vote really gets to me, mostly because it reminds me it feels like nothing ever changes, beyond getting worse. 
— Eerie seeing such a (relatively) sparse stage after many years of bloat.
— In dress, Pete came out still wearing the outfit he’d had on for the First Date sketch. He’s nowhere to be found here. 
— In dress, Bieber left as soon as Issa finished speaking. At least he stuck around this time.
— Tim Robinson and Zach Kanin are listed in the credits. No idea what they wrote, but I’ve seen some suggestion of “Jack Flatts,” which would make sense (especially with Beck’s involvement). 

CUT FOR TIME: SUNDAY NIGHT PLANS
host attempts to pitch convoluted Lovecraft Country at tailgate party

— Written by Sam Jay and Gary Richardson. 
— This is even more of a straight-up slice of life piece than the date sketch, so much so that it’s compelling watching various players who are usually not in this environment try to go through it (particularly Kenan, whose whole SNL career is a world away from this type of performance).
— The mentions of Lovecraft Country, which went from everywhere to nowhere (although it helped give us a host) remind me of how long ago 2020 feels.
— A pleasant surprise to have Ego playing a queer character without this being made into a punch line or a reason for the audience to gawk.
— Issa seems a little nervous, but the skittishness fits the character.
— Issa and Chris have a good back-and-forth in this. 
— Heidi’s very frail “white ally,” quickly shut down by Issa’s character, is played just right. 
— Some serious audio issues peppered through this, especially when Issa is trying to describe the show.
— It’s so refreshing to see attempts at character traits and relationships that aren’t just there for a punchline. Issa’s character is abrasive and the people around her react to that, just as real friends do, rather than staged conflicts for the sake of staged conflicts.
— I like the thread of Kenan’s character constantly drinking and going to get more beers, which, along with him constantly defending Issa’s character, has a good payoff.
— I can see why this was cut, much as I would have loved to have seen it as part of the episode. I’m just happy, and somewhat bewildered, that it was uploaded at all. 
— I’m grading this on a curve, somewhat, but as a last hurrah for Gary Richardson and Sam Jay before Jay’s departure for her own sketch show (they do have one more sketch that gets on but it’s a group effort in the Chappelle episode), as well as a heartbreakingly rare echo of the more reality-based material the show has lacked over the last 30 years, I feel like I have a right to do so.
STARS: ****½ 

OTHER DRESS REHEARSAL SKETCHES
— A pre-tape with Andrew, on a beach vacation, watching via Ring cam as Mikey, Pete and Chris break into his home. They, and Issa (as the Ring controller), question Andrew about why he isn’t spending more time with his family while on vacation, only for him to tell them his wife and kids have their own vacation. They start doing the limbo and encouraging him to come out of his shell. After they tell him to go talk to a girl on the beach, he thanks them, calling them his best friends and telling them to enjoy burgling his house, which they proceed to do. (I’m surprised this was never uploaded, as Issa’s presence means it can’t be used again) 
— Mikey and Ego as actors in a commercial, with Issa having to talk to them about their COVID tests. The setup was similar to SNL’s own testing processes. Melissa, Bowen and Heidi as techs who were just trained about COVID tests only 30 minutes earlier. Mikey and Ego would ask what was going on as the three of them had no idea what they were doing, did not wear their masks properly, didn’t put names on COVID tests, etc. The punchline is that they were doing a porn commercial for cereal. (This doesn’t sound great, but I’m sorry we never got a Bowen/Heidi/Melissa team-up, and never did.) 

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— Some fans I have a lot of respect for enjoy this episode and consider it a road not taken for the rest of the season, while others I have a lot of respect for were underwhelmed, or unable to feel involved due to the audience. My own opinion is more on the positive side, which is why I wanted to review it. While I don’t have any knockout grades, I think the episode takes a few risks and builds up a good flow from Update onward. I’m more positive about season 46 than some fans are, but I can’t deny that a number of episodes just feel empty. Much of this episode, for me, is full of creativity, even with quieter crowds. This also feels like one of the few episodes of the season that wants us to embrace all the newer cast and not just see them as placeholders or helpers.
— At the time these episodes aired, I was on something of a high horse if people felt that the quiet crowds hurt their viewing experience. Now that we’re a few years removed from that disorienting period (as an SNL fan and…just in general), I see that this wasn’t entirely fair on my part, and I can understand why viewers as well as the cast and crew may have felt demoralized. The episode got over enough for me that I didn’t mind the subdued atmosphere, but if this had been something on the level of that Elon Musk episode airing at this particular point in time in the season, I probably would have been in despair. 
— A common criticism of reviewers was the common criticism of many episodes—that the host was wasted. There are certainly many occasions where this is the case, but I think Issa got a few strong chances to use her comic voice, with another if you count “Lovecraft Country.” That’s more than a number of hosts tend to get, especially comedians in recent years. I hope she can come back and get even more chances. Maybe if that movie she did with Bill Hader ever comes out…? 

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


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
(CFT: Sunday Night Plans)
Your Voice Chicago
Jack Flatts
First Date Exes
Weekend Update
Dancer
eBay
Monologue
5-Hour Empathy
Bonjour Hi!
Dueling Town Halls 

TOMORROW
The one and only Kabir will be reviewing Adele/H.E.R.

March 7, 2020 – Daniel Craig / The Weeknd (S45 E15)

by Anthony

THE INGRAHAM ANGLE: CORONAVIRUS 
Elizabeth Warren [real] savors her successes

— Another day, another 9 minute SNL open that tries to shove every news story of that week into its runtime in a series of thin walk-ons. In this one’s defense at least, hoo boy was there a lot of news to cover this particular week. This is also a Drezgate piece, so hopefully it has a bit more of a sense of purpose than your typical Jost written cold open mush. 
— Obviously it’s very strange in hindsight to go back to these early, pre-lockdown days of COVID. Also sad to see how little some people have changed their tune a year and change later, just with slightly different wording…
— I’m no fan of Ingraham but this still feels like a pretty facile, even pretentious take on her to me. Hard to explain exactly why but it just doesn’t work for me at all. For one thing, I’m a big believer in ‘show don’t tell’, and this sketch just had Ingraham outright tell us she’s a fearmonger who uses racist dog whistles. 
— Kate’s Ingraham is actually a bit of a reverse Stefon/Cathy Ann, in that her first appearance was on Update but has since only been in sketches. In the case of Cathy Ann that made for a big improvement. Here? Eh…
— Unlike Kate’s Ingraham, Cecily’s Judge Jeanine always tends to amuse me, though she’s not given any material to write home about here (she’s racist, loud and drinks a lot—bold takes!)
— Similarly, the Trump sons are a fun pair of characters given nothing new to work with here. Eric’s declaration of “I’m a father!” as their segment concluded made me chuckle at least (as did Alex’s physicality when trying to mirror Mikey as Don Jr’s mannerisms, something that always gets me with these two).
— SNL brings back Darrell’s Chris Matthews after the real life Matthews’ firing. On the one hand I get this move, as Matthews was one of Darrell’s more fun political impressions, though it is one I’m not sure how many non SNL die-hards even remember.
— I do like Matthews immediately coming on and thinking this is still Hardball.
— I remember Che being on Hardball and one of the first things Matthews asked him was “who was the funniest black guy?” because the real-life Matthews is already a sketch character. 
— Round 3 of “fun impression, meh material”. 
— White chocolate gets cheers from the audience?! First off, it’s not that good guys. More importantly, you’re here to respond to the comedy, not give me your snack takes.
— Real-life Warren appears here, fresh off of dropping out of the presidential race. I remember some Bernie supporters were upset she made the time to appear here when she hadn’t endorsed him yet, because this is post-2016 America and every goddamn thing needs to cause an argument. 
— The material here is pretty soft, but that’s par for the course with a politician playing themselves on SNL. When Kate played Warren on the other hand, some kind of take beyond “gee golly” or whatever they had would have been nice. 
— Omg, Kate plays Ingraham AND Warren here?! Yass qwern, go off! (I wanna fit in with the other people who review SNL online for once.)
— So what was the premise here? It started as a piece mocking the right’s response to the initial outbreak of COVID in the US, which, fair enough. We get Judge Jeanine and the Trump sons on The Ingraham Angle and they all say dumb right-wing talking points about COVID. Bada bing, you got your fine if disposable cold open. But we keep going from there, so that the premise becomes “famous right-wing celebrities mock the left’s response to COVID, and also Chris Matthews shows up and prattles on and also two Elizabeth Warrens gee golly together”. There’s no wonder I barely remembered this going in outside the Warren cameo—what the hell is there to grab onto here? Its lukewarm leftovers of more successful prior bits with a dash of Kate hero worship seasoning that’s supposed to add spice but just leaves the whole thing tasting a little funky. I thought it’d do in a pinch, but honestly I’m ready to toss it and just order some takeout instead.
STARS: **

MONOLOGUE
in No Time To Die, James Bond (host) is gleeful & goofy over craps wins

— As far as I can tell, this was originally a Seiday pretape set to air in the middle of the show as usual, then was turned into a monologue with help from Stephen Castillo (I can’t find out if there was a full monologue during dress or if this change was made pre-show). I can see why this move was made, as this piece does a lot to sell Craig’s goofy, affable presence as host. 
— Craig on SNL is a funny presence. He has that kinda dorky dad energy pioneered by Buck Henry back in the day, but there’s an extra, almost alien-like quality to his work on the show that really intrigues me. He always seems to be playing things “off” in a way that seems both intentional and unintentional at the same time, contradictory as that may be. I dig it.
— Bit of a weak premise, (plus, ‘guy in movie who typically looks cool revealed as dork’ is a Seiday trope we’ve seen before and since) but as I previously mentioned, Craig is doing a lot to sell it with his cornball energy.
— Since I’ll be mean to her later coming up, I’ll point out Kate’s pretty fun here as the feisty old lady. This type of mugging Kate role always works better as part of an ensemble than when it’s supposed to anchor a sketch.
— Ditto what I just said about Kate for Kenan honestly. Still, he’s a ton of fun here, especially when he just starts chanting “you!” to Craig.
— I like some of the different angles of Bond and the crowd here, especially the bird’s eye shots when he’s gloating to the whole group. 
— This plays out predictably, but Craig carries it there the whole way with me. This is just pure dumb fun. It’s very slight but you can’t help but get caught up in the energy, which is another reason it was a good choice to move this up top (especially after the typically overlong open did its work to drain us). 
— Nice touch with Kenan not only popping up in the iconic Bond bullet shot, but coming out on stage with the real Craig at the end of his monologue. 
STARS: ****

THE SANDS OF MODESTO 
social distancing impacts soap opera interactions

— Written by James Anderson and Bryan Tucker. 
— In a move sadly all too typical of late era Kate, she comes in basically already having broken character. 
— Pretty easy humor here, mining early COVID paranoia for “everyone’s scared of germs now!” jokes, along with your typical soap parody goofery, though it’s just silly enough here to mostly work for me.
— “But you were killed in that plane crash.” “That’s what I was told—but I’m alive!”
— Kate is smirking her way through this whole sketch in a way that’s actively bringing it down for me. This is melodramatic material with an absurd bent and needs to be performed as such to work. Frank Drebin isn’t funny if he knows he’s an idiot, ya know? I just think of the way Jan or Jane or even Kristen on the right night would have played this, as soap actresses too in their own world to even realize anything funny was going on, and I know the sketch would be much stronger for it.
— Or maybe the problem is the writer? Cecily’s a hair too broad here for me as well, and she’s definitely someone capable of giving the type of performance I’m talking about. Maybe cast members just see Anderson’s name on a script and think “oh got it, Southern accent, mug eyes”. 
— A fight between Cecily and Kate being portrayed by two Barbie dolls is a funny touch. The use of stock footage in general throughout this piece is solid.
— This is real goofy stuff, but it just about works for me, even with Kate’s sloppy performance. I feel like I’m going to be using the phrase “dumb fun” a lot in this review, but hey, the world was about to shut down and I can’t blame these guys for not working out the tightest material this week.  
STARS: ***½

ON THE COUCH 
(KET), (CRR), (musical guest) doghoused in music video

— I love Kenan and Chris, but I’m pretty much always lukewarm on them in songs (I know, I gave Come Back Barack a 4.5; if the sketch is strong enough I can look past it). I’m pretty lax with impressions but for some reason I’m really snobbish about comedy songs. If you’re gonna do it, it should sound like a real song, dammit!
— Eh, this is kind of a 90’s stand-up ass premise.
— Sleeping on the couch ain’t even that bad! I honestly do it by accident more than I care to admit.
— There’s a bit where they attempt to do a crescendo of “sleeping on the couch”s similar to the one in “Jizz In My Pants”, but with much less success. “Jizz” was also smart enough to save that move for towards the end of the song.
— Cute dog.
— Pretty predictable response verse from the girls.
— When Melissa is saying all the ways Chris wronged her, we at least get some typically amusing Chris Redd dumb guy reactions.
— Ah, there’s Daniel and his endearingly lame American accent at least. His bit outside with The Weeknd is fun.
STARS: **½  

THE DEIRDRE SHOW
piqued Cookie (EGN) huffs during cooking segment

— Written by Ego and Drezgate, inspired by this moment with Patti Labelle on Tyra Banks’ show. 
— Ego is always immediately charming in these types of diva roles. So far, however, this sketch is doing little beyond having her rotely recreate the type of reactions Patti gave the chef in the real life clip. If anything, this piece is less funny as it ignores the comedy in the real clip of the chef not realizing the joke is on her.
— As per usual with modern SNL, I’m finding these audience reaction scenes unnecessary. Yeah, they establish that the audience has turned on Daniel’s character, but some off screen boos would accomplish the same thing (with about the same amount of laughs).
— As always, Ego knows how to deliver the line “pissing me off” just the right way. If I ever text someone that phrase, her intonation there is the exact one I have in mind.
— The twist of Ego’s character going to eat a strip of gum and actually eating the foil is okay, helped by some really funny lines from Ego: “It’s just gum. You know, shiny, tastes like coins, sparks when you chew it.”
— There wasn’t much to this, and it certainly doesn’t compare to some of the great Ego pieces we’ll get next season, but it was amusing enough, carried pretty much entirely by Ego’s effortless charm.
— A sequel to this was cut from dress from Season 47’s Rami Malek episode. I can’t say I’m too broken up by not getting another one of these, especially as Ego is on more solid ground with the show by that point and doesn’t need any bit of airtime she can get. Although I’d still take it over the Prince sketch from that episode.
STARS: ***

DEBBIE DOWNER WEDDING RECEPTION
at a wedding reception, pandemic context has Debbie Downer (RAD) in her element

— Ah, Debbie Downer. Listen, I love Rachel as much as the next guy, and like everyone I think that first installment is a ton of fun. It’s a perfect example of the type of chaos the live element can bring to SNL, with Rachel breaking character so hard she literally can’t continue the scene. While breaking on SNL can sometimes feel manufactured, it works in that sketch because you can tell Rachel is just genuinely losing it, in a way that doesn’t feel in any way forced. So how do you repeat the success of a piece like that? Well, as our friend Kate showed us with her iconic breaking sketch, you bring back the character in a series of different locations/situations that are all really just variations of that first one, and shove in moments designed to make people crack. It’s perfect, like a delicious, creamy, rich cake being force fed down your throat. Mmm, that’s some good sketch comedy fun. (Comparing comedy to food a lot in this review. Maybe I’m just preparing myself for “Salad”). 
— Paula Pell came back to write this. At least this topical setting (bumming people about COVID) is fitting for this character. Gives this sketch an interesting, possibly unintentional twist too where Debbie’s totally within her right to freak out about what she’s going on about for once. 
— “They say to forgo masks”—goddamn, March of 2020 feels like a million years ago.
— It’s subtle, but I like Debbie sort of joining in on the Table 9 chant. She’s trying.
— The COVID stuff is a decent attempt to bring Debbie Downer into 2020, but the #MeToo bit was a big miss for me.
— He doesn’t really get anything to do (shocker) but I like Alex’s annoyed performance, playing someone who’s clearly dealt with Debbie many times and is in no mood for it on his wedding day. 
— Everyone doing a Debbie style reaction shot to the mention of Trump feels pretty easy, as does the extra joke with Aidy as the stereotypical older white woman who loves Trump. It’s not like I need harsh political digs in my Debbie Downer sketches, but if we are going to go there, more than a literal sad trombone of a joke would be appreciated. 
— Not the worst Debbie Downer, but still about as pointless as any of them past the original felt. 
STARS: **½ 

MUSICAL GUEST INTRO
host wins the internet with his emphatic introduction for musical guest


Anthony: Haha, I guess I gotta talk about this now, huh? So Daniel’s intro for The Weeknd blew the fuck up in an entirely unexpected but very 2020 way. It really is kind of perfect for our modern times where you have to squint to even see what the zeitgeist could possibly be that an out of context intro for a musical guest became the thing from this season that the most people ended up seeing. I mean, there was a damn Times piece about it! I’ll link that here, since it goes in depth on the Twitter account/meme for those who have no clue what the hell I’m talking about. I’ll also link this Times piece, in which Craig charmingly learns of the meme’s existence (lot of plugs for struggling upstart The New York Times in this section of the review).

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Blinding Lights”

Blue: Humorously enough, as I type this review, it is currently the weekend. Thanks for reminding me, Daniel. 
— This stage set, full of dozens of flashing lights, is very appropriate for this song’s title.
— A truly addictive synth riff opens this song. Despite its frequent airplay, this is why I can never get sick of this song—it’s impossible to feel sad when hearing that riff.
— Interesting theatrical outfit The Weeknd has chosen. I’m not sure as to the significance of the broken nose, but he looks great.
— Wow, The Weeknd’s voice sounds exactly like it does on the recorded version of this song.
— Nice display of versatility from the keyboardist on stage right, who is now playing guitar. I wish he and the other keyboardist on stage left weren’t so close to the back, though- I want a better view of them as they play.
— Incredible melismatic vocals from The Weeknd.
— The flashing lights, The Weeknd’s red jacket and the keyboardists’ glittery suits are really appealing to my aesthetic sensibilities, and fit the song’s 80’s synthpop style very well.
Stars: ****

WEEKEND UPDATE 
bag ban raises slippery slope fears for plastic expert Bottle Boi (BOY)

The Weeknd Update- musical guest coughs despite saying “I feel fine”

Girl You Wish You Hadn’t Started A Conversation With prattles

— I see SNL continuing here to push the narrative that Bernie and Biden are basically the same, which no matter where you land on them feels misinformed at best.
— Oh man, speaking of shit that feels prehistoric now, we get jokes about Trump dry humping that flag.
— Che’s bringing back his nihilistic COVID influenced outlook from the previous Update, in a slightly more muted form here.
—  Bowen debuts a new character here, one with a very Sandler-esque Southern accent. Apparently this was cut from dress the previous week. 
— Bowen has a lot of energy here as usual but this material is super thin. There’s a couple laughs from the lines themselves (such as Bottle Boi wondering if we get rid of plastic, where will fish get their necklaces?) but for the most part any enjoyment I’m getting out of this is just from Bowen’s performance. 
— Okay, I did chuckle at “Greta ToonTown”.
— Interesting hearing a joke about the film the host is there to promote. In general, a bit eerie hearing all the stories this Update about things getting canceled due to COVID, knowing what was around the corner. 
— We get a return of the “Weeknd Update” bit from the last time he was on. It’s still cute, helped by knowing when to end.
— Cecily brings back GYWYHSACW (just give her a damn name, show) for the first time in almost 4 years.
— Right off the bat some fun interaction with Cecily and Che as she tries to force her hand down his throat.
— Really loved Colin “freak” Jost in his shades more than I probably should have.  
— This is nothing new for this character, but it’s working. It helps that it’s been so long since we’ve seen her, but all the normal elements (the Jost-style memorable one liners, the wonderfully dumb malaprops, Cecily’s perfectly keyed in annoying drunk girl performance) are working and in fine form here.
— The ending with Cecily donning a Momo mask was kind of dumb, but otherwise solid stuff here.
STARS: ***½ 

ACCENT COACH
host’s accent coach (BEB) wants Benoit Blanc to be cartoonishly southern

— Written by Beck with future cast member Andrew Dismukes. I remember this being a divisive piece (as a lot of vomit hose pieces can be), with me landing more on the side of being charmed by its goofiness than off put by it, though we’ll how true that remains this time around. 
— Fun premise, with Beck as the accent coach behind Craig’s, uh, eccentric southern accent in Knives Out.
— What is this look on Beck’s character? I guess it would make sense if he was being presented as some hick, but the character is clearly meant to be more sophisticated than that, so the outfit seems like a strange choice to me. You can say it’s his misinterpretation of what a Southerner would wear, but he establishes he doesn’t know what type of accent he’ll be doing before he enters. I don’t know, maybe I’m dumb and missing something, but the outfit doesn’t seem to have a purpose beyond “doesn’t Beck look funny like this?”
— Beck is an incredibly talented, funny guy, but he never got quite to the point where he could carry a sketch for me just on the basis of watching him goof around, which is about all this amounting to so far.
— Hooo boy, is this a lot more try-hard than I remembered…
— The “hot butt” stuff is another example of modern SNL thinking every line has to be a laugh line at the expense of the main premise (this is a bit of a problem with modern sketch in general; I had a real problem with it in Season 2 of I Think You Should Leave, for example).
—  Beck and Daniel start puking now for no discernable reason other than “comedy!” I’m an easy mark with the vomit hose, but c’mon now… 
— “You can PUKE on command?!” Mikey Day with his Mikey Day-ass lines….
— Yea, that was considerably worse than I remembered. I generally don’t have any issues with Beck on the show, but that felt like a really indulgent piece that did him no favors.
STARS: ** 

DEEP QUOTE GAME NIGHT
during a game night, (host) & (HEG) trade impossibly-obscure movie quotes

— Written by Heidi with Will Stephen. 
— Heidi’s amusing me right off the bat with her intense characterization here.
— The obvious building attraction between Heidi and Daniel is a lot of fun, though for the second time tonight Kate is actively dragging a sketch down by having such a loose performance. She’s supposed to be basically cuckolded here, and yet her choice of a reaction for her character is to smile and giggle at the whole thing? And I say choice, because, if these breaks aren’t intentional, they’re at the very least the result of a performer choosing to go into a scene without much commitment. Which is annoying enough in a sketch like “Sands of Modesto” that’s already centered around her, but even more so in a sketch like this, where the focal point is supposed to be another cast member (Heidi in this case) and not lil’ ol’ charming Kate. And Kate knows how much this piece means to Heidi, considering this was apparently a piece Heidi had had cut from numerous previous episodes, including Harbour and Driver. Getting this on was supposed to be entirely Heidi’s moment, and yet once again Kate had to make it about her. I do think some fans definitely do too much to vilify Kate, but stuff like this really annoys me.
— Kay, one more quick comment about Kate (I know, I know)—some may point out that Daniel breaks here too and I don’t give him as hard of a time, but A: he’s not a cast member on his 8th year (and one who’s frequently hailed as the best of the current cast, and a legend in the making) and B: he only breaks after his scene partner has been for basically the entirely of the scene already.
—  Not sure we needed two sets of couples here to react to Daniel and Heidi. They both seem to be getting the same type of lines. Their lines themselves are also a bit too of the “spelling out what’s weird here” variety y’all know I don’t care for. Still, they don’t distract too much from the meat of the sketch.
— Okay, I did get a laugh from Ego’s “yall, stop quoting Captain Phillips!” The girl can sell a line.
— I love that the quotes have expanded into other languages now, though again, could do without the Chris line spelling that out.
— Good “so wrong” laugh from Heidi’s clue of a cough being in reference to Philadelphia
— The pair kissing is a solid climax to this, though I can’t help but feel like we needed another beat or so. This was a very fun, sturdy little character sketch, but it felt a rewrite or two (and a much more locked in supporting performance from you-know-who) from being a true classic. 
STARS: ****

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest & Oneohtrix Point Never [real] perform “Scared To Live”

Anthony: You know Craig sounds even more relieved to see The Weeknd here, and yet you never see this one. Strange.
Blue: Another adherent to the “one upbeat song and one ballad” SNL format, I see.
— While “Blinding Lights” is clearly rooted in 80’s pop, and I’m hearing some of that in this song too, this also feels early 2000’s to me. There’s definitely a timelessness to it.
— I like the tone on that Juno-60 that Oneohtrix Point Never is playing.
— Another outstanding vocal performance from The Weeknd.
— Strong chorus, with The Weeknd singing in a higher register compared to the verses, and a second synth coming in to add some sweeping pads to the song.
— I love the synth noodling on the second verse. It feels a touch more modern than the rest of the song.
— Why not sing the pre-recorded vocals on the bridge? Is that because it’s (what appears to be) a sped-up sample from “Your Song” by Elton John?
— Great high notes from The Weeknd on the last chorus. The hints of vibrato in his voice, however, are bothering me- it’s not necessary for the song.
— Interesting tone overall to that song. The hopefulness of the music undercuts the sense of regret in the lyrics. It feels like a healthy way to look back on a relationship’s end, rather than another whiny moping breakup song.
STARS: ***

SALAD
sick-in-the-head Nadine (AIB) feeds her family inedible “overnight salad”

— A pretape I’ve always enjoyed, written by Aidy with Rob Klein. 
— The doo wop style melody to this is catchy. 
— Also really dig the set design. Yea, it’s pretty typical 50’s kitsch, but there’s something subtly off and claustrophobic about it (perhaps how it’s shot helps) that adds to the not-quite-right tone of the sketch before the reveal.
—  Delightfully nasty image as Aidy mashes her bare hands around in her gross salad concoction. 
— Obvious but still fun (and well-performed by Craig, even with his goofy American accent) reveal that the mess of a salad tastes terrible.
— Wonderfully dark bit where it’s revealed Aidy’s character has probably killed the family dog by feeding it her gnarly ass salad.
— Aidy’s performance here is perfectly off, and one of my favorites she’s given on the show. I’ve especially always loved her practically incomprehensible delivery of “maybe does he need a big scoop o’ mayo?”
— The ending felt a bit too abrupt, but otherwise, a very solid, dark pre tape.
STARS: ****½ 

GOODNIGHTS


IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— A very loose show, as can be expected given what was going on in the world at the time. As such, I preferred it then, when I really needed some dumb goof-a-loofs (as opposed to now, when everything is going so awesome I simply don’t need to laugh anymore) but it’s still a show that moves along charmingly enough, aided by Craig’s lovably odd energy. And hey, no Regine, so it’s an automatic improvement over his last episode, at least.

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


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
Salad
Monologue
Deep Quote Game Night
Sands of Modesto
Weekend Update
The Deirdre Show
On the Couch
Debbie Downer Wedding Reception
Accent Coach
The Ingraham Angle: Coronavirus

TOMORROW
John Krasinski and Dula Peep stop by to the world as we know it gets put on temporary (?) hold, and the show has to adapt in a way it never has before. Carson’s the first of our reviewers to look at a not-live (and often not even from New York) SNL, as the show goes At Home.  




December 7, 2019 – Jennifer Lopez / DaBaby (S45 E8)

by Anthony

NATO CAFETERIA 
Justin Trudeau (JIF) & others bully Donald Trump (Alec Baldwin) at NATO

— For those wondering, this open lasts 42 seconds before Fallon and Rudd walk in. Next week the cast might get a whole minute up top before some celebrity comes in to scoop up the spotlight.
— It’s somewhat ironic to have Rudd, a guy I’ve seen be funny but never really on SNL, paired with Fallon, a guy I’ve only seen be funny on SNL. 
— And then we get James Corden. I know the proper internet response here would be some mouth-foaming, Doug Walker-esque all-caps rant, but honestly Corden’s a guy I always found more simply lame than infuriating. Him and Fallon represent a whole lot of what I hate about current late night, but outside their talk shows the most they tend to inspire out of me is generally indifference. I did also like Corden in Doctor Who and Gavin & Stacey, which helps. 
— It should also be noted Corden actually acquits himself to the material pretty well here as well, coming off the most natural of the three. I particularly like when he tries to imitate Rudd and Fallon’s hair tussle. 
— Liked Mikey’s lame compliment of “I love your economies”.  
— Corden telling Mikey to “Brexit out of here” and Fallon responding by saying he’s being “so cringe” are both meant to be lame, and shit do they achieve that. 
— Trump comes in with a big tray of hamberders, cus hur hur hur.
— So the joke here is that Trump is like the loser kid in high school. Not the worst premise, but certainly not the best. Let’s see if we get some decent one liners at least, like these pieces can be occasionally good for.
— I like Alex’s quirky Latvian president.
— There’s a side bit going on here with Boris just barely fitting into the cool group. Normally I’d complain this feels like a hat on a hat, but honestly the Boris bits are all funnier than the Trump ones.
— Boy if that ain’t fitting that Kate gets to sit at the “cool kids’ table” with the celebrity cameos.  
— Kate’s Merkel is pretty much giving us the same shtick as always, down to the Obama crush 3 years after he left office. At least this isn’t one of her more insufferable political impressions (though your mileage may vary there). 
— Big fuckin’ eye roll at the “Impeach Me” sign gag (complete with 3 exclamation points to really hammer the desperation home).
— So this whole thing turns out to be an anti-bullying PSA from Melania, which in turn turns out to be a parody of a Peloton Ad? What are you trying to say, show?!
— Yea, we got a lot of the worst Trumpwin offenders here. Hack punchlines, pointless cameos, incoherent satire and “activism” that amounted to going “hey, isn’t this guy bad? Applaud us!!” Not a great sign when the highlight of your sketch is James Corden.
— Looking at my scheduled reviews for the next 2 seasons, this is actually my final episode with an appearance from Trumpwin. I can’t say I’m too sad to see him go. Baldwin was involved in a lot of iconic material from the show over the years, and was always a host who gave 100%, so its definitely unfortunate to see his time with the show end (I have to assume he’s not coming back any time soon, do to recent tragedies that neither I nor anyone in the comments are gonna talk about) with him giving such routinely lazy performances in service of such routinely lazy material. I don’t mean to harp on it too much in these reviews, but my beef with Trumpwin is basically my beef with Trump himself, just on a much smaller scale. For four years he was the face of an institution that, although deeply flawed, is one I care deeply about, and he spent that whole time making it look bad. Good riddance to both.
STARS: *½ 

MONOLOGUE
50 year-old host kicks with The Rockettes & wears her green Versace dress

— Jennifer Lopez is hot. You can pretty much skip the next 4 pieces since that’s about all they’ll give you (okay, that’s unfair to one of them, though we’ll get to that). 
— Obligatory mention of how the host is no longer with the person they mention to be their significant other in their monologue, which is so awkward since we’re all 16.
— There’s no real conceit to this other than J Lo bragging about how well things are going for her. The show tries to turn that into a comedic conceit, culminating in that dumbass moment where Beck’s head explodes because J Lo says she’s 50, but it just feels like the show blowing smoke up her ass (which I’m sure she’d want me to mention is a very famous ass) under the thin veil of irony. 
— Also, I’m sure I’m not the first to say this, but J Lo’s insistence on mentioning that she’s 50 makes her sound like some kinda Sexy Sally O’Malley.
— Now Lopez kicks off a rendition of “Santa Claus is Coming to Town”, complete with Rockette backing, building to a grand finale where it’s revealed she’s been wearing her iconic green Grammy’s dress under her tuxedo. It’s decent fluff, I suppose—certainly more tolerable than the first half of her monologue. 
STARS: **

SURPRISE HOME MAKEOVER 
home makeover program visits Matt Schatt & out-of-his-league wife (host)

— Here we get a return of a sketch from Mikey’s very first episode. I enjoyed that sketch, especially as an intro to Mikey, but it’s not one I needed to see returned to all these years later. It’s also never a good sign when the first real sketch of the night is a repeat of a one off from three years ago….
— Kenan’s character is named Becker Cheeks. Either commit to a joke name or don’t, guys.
— Bit of confusing chronology here as well, as Kenan is playing a different reporter than he did in the last sketch, and Mikey, while playing the same character, makes no mention of his previous marriage (other details, such as him having no penis and only testicles in the last sketch, are contradicted here as well).
— Thanks to John and Matt (not Schatt) for letting me know we did find out what happened to Margot Robbie’s character, but only in the form of a tweet from Mikey.
— Mikey: “I can not believe this is happening, I never get lucky like this”. Audience laughs. Kenan: “Oh, I’d say you get very lucky.” Audience murmurs. See Seiday, even the crowd is telling you you don’t need to explain these jokes to them! 
— Matt being really into Smurfs is kinda funny, though it feels like it could have been any random beat in the last sketch but it meant to be one of the bigger jokes of this piece.
— One thing I do prefer about this to the first sketch is the lack of a character like Cecily was playing in that one. She got some good straight man reactions there, but the fun of this piece is in everyone’s outsized reactions to the couple, so it doesn’t feel necessary to include a character who’s there to try and keep everyone on track. 
—  I did like the small joke of Mikey calling his rollerblades his “sports stuff”.
— Continuing my point from earlier, the Smurf Life tattoo feels like it’s meant to be the centerpiece gag of the sketch, and that just feels to me like it has so much less weight than his wife being a Kennedy or him having no genitalia. 
— Luckily we get Bowen here to add some excitement. Bowen can’t quite bring the energy as high as Leslie did in her fantastic intro from the first piece (“I got TWO THEORIES”) but he makes the proceedings a lot more fun, for sure.
— Bowen lunging at Mikey’s dick is certainly exciting, though as mentioned “average sized penis” just doesn’t feel like as consequential a beat as “no penis”.
— Like a lot of Seiday sketches from the past couple years this is hard to grade as it was a functional, well performed piece with some solid laugh lines that nevertheless gave off a very tired and frankly lazy feel. I’m just gonna stick the grade at the halfway point and call it a day.
STARS: **½ 

CHAD & JLO
host is unfathomably drawn toward pool boy Chad; Alex Rodriguez cameo

— Our first Chad of the season. I don’t hate this character (though I certainly never need to see him again) but I recall really not caring for his two Season 45 appearances. Let’s see if I’m warmer to this this time around. 
— Seiday get a lot of shit in certain fan circles, and while I think some of it is unfair, episodes like this, where they get the two sketches up top to repackage old sketches of theirs in slightly different colored wrapping, remind you those complaints do come from somewhere.
— This is giving me very little to talk about. Sometimes bad sketches can be fun to bash but this is just bad in such an uninteresting way. J Lo & especially Pete seem to be sleepwalking here, and the writing isn’t anything we haven’t already seen a million times in these Chads before.
— Amazing how unnatural A Rod can make only 5 words sound.
— The weakest Chad in my opinion. This one took the exact approach you’d expect out of this character and only got more predictable the longer it went on.
STARS: *½ 

THE CORPORAL 
knockout’s (host) sisters’ (KAM) & (AIB) schemes backfire in a 1955 movie

— Ah yes! This is easily one of my favorite sketches the team of Drezen/Gates/McKinnon/Bryant would ever do. 
— Great bit right off the bat as Kate and Aidy shout down J Lo to return to the attic. 
— At first glance, this is just another “isn’t J Lo hot??” sketch, but the writing is sharp enough here that I can look past that. 
— Similarly, these are the type of broad, chummy Kate and Aidy performances I tend to really not care for, but for whatever reason they work for me here. I guess the sort of vaudevillian nature of this piece allows them to go broader without it annoying me.  
— Love the runner with Kate and Aidy trying to kill each other with poorly disguised weapons (“Why, that’s a shotgun!” “Oh! So it is, I thought it was a Q-tip.”)
— The runner with Kate and Aidy trying and failing to make J Lo look ugly isn’t quite as strong but is still really fun.
— Nice little twist on the usual Kate shtick with Aidy being the one to get the “tee hee, this character is secretly into girls!” line.
— The lobster part is a nice bit of absurdity. Especially love Kate’s line to J Lo explaining this is how men look: “Yes, they’re small and they’re lobsters.”
— Another great bit of absurdity with Kate’s gunshots only succeeding in making J Lo’s dress strapless. 
— Beck comes in at the end here, getting what has to be one of the all-time great one-word roles on the show.  
— A very fun sketch that has always stood as one my favorite Kate/Aidy pairings. This isn’t high art by any means but it does exactly what it wants to do and does it with infectious energy. 
STARS: *****

THEM TRUMPS: RALLY 
at a rally, white audience turns on black First Family

— Continuing tonight’s trend of “shit we didn’t need to come back”, we get our third and final Them Trumps. 
— This one especially feels pointless to bring back—not only because it’s such a one-note sketch but also because Leslie, one of the sketch’s major players, isn’t even on the show anymore. 
— The background music for the intro is pretty well produced; I especially like the Travis Scott style autotuned “ooooh, them Trumps”. 
— Kenan’s Trump is acting all cocky in the face of danger, but ol’ Tony suspects there’s a big sneaky stinky subversion coming our way. Something in my gut.
— These sketches always feel halfway caught between being an Empire parody and a genuine attempt at satire, and never end up feeling like they hit their marks with either. The first one still managed to work since it had the element of surprise on its side, but by this third sketch, as alluded to above, I know the tricks. Rotely repeating them in a slightly different setting ain’t gonna cut it.
— I will say Kenan is always really fun in this role, at least. Also enjoy Chris as the Don Jr stand-in.
— “Make America Swag Again”—yeef.
— I thought we’d maybe get some kind of subversion of the subversion, but no—it was just the same sketch we saw the last 2 times.
STARS: **

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “BOP”

Anthony: Oh DaBaby, you truly ended up being as dumb as your name. I actually didn’t mind this guy for a while, as at least he’s one of the modern pop rappers who doesn’t sound like he’s falling asleep on the mic. Throw him on in the gym or the car and close your eyes (always advisable when driving) and you’ve got a decent B-tier Ludacris. Luckily, that type of raving endorsement makes it easy to dispose of the guy when he turns out to be a total shithead. 
Blue: A couple bars in, and I can say…I don’t think I’m going to like this.
— I feel so thrown off listening to the hype man while the camera is on DaBaby. Wish they’d pan out to show who’s talking.
— Not a fan of DaBaby’s deep, raspy voice. 
— “My girl got good kitty.” …No comment.
— DaBaby pretending to grab a phone from one of his backup dancers and then throwing it while saying “what the—” made me laugh.
— Speaking of the backup dancers, they’re doing a great job!
— Unexpected backflip and handsprings from one of the dancers! I think I can hear an audience member shouting “whoa!” at that (or it could be part of the recorded track).
— Now here comes a backup dancer walking on her hands… and twerking up a storm. Gotta admit… I genuinely find this impressive (not that I particularly enjoy seeing it).
— “What’s that? DaBaby brought the Jabbawockeez?” Yes, I guess he did bring the Jabbawockeez. Not that I’m familiar with them.
— The Jabbawockeez are not adding much to the choreography besides an interesting visual aesthetic, but I appreciate the hype man’s enthusiasm for them.
— Abrupt ending.
— Lol @ the big smiles on DaBaby and his hype man’s faces.
STARS: *½ (the song did nothing for me but the choreography was enjoyable)


WEEKEND UPDATE
Nancy Pelosi (KAM) offers passive-aggressive prayers for Donald Trump

when it comes to the holidays, Jules (BEB) sees things a little differently

— Nice, biting Catholic Church line from Jost. Pedophile priest jokes are so tacky at this point, but a good hearty “fuck you” to the church is always appreciated.
— Che’s food stamps rant was strong, and is one of those nice moments from him where you feel like he’s bringing something you’d wouldn’t have seen with any previous anchor.
— Kate does a bit as her Pelosi. She calls Jost “Breitbart Ryan Seacrest”, talks about how bad Trump is, makes a pee tape joke, and hopes Linday Graham has a black, gay baby. It was truly a revolutionary moment in comedy.
— Jules is a fun enough character, though it feels like a shade of Beck I’ve seen enough of that I’m not exactly going to praise him.
— Okay, Jules’ Black Friday/Friday line made me laugh more than it should have.
— The usual from Jules, but this character can at least provide enough solid lines that that’s not the worst thing.
— A good enough update overall, though I wasn’t exactly blown away by the correspondents—Pelosi particularly.
STARS: ***

HIP HOP CAROLERS 
(host) & other hip-hop carolers distract while musical guest robs family

— Hmm, the premise of a bunch of adults who do hip-hop carols doesn’t sound like it’ll do much for me, but let’s see.
— Ha, that has to be the first City High reference on network TV in about 20 years.
— Haha, wait, they’re taking the City High reference further with a full on Christmas themed parody of “What Would You Do?”?? I’ve always liked that song, so I appreciate this on some level, but no one remembers it.
— Ok, so the premise is they’re carolers who sing rap songs, and also the rap songs have had their lyrics changed to be about Christmas themed movies? This doesn’t even sound like the basis for a good Tweet, let alone a sketch. 
— Our next song parody is Pras’ “Ghetto Superstar”, which does feel more remembered than the City High song, at least. Too bad these lyrics are still doing nothing for me.
— Oh wait, the raps are just about Christmas now, not Christmas movies. Although we still get a throwaway mention of Home Alone, which the last song was a parody of. Not entirely sure what’s happening right now, to be honest.
— Ending with “Tha Crossroads”, a song I’d genuinely call one people remember. What a journey to get there. Once again though, the lyrics/performance do nothing for me. The joke with this one is how sloppy the performance itself gets, but at that point it just feels like what are we even doing here?
— Also, I know it’s not my job to pitch on these things, but I feel like replacing the “bone bone bone” intro with “ho ho ho” would work better than “pole pole pole”. I mean maybe the joke is meant to be how little the whole thing works, but then again I ask: what are we even doing here?
— The “I miss my Uncle Charles” part is so specific it makes me think that was just a backstage bit Kenan and Chris would do that’s been made into a sketch.
— DaBaby shows up to reveal he’s been robbing the family the whole time, a reveal that did a whole lotta nothing for me! And woof at that Robin Hood line.
— Speaking of “whole lotta nothing”, that would be a fitting subtitle for that sketch. Next. 
STARS: *

HOOPS 
(host) & (MEV) hawk large, round, golden, versatile earrings

— Yay, a rare Melissa showcase!
— Ha, these women’s names being “Gino’s Girlfriend” and “Her Cousin” are good ways of identifying their values.  
— As is typical for Drezgate affairs, lot of great one-liners here. Even in the initial spiel you get “made from 100% metal” and “will turn your ears the color of money”.
— Would cut out the part where they show all the words you can get inside your hoops. We just got a long list and that one had funnier details. 
— Enjoy Alex’s sleazy mob character. 
— This role isn’t exactly a stretch for Lopez, which is perhaps why this feels the most committed we’ve seen her all night. 
— Like Lopez describing babies as “very grabby people”. 
— Melissa co-wrote this with the Drezgate team, now responsible for my second above-average rating of the night. This feels typical of a lot of the two-hander, direct-to-camera sketches Kate & Aidy would do with that team around this time period. However, working with different performers here not only allows for fresher feeling central performances, it also allows Drezgate’s typically strong one-liners to pop even more since they’re not being held down by the weight of McKinnant’s indulgence.
STARS: ****½

POTTY PM
device lets (KYM) pee from bed, but female urination is a mystery

— My proud tradition of reviewing Kyle sketches with “potty” in their title continues. 
— Kyle’s voice is already naturally funny in a TV spokesman setting.
— Pretty fun visuals showing how the PottyPM will work. 
— Great turn with Kyle awkwardly unsure how his product would work with women, and gradually revealing he’s not very sure how women work in general.
— J Lo is really selling her increasing levels of discomfort well. I’d say this pre-tape and the live sketch before this stand as some of her best work on SNL.
— The visual of the PottyPM trying and failing to find an entry way into a woman’s body is really funny. I would have cut the visual off there though, before getting into the “Filipino tube” stuff. 
— J Lo’s smiley but stilted delivery of “yea, it’s fine” is especially strong.
— This feels a bit typical for Kyle, but it was well written enough, and really elevated by the work from Kyle and especially J Lo.
STARS: ****

WISCONSIN WOMEN
wild child (CLF) battles a bear outside a Wisconsin hardware store

— I remember absolutely hating this when it aired, but I feel like my SNL tastes have changed significantly since then and the stuff I end up hating the most now is the excessively bland stuff rather than the excessively weird, so we’ll see how I feel this time around.
— Bit of a direction mishap, as the camera awkwardly zooms in on Cecily, Kate & J Lo when Heidi is first talking at the top of the scene.
— Someone from Wisconsin or the general Midwest can attest to the strength of the ladies’ Wisconsin accents, but they don’t sound great to me.
— Hmm, about a minute in and this is doing very little for me. The audience seems to agree. There isn’t really a premise so far, other than Kate and Cecily (and J Lo) getting to be “weird”.
— Really not sure what to make of Chloe’s character.
— Chloe’s character is now getting tossed around the stage like a doll (and in fact, is literally now a doll), which feels less like a culmination of anything that happened in the sketch and more like something crazy happening because The Big Book of How To Make Air said that’s what you need at the end of a sketch.
— Another total dud tonight. That just felt like watching these 3 ladies fuck around for 3 minutes before a Chloe doll got slammed into a wall in a desperate attempt to make it seem like any of this had a point.
STARS: *

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Suge”

Blue: This track sounds more exciting than the one from the first performance.
— Already I’m thinking “why not sing the pre-recorded vocals?” but the vocals that DaBaby isn’t covering sound live… hm…
— Ahh, and now DaBaby’s hype man has appeared to show that he’s the one doing the vocals.
— Watching two of the Jabbawockeez mess around with the dude behind DaBaby while he’s rapping, is proving to be 1. Very distracting and 2. More entertaining than DaBaby’s rapping.
— Really, they had to bring the twerking hand-stander back only for DaBaby to do the EXACT SAME clapping gestures around her?
— It looks like DaBaby might be having trouble getting his headset mic to stay on.
— I like the dance-off that’s now occurring to the side of the stage. Looks like a bunch of friends hanging out..
— As for the song: forgettable. At least the dancing was slightly entertaining, although not as much as in the first performance.
STARS: *

BARRY’S BOOTCAMP
hyper (BOY), (host), (CES), (BEB), (HEG) try out to be boot camp trainers

— Interesting to see this brought back so soon after the Harbour episode. Considering, however, that these are co-written by Bowen, it makes sense he’d want to capitalize on something from his first set of episodes that did so well.
— There’s also another connection here to the Harbour sketch, as his SoulCycle instructor there mentions he was cut out of Hustlers
— These are one of those line-arama sketches that I could never describe in glowing terms but are always a chance for some memorable quotes and performances.
— Bowen makes an OJ joke, surely making Norm proud. 
— I like J Lo’s “obstacles” she had to overcome just being that she was once a baby.
— Ego is playing them well, but not sure if I need these asides with her being disgusted with Mikey’s character. It seems like yet another case of modern SNL trying to cram jokes into every corner of a sketch, which always just makes them seem less confident in their core idea. 
— Apparently Mikey had the role opposite Ego in the first installment of this, but it went to Alex when he lost his voice. Considering Alex and Ego’s chemistry I’d have kept him in this installment over Mikey. 
— Cecily’s performance here is another case of “this is fine, but I’ve seen you do it so many times”. Same for Beck. 
— Lame dyslexia joke.
— I do kinda like Heidi as a woman fully ok with her lack of agency. 
— Bowen’s fun here, but nowhere is he stealing the scene for me like he did with “gay racism” rant last time.
— Just like last time I didn’t really care for the ending. 
STARS: ***

GOODNIGHTS

— DaBaby being such a goober here would be appreciated if he wasn’t such a genuine goober. 

IMMEDIATE POST SHOW THOUGHTS
— While not without its highlights, this was a week that found the show mostly spinning its wheels and delivering a series of sketches that looked a whole lot like a bunch of other sketches we’ve gotten over the years. While that isn’t inherently a bad thing (the beats of The Corporal and PottyPM both felt familiar to their leads and managed to make things work), so much of the material tonight just ended up feeling warmed over and tired (think of how often I used a variation on the phrase “we’ve seen this before”). Don’t be fooled by the rocks that it got, this is the same SNL from the block (that block being Rockefeller Plaza).

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


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
The Corporal 
Hoops
PottyPM
Weekend Update
Barry’s Bootcamp
Surprise Home Makeover
Them Trumps
Monologue 
NATO Cafeteria 
Chad & JLO
Wisconsin Women
Hip Hop Carolers 

TOMORROW
From J Lo to ScarJo, as Vax Novier covers what I’d consider Scarlett Johansson’s best episode (not that it had much competition).

May 18, 2019 – Paul Rudd / DJ Khaled (S44 E21)

by Vax Novier

DON’T STOP ME NOW
enablers back Donald Trump’s (Alec Baldwin) “Don’t Stop Me Now” directive

— This opening is the closest, I believe, we ever got to having an address to the nation from the oval office with Trumpwin.
— An odd turn with the Trump cabinet singing a variation of Queen’s “Don’t Stop Me Now”. Apparently continuing the show’s recent tradition of trying to make the season finale cold open feel special by adding a musical touch.
— This ends up being the last appearance of Aidy’s Sarah Huckabee Sanders. She had one of the more tolerable impressions of the Trump administration, and I always felt that it was the thing that raised her profile towards becoming one of the show’s leading players.
— We get an appearance from Kate’s Giuliani. Oh I’m sorry, Wilbur Ross! Kate’s male politicians are so damn interchangeable that it doesn’t matter who she’s playing.
— They’ve really gone back and forth over the years on how Cecily’s Melania is portrayed, going between a hapless victim and proudly supporting Trump (the latter of which is on display here). You could argue the shift came after wearing her “I Really Don’t Care, Do U” jacket several months earlier, but earlier sketches, like the Trump pieces with Taran, presented Melania as completely supportive.
— I finally got a good laugh from Alex’s reliable Eric Trump joining in, only to sing The Muppet Show theme song.
— Robert De Niro appears yet again, and it might be his best appearance by default since it was short enough that he couldn’t butcher any of his lines. Thankfully, this ends up being his last Mueller cameo. The same can’t be said for Trumpwin, unfortunately, as Alec, once again, boasted over the summer that he was retiring the role only to return after claiming that Lorne convinced him the audience demands his impression!?!
— The musical number is coming off very stiff and restrained, instead of the epic performance the show wants it to be.
— And we end on the first of many references tonight that this is, in fact, the season finale as Trumpwin implores the viewers to “tune in next season to see who lives and who dies.” This also serves as a reference to both the general finale trope and Season 11’s infamous closer.
STARS: **

MONOLOGUE
host describes his history with SNL in the form of a best man’s speech

— Paul shares that he’s thrilled to be hosting “the most anticipated finale of this weekend”. A reference to the upcoming Game of Thrones finale that did not age too well. Even with an unmemorable musical guest this time around, the tradition of Paul being overshadowed finds a way to continue.
— Good conceit of Paul giving SNL a best man speech.
— Probably the best use of the Vogelchecks as Paul discusses how he and the show made out a couple times.
— Funny story about Paul witnessing the first show in ‘75.
— A charming monologue that Paul handled pretty well.
STARS: ***½

A JOURNEY THROUGH TIME
Ms. Rafferty was beset by hominids when she traveled back in time

— Not a great sign of confidence, and a waste of Paul, to start off with this retread. It’s a chore to get through these since nothing will top the classic first instalment.
— It felt like they were attempting to reveal Ms. Rafferty by staying on that two shot for a while, even though it’s obvious what sketch this is by having the same exact setup every time. 
— You can really decipher the copy-and-paste template by this point, only replacing the event that occurred, the euphemisms Kate uses, and Mikey in Bobby Moynihan’s role midway through. 
— This is so by the numbers, I’ve spent my time watching it thinking about a hypothetical sketch that explores the dynamic between Ms. Rafferty and Cecily’s character after they’ve experienced multiple supernatural events together. It would actually mix things up for once.
— Anyway, this completely washed over me. Good riddance to the character!
STARS: *

GRACE AND FRANKIE RAP
PED & host rap about favorite show Grace & Frankie; Jacob Anderson cameo

— Pete makes a tongue-in-cheek reference to the past year he’s had, saying “I really don’t like to talk about my personal life. I don’t like that attention.”, followed by Kenan giving a dirty look.
— I liked Kenan going “You know nothing Pete Davidson.” when it’s clear Pete’s Game of Thrones knowledge is limited.
— Great turn with the rap becoming about Grace and Frankie.
— DJ Khaled’s presence is very unnecessary (heh, you could say that about the musical performances too).
— Funny inside reference with Paul’s favorite Grace and Frankie season being the 4th when Lisa Kudrow guest starred.
— Lily Tomlin and Jane Fonda make a cameo in a separate insert. It’s wild that this is Lily’s first appearance on the show in over 35 years, and this is what it took to get her on again.
STARS: ***

WHAT’S WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE
dim contestants make erroneous guesses

— The debut of this recurring gameshow.
— Pete: “I didn’t come here to make friends, but I’d like it to happen.”
— I laughed at Paul bluntly stating love was missing from the picture.
— An oh so wrong laugh from Pete’s guess for the mirror picture.
— Kenan’s mic starts to give feedback when he breaks after Aidy refers to the desk calendar as a “date tent”.
— Paul finally getting an answer right received applause from the audience for some reason.
— A decent ending to a consistently funny string of one-liners. It worked best as a one-off, but there’s still some entertainment found in the sequels.
STARS: ***½

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest hypes performances

Lil Wayne & Big Sean [real] perform “Jealous”

Jeremih & Meek Mill & Lil Baby & J Balvin [real] perform “You Stay”

Blue: “They said I would never do SNL!” I wish they’d been right.
— Welcome back, Lil Wayne. Certainly weren’t missing you after your earlier performance this season. Still, this could be interesting. Like a round of SNL All Stars: Musical Guest Edition.
— The way DJ Khaled keeps interjecting random call-outs while Lil Wayne is performing reminds me of a guy who always needs to have the last word in a conversation. His presence is so unnecessary.
— Oh my god, that enthusiastic shout of “IPAD!!” I haven’t seen a performance this unintentionally hilarious since Kanye’s season opener. I guess it’s a fitting bookend…?
— Our soon-to-be-final instance this season of “why not sing the pre-recorded vocals?”
— Here comes Big Sean to sing his verse of “Jealous.” As little as the song has been doing for me, I do have to say I like his voice a lot.
— “Another one!” How ‘bout we don’t and say we did?
— Here comes Jeremih, who has a decent voice. Too bad DJ Khaled’s aggressive call-outs are destroying any amount of interest I might have had in the song.
— Hello, Meek Mill! Another familiar face from earlier this season
— Wish I had the isolated vocals from DJ Khaled’s mic; they’re rife for memetic purposes. “WHAT ELSE? WHAT ELSE? ROLLS ROYCE!”
— I actually don’t think I’d mind this song if it weren’t for DJ Khaled. Meek Mill’s verse is pleasant enough, if nothing special.
— Here comes ANOTHER ONE in the form of Lil Baby.
— Because I’m lost for words regarding the actual performance, I gotta point out that I like the way the stage looks. The lighting is great and I like the elevated X shape that the performers are standing on.
— Yet ANOTHER ONE in the form of J Balvin? That’s a lot of guest performers.
— Oh god, DJ Khaled repeating “Summer starts now!” at the end… he really did need to have the last word.
STARS: *

WEEKEND UPDATE
surprise about subpoenas causes Jeanine Pirro (CES) to repeatedly wet COJ

upset about Alabama’s abortion law, LEJ asserts control over her body

— The opening cheers go on longer than usual, causing Colin to jokingly chide the audience as Michael laughs it off.
— For the recurring bit of commenting on the appearance of political figures, we get John Bolton as the “Islamaphobic Lorax” plus Jared Kushner and Stephen Miller having “resting evil face”. I get that it’s an endless outlet for jokes to keep coming back to, but it can feel thin and lazy when it’s done nearly every week.
— The return of Cecily’s Jeanine Pirro after her noteworthy piece two months prior.
— A good way to top Pirro’s overreactions from the tumbles by introducing the wine element.
— I’m loving the escalation to the bit with Pirro initially doing a spit take, then spilling the rest of the drink over “Colin Jessica Jost!” after he waits for her to finish the sip, and finally, Michael giving Pirro an extra drink so she can spill it on Colin, to which she replies, “Thank you Kenan!”
— A terrific final beat of Colin holding Pirro’s arm, only for her to soak him with the other glass that was refilled under the desk.
— And now Colin is completely drenched for the rest of this Update. It’s funny to think, in retrospect, that this could be the reason he had a different suit jacket for Season 45.
— Michael cracks himself up over that Saw/Seent joke.
— The bi-anuual joke swap officially becomes a staple, replacing the former tradition of reading their favorite jokes that were cut.
— Hilarious bit with Colin cowering after a particularly touchy joke on “Chimpanzee Culture” followed by Michael innocently responding “I wouldn’t have said that.”
— Classic part with Colin instantly aware that his next joke was going to be racist based on the accompanying MLK graphic.
— An excellent ending to another standout joke swap with a defeated Colin responding “You’re gonna get me murdered!” to that last joke, then lampshading the terrible transition into the following abortion commentary.
— Leslie Jones is just now appearing in what ends up being her final episode.
— A very powerful speech being given about the Alabama abortion ban, and Leslie is commanding the stage! It may feel like clapter on the surface, but it was something that really needed to be addressed in the moment.
— Funny interjection with Colin attempting to ally only for Leslie to call him a “flat white privileged latte!”
— A fantastic commentary from Leslie, that becomes more poignant as her last one.
STARS: ****½

MUSIC BOX
shopkeeper (host) helps (KYM) & (CES) recall song about a farty ballerina

— Starting off with a throwaway bit about Kyle having a drinking problem.
— Kyle’s comments to the daughter on how she’s bad at ballet are working better than they would by having an actual child in the role.
— Yet another rendition of the tired “What’s this song?! Oh wait, I know it!” concept. You could argue that there’s some comedy to be found in the weird, obscure song, but this is just dumb, and not in the ‘so stupid, it’s ironic” kind of way they’re going for.
— Kenan’s walk-on as Jordan Peele (?) feels forced since the lack of setup combined with his vague, yet familiar look makes it too ambiguous to resonate.
— And we end on a random twist of this being an episode of The Twilight Zone.
— Apart from some funny lines in the beginning, this felt like time filler using a repetitive format that rarely ever works.
STARS: *½

THE VIEW
panelists fawn over Pete Buttigieg (host) & his husband (BEB)

— The second and final sketch for this new edition of The View (a.k.a. View 3.0) due to Leslie’s departure.
— Funny how one of the topics in the first instalment was about Paul Rudd turning 50, and then they bring it back in the episode he hosts.
— Cecily-as-Abby-Huntsman, after being misnamed Amy “Thanks [Whoopi]! It’s Abby, but I can change it.”
— Interesting to see Paul as Pete Butteigieg here before Colin Jost’s portrayal the following season This doesn’t stop him from making a political impression cameo that year, however.
— Paul’s Butteigieg getting asked if he’s gay followed by a chyron on the screen with just the word “Gay” provided a light chuckle.
— A couple technical gaffes throughout this sketch such as an awkward silence before cutting to Aidy reacting, and the music cue of LeAnn Rimes “I Need You” starting late causing the fawning over Biden sequence to be mistimed. 
STARS: **½

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest hypes more performances

SZA [real] performs “Just Us”

Meek Mill [real] performs “Weather The Storm”

John Legend [real] performs “Higher”

Blue: Interesting chatter heard in the background of Paul’s introduction. Sounds like someone forgot to turn their mic off.
— What the hell happened at the start? After DJ Khaled’s “Another one!” cue, it sounded like the sound engineer started rolling the track from the previous song, only for DJ Khaled to cut it off again, and only then did the OTHER ONE actually start.. That seemed like some sort of pre-planned bit that fell totally flat.
— The piano onstage rolls around to reveal SZA! Having enjoyed her performance last season, I’m hoping her presence will outweigh DJ Khaled’s.
— “SING IT GIRL!” What do you think she’s trying to do?
— Feel like I should be playing a drinking game and have ANOTHER ONE every time I hear ANOTHER ONE. Maybe it would make this more bearable.
— “You sing like an angel!” Y’know, that’s the first thing DJ Khaled has said that I can get down with. SZA was awesome. I loved her energy and she actually made an effort to acknowledge DJ Khaled onstage, as if they were singing a duet.
— After an all-too-brief verse, Meek Mill comes in to replace SZA.
— This… isn’t bad. I’m really liking Meek’s rap, and the callouts from DJ Khaled actually fit in here.
— And who did they save for the grand finale of SNL’s All Stars: Musical Guest Edition? John Legend! (Who had actually never been on SNL before.)
— John is in fine voice, which is unfortunately making DJ Khaled’s call-outs sound even more out of place.
— Cool moment at the end where all the guest performers gather onstage while DJ Khaled makes a tribute to Nipsey Hussle (who had died three months prior to this performance).
STARS: ***

LESLIE & KYLE
host joins KYM & LEJ after they consummate their relationship for real

— The return of the Leslie+Kyle saga.
— We get a new angle to the piece, as it’s revealed their ongoing storyline really was just a series of sketches.
— A fun turn with them falling in love for real after rewatching the videos.
— Lorne’s traditional appearance in these pre-tapes comes this time in the form of a digital insert on a moon during Kyle and Leslie’s fantasy montage. Not too different from Al Gore’s “cameo” earlier in the season.
— Funny reveal that they “were just having sex for a few hours” in Paul’s dressing room.
— Paul: “I just want the finale to go well…” Oh, is it the finale? I had no idea after everything but the live sketches referred to that information!
— Aaaand we’re ending on a hacky gay joke.
— A good conclusion to the Leslie+Kyle arc! It works as a sendoff for Leslie too, whether or not that was intended.
STARS: ****

OUIJA BOARD
at a slumber party, summoned demon (MEV) wants to join the girl squad

— This was cut from last week’s Emma Thompson episode with Emma in Melissa’s role.
— Heidi and Ego make their first appearance in the last sketch of the night. Between this, Chris and Alex only appearing in the cold open, even Beck and Mikey in nothing but small, supporting roles, it’s been a quiet night for a lot of the cast.
— Great to Melissa leading the final sketch of the season!
— Some good laughs from Melissa’s demon awkwardly trying to fit in with the rest of the girls.
— Very interesting to see Kate in a non-specific role as part of the ensemble, considering she’s been at the level, since around 2016, where all of her roles are either the lead or a notable bit part (having a “funny accent” in the National School Walkout sketch, for example). This is especially noticeable due to Kate’s popularity with the audience, being recognized as the show’s biggest star right now. She even got Eddie Murphy levels of applause during the Biden cold open from Kit Harington’s episode just for walking on as a general character.
— Funny ending with Paul eagerly wanting to find out how he’s gonna die.
— I remember when this first aired, seeing Melissa carry the sketch and Kate/Cecily/Aidy in minor roles made it feel like a passing of the torch was coming and they would step down (or you know, leave) and let the newer players take the forefront. This never happened, of course, as the senior members continue to dominate while Melissa’s airtime only got worse, to the point where she’s lucky to even appear at all most of the time!
STARS: ***½

GOODNIGHTS


CUT FOR TIME: RETIREMENT PARTY
IT guys (host) (BEB) have a musical surprise for their co-worker’s (KET) retirement party

— A funny song from Beck and Paul glorifying computers, which eventually devolves into singing about making love to them.
— I got a big laugh from Alex’s delivery of “Hey! Are you threatening us?”.
— Kenan starts to really lose it after revealing that he enjoys the musical numbers.
— The ending felt very rushed as Beck and Paul beginning their next song, Kenan suddenly having a heart attack, and the duo being asked to leave all happen at the same time before cutting to the establishing shot.
— There wasn’t much else that stood out here, but I felt the execution worked well enough, even if everyone got a little too loose by the end. It’s almost fitting how the sketch that uses Paul in the best way is the one that gets cut.
STARS: ***

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS:
— A disappointing outing, overall, which is usually on par for the finale. Paul was wasted as a host, somehow even more this time around despite not having a musical guest that truly overshadowed him. The constant references throughout the show to it being the season finale dates the material to a certain timeframe.
— Farewell to Leslie Jones. She certainly had one of the more unique trajectories for a cast member due to having a breakout moment before ever joining the cast, which allowed her to take on a couple of leading roles early on that most cast members would have to wait for. This early success (combined with having projects lined-up outside of the show) certainly contributed to Leslie being able to leave when she did, considering that a five-season tenure today appears to be treated the same as staying on for only three seasons 20 years ago.
— Although it may have seemed like she didn’t get much to do here, we got a final Update piece, her best impression (Whoopi Goldberg), and one last Leslie+Kyle film for the road. Not a bad way to go out and pretty on par with her screentime for most nights. The fact that Leslie was able to go out while she was still on top makes her tenure better to look back on, especially compared to everyone who’s still on the show and refuses to leave.

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


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
Weekend Update
Leslie & Kyle
What’s Wrong With This Picture
Ouija Demon
Monologue
Grace and Frankie Rap
The View
Don’t Stop Me Now
Music Box
A Journey Through Time

TOMORROW:
“Can a bitch get a beef bowl?!? CAN A BITCH GET A BEEF BOWL?!?” We salute an SNL great with The Best Of Leslie Jones!

May 11, 2019 – Emma Thompson / Jonas Brothers (S44 E20)

by Kabir

MEET THE PRESS
GOP senators will support Donald Trump, no matter what

— Nice applause for Kyle at the top as Chuck Todd. I’ve always been a Kyle fan, yet he always seems underutilized.
— Good impressions from everyone and some funny lines to get this moving. I’m glad there are no unnecessary cold-open-cameos this week.
— A “financial genius and a business Jesus.”
— I’m kind of tired of Kate’s cigarette-smoking-tough-guy-in-profile expression which she brings to so many male political figures. She could—and should—be doing something different.
— The bit with McConnell and Collins simultaneously saying “Jesus Christ”/”Sammy Davis Jr.” was funny.
— This is giving me the same vibe as “What Even Matters Anymore” from the Jessica Chastain episode.
STARS: ***

MONOLOGUE
mothers host, TIF, AMP translate the meaning behind moms’ phrases

— Nice, random mention of Kenan as Emma’s “husband of 16 years.”
— Somehow, I knew when Emma mentioned SNL Moms that she was bringing out Fey and Poehler.
— Good back-and-forth on all of these “translations” of what Moms say.  Even the Boston one—which could have just been a tired retread of the “Harvard Yard” trope—came off well.
— Sweet ending with the three wishing their actual kids a Happy Mother’s Day.
STARS: ***

ETIQUETTE COACH
etiquette coach (host) aggressively preps (LEJ) for royal christening

— Is this an outtake from a ‘90s sitcom? This is weak.
— This is coming off like a My Fair Lady/Mary Poppins hybrid now with the song.
— Is the whole joke just Emma attacking Leslie?
— For some reason, the audience is on fire for this.
— That’s it? I guess I should be relieved.
STARS: *

THE PERFECT MOTHER
(host)’s parenting of (HEG) had its rough edges

— Emma’s accent is excellent.
— This is well-made but not actually that funny. It almost looks like a commercial which will reveal a product for new Moms/parents at the end.
— Another nice, wistful ending… but we just had that in the monologue. Did we need two in the same episode? I thought maybe they were leading up to a big joke at the end. I want to rate this higher because everything shown was true-to-life… but this is a comedy show, not a docudrama.
— Matt reminded me that this is spiritually similar to “The Day You Were Born” from season 43’s Amy Schumer episode, as well as “Best Christmas Ever” from the season 44 Matt Damon episode. And coming up in season 45, there’s “Home for the Holidays” in the Eddie Murphy episode.
STARS: **

CINEMA CLASSICS
rival actresses (host) & (KAM) want to get the last word

— I liked Reese introducing himself and saying “De’What’s Up?” Not sure he’s done that before or since.
— This seems inspired by the real-life Bette Davis/Joan Crawford feud from “Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?,” which was chronicled in the 2017 FX series “Feud.” But the audience is mostly dead here.
— In that wig, Emma looks a lot like Nora Dunn.
— This is now just turning into the improv warmup game “Yes, And.”
— Funny when Kate tries to conjure the MGM lion.
— Resse’s one-sided conversation is funnier than the rest of the sketch. The black-and-white section was well-acted but not actually that funny.
STARS: **½

CHOPPED
mystery ingredients lead to weird dishes & punning judges

— I remember seeing this online before I saw the whole episode and loved it.
— Melissa re-stating what Leslie said was great.
— Some of the ingredients and dishes (loose sugar, horse penis, kitten on a bun) are giving me a real Monty Python vibe. (I said the same thing in my review of the Liev Schrieber episode for the House Hunters pre-tape.)  I guess that makes sense since Thompson got her start in British sketch comedy.
— Way too many funny lines for me to keep summarizing them.
— Wordplay upon wordplay here, then Leslie with a gun out of nowhere.
— I was surprised to learn that this sketch, and the House Hunters piece, were both written by Kent Sublette—a writer who seems to polarize SNL reviewers.
— By the way, the production design of this is impeccable.
— This was shorter than I remembered but maybe that’s because they crammed so many jokes in.
STARS: ****½

JUDGE COURT
(KAM), (host), (AIB) capriciously rule on plaintiffs’ cases

— This is a live sketch, but just like the “Chopped” pre-tape, it has impeccable production design and a lot of jokes crammed in so far. Even the judge’s names.
— “I rented an apartment in 20-thousand-16.”
— Was this written by the same people as “Chopped”? So many absurd lines here. “We release you of your own renaissance.”
— Nice Jonas Brothers cameo. I’ve never seen them act but this was kept short and they did fine.
STARS: ****

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Sucker”

Blue: Ha, I love how excited Emma sounds during the intro!
— Just like I remarked on Cardi B from last season, it feels like a lifetime ago since the Jonas Brothers reunion album, even though it’s only been a couple years. Thanks, pandemic.
— Right away, I’m loving the visual aspect. The Jonas Brothers are wearing a great black-and-red color scheme, and the bunches of balloons adorning the stage is fun.
— Nick and Joe are seamless in their vocal trade-off, and both sound incredible, exactly like they do on the record. (Yes, I have listened to this record. Don’t ask me to remember anything from it, though.) Their harmonies in particular are super tight and perfect.
— Great sound on the drums when they make their entrance.
— The whistling part after the chorus, and Kevin doubling it on guitar, is really the only part of this song that interests me. I’m really drawing a blank on any more in-depth comments.
— Sweet ending with Joe putting his arms around his brothers and the three of them taking in the applause. 
STARS: **

WEEKEND UPDATE
Bailey Gismert likes Detective Pikachu but struggles with teen woes

PED describes what it’s like to still be cohabitating with his mom [real]

— When the camera cuts to the set, Colin is seemingly trying to find something under the desk. He quickly pops up into position and he and Che are both laughing about that as they introduce themselves.
— Some pretty good jokes tonight, and the crowd is into it.
— The Bailey Gismert piece is territory they’ve covered before, but Heidi’s performance makes this more enjoyable. The audience is into this, too, for sure.
— The section where she’s crying about her life is giving me flashbacks to her “boxer’s girlfriend” character.
— Pete’s commentary was short but sweet. This is reminding me of when cast members would bring out their Moms in the specials from the ’90s (something that’s been reprised occasionally in the years since). Her sweatshirt is cute, too, and makes me think she really is a fun roommate.
STARS: ***

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST
Belle (CES) learns that Beast (CES) sired Mrs. Potts’ (host) child (PED)

— As mentioned in the past, I love when SNL mocks/parodies Disney.
— Nice production design here, too.
— I’ve never seen Emma in the live-action Beauty and the Beast, but I assume her acting there is the same as it is here.
— Reviewer Matt pointed something crazy out: at one point, Emma seems to forget which arm she was using as the spout and which one was the handle! But she just goes with it.
— The reveal of Pete with the Beast’s fur was probably expected to get a bigger reaction.
— The song at the end seemed stilted, too, but still had some decent lyrics.
— This seemed short. I expected it to get even darker, but it just ended.
STARS: ***

YOU DON’T KNOW ME
Tracy (KAM)- teen’s (EGN) “you don’t know me” claim is repeatedly refuted

— Kenan’s look reminds me a lot of the Dad from “Family Matters.”
— So far this is just the standard parody of Jerry Springer-esque shows.
— Interesting but not exactly humorous responses from the audience.
— “Your Mama was a bit of a ho, too.”
— The line about “I’m not a doctor” must be a reference to Prince keyboardist Dr. Fink, who appeared on the show in season 6. Nice.
— This kind of just came-and-went without any real escalation or anything.
STARS: **

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Cool” & “Burnin’ Up”

Blue: “Once again, Jonas Brothers!” Once again, Emma hamming it up on the intro, and I’m so here for it.
— Okay, scratch what I said before about not remembering anything from this album, because I do remember this song… mostly for what I thought of as completely dumb lyrics.
— Again, Nick sounds great. Interesting move to include harmonies from the backing vocalists on this track- I’m sure Joe could have handled the harmonies.
— I didn’t notice it in the other song, but that’s an interesting dual-drummer setup. Both of them look to be regular acoustic drum sets, without any additional percussion, so I’m not sure why two are needed. I’m not hearing anything too complex that would justify four hands instead of two…
— Pretty sure Jonas Brothers don’t need to name-drop Post Malone. On the plus side, Joe is hitting some nice falsetto notes.
— I get that Jonas Brothers are the stars and all, but I would really love some focus on the guitarist who’s playing the solo after the second chorus. Speaking of guitars, I can hardly hear Nick’s at all.
— The very short drum break leading into the last chorus was… how do I say it… cool.
— Now that the Jonas Brothers have established that they’re cool, it’s time for them to heat up with… “Burnin’ Up!!”  I will shamefully admit right now that if I’d been in the audience for this, you would have heard me screaming along with all the fans as soon as Joe broke into “I’m hot, you’re cold…” 
— I love Kevin’s guitar rhythm here. I also like how he mouths the words even though he’s not singing.
— Great falsetto from Nick on the bridge.
— Great percussion on the chorus breakdown! I haven’t heard this song in years so I don’t remember if this is part of the original recording, but either way I am loving it.
Is Joe doing the low harmony or the high harmony? If it’s the latter, either his mic needs to be turned up, or he really needs to project.
STARS: ***½ (“Burnin’ Up” bumped it up for me)

WAIT A SECOND, THAT SHOULDN’T BE THERE
anachronistic products on film

— Another movie-clip-type show?
— The audience is hooting right from the top. They must see something in the studio which we can’t, yet.
— The big Crave Case and 7-11 cup are funny.
— The Shakespeare In Love clip is pretty similar. The jokes in this are all pretty much the same, but the audience is dying.
— I didn’t DIS-like this, but it was so repetitive.
STARS: **½

GOODNIGHTS
at closing, PED’s mom & Jon Hamm [real] are together

— Emma didn’t point out that Jon Hamm is standing next to Pete’s Mom! He’s looking like a cross between Jeff Golblum and Hank Azaria, but still nice to see him back in 8H.

CUT FOR TIME: TWININGS EXTREME
CFT- British athletes maintain edge with sports teas


— Let me say right now that this may seem insanely funny to someone who knows little about Great Britain. But since I grew up around tea drinkers, this is extremely ho-hum to me.
— Excellent production design for this ad. It absolutely looks real. Unfortunately, that doesn’t make it funny. It really just seems like a normal commercial.
— I did get a laugh from “Darjeeling Octane” and the description of the “three to five days” of a cricket match. For me—and maybe for everyone?—that level of ridiculousness is what was needed here.
— Okay, the complicated “sport kettle” is slowly winning me over.
— And now I’ve gone from mildly impressed to grossed-out at the thought of Kenan being scalded to death.
— I don’t know if my personal perspective is skewed (for the reasons mentioned), or if everyone feels this way, but this ad was weak. To quote Nathan Thurm, “is it me? It’s him, right?”
STARS: **½

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— The political material here felt different (better) than previous episodes I’ve reviewed this season, and it was stronger than most of the rest of the sketches. However, the absurd “Chopped” and “Judge Court” were the big highlights this week. Emma Thompson’s sketch background made her a good fit for the show, too.

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


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
Chopped
Judge Court
Weekend Update
Meet the Press
Monologue
Beauty and the Beast
(CFT: Twinings Extreme)
You Don’t Know Me
Wait a Second, That Shouldn’t Be There!
Cinema Classics
The Perfect Mother
Etiquette Coach

TOMORROW
The season ends with Paul Rudd hosting for the fourth time, as covered by Vax Novier

May 4, 2019 – Adam Sandler / Shawn Mendes (S44 E19)

by Anthony

FAMILY FEUD
characters from Game Of Thrones & The Avengers compete

— I appreciate the fact that, apart from a quick C-Span bit up top, we’re not getting a political open for once here. Not sure, however, about the decision to instead focus on Game of Thrones and The Avengers. And I’m especially not sure about the choice to frame it around fucking Celebrity Family Feud. As I’ve said, these sketches only work when they’re rooted in some character drama, as they are in the fantastic Tracy Morgan & Chance the Rapper installments. When they’re just there as a loose frame for mediocre impressions, they become even lamer versions of those audition pre-tapes the show loves to trot out. 
— Also not sure about this sketch positioning Game of Thrones and The Avengers as the “two things all Americans can get behind” – though it is funny knowing that, since this aired 3 weeks before Thrones’ notoriously divisive (as in, some hated it, and some thought it was just merely lame) finale, this is the last time they could do that gag.
— I love the contrast of Beck’s extensive Thanos makeup and Leslie’s get up as “Groot”.
— Kenan’s Harvey’s comments to his guests feel particularly lame tonight. 
— Leslie: “Bitch I’m Groot.” Wonderful. 
— Okay, Harvey’s now getting in some solid digs on the notoriously poorly lit Thrones episode “The Long Night”. 
— Kate as Brienne of Tarth is some “well, I guess you gotta” casting. Also, boy is she mugging up a storm right away.
— Mikey as Tormund: “Isn’t she a snack?” Hur hur, ‘cus he wouldn’t talk like that! (I know the “bitch, I’m Groot” joke was basically the same thing, but holy shit can Leslie sell a line like that better than Mikey.)
WOOF at that “maybe it’s Maybelline” joke.
— Kyle’s okay as Bran here, though that’s a role I actually think Dismukes would get cast in today, and I’d be interested to see his take. 
— So Kate’s just playing Brienne the exact way she does Angela Merkel but without the accent? What another powerhouse performance from our forever star. 
— That HGH joke deservedly died with the audience. 
— I understand corpsing sometimes, but Leslie’s acting like she’s literally hearing Kenan’s lines for the first time. 
— Between the Maybelline bit and now a line about her “boobies”, Cecily is really getting saddled with some of the lamest material here (which is saying something).
— Melissa shows up at the end here as Arya. For those worried it may be too much exposure for her, don’t worry, she doesn’t get any actual jokes. 
— LOL at Leslie’s late entrance on the LFNY. That little moment, as well as her general presence, raises this sketch a bit. However her corpsing also lowers it back down a bit (though not to the same degree), so swings and roundabouts. 
— Despite the changeup from its usual political setting, this was yet another overlong and mostly unfunny open in this era. Not a great start for such a special episode, but we’ll keep on moving. 
STARS: *½ 

MONOLOGUE
ADS sings a song about how he was fired from SNL; CSR cameo

— Adam is coming off a bit charmingly nervous in his opening lines here, in a way that reminds me of some of his earliest appearances on the show. He’s mentioned several times that nerves were actually what kept him from coming back to the show, since he was worried he would just come off super rusty and out of place. I totally understand his reluctance, though I’m obviously glad to see Sandler back at 8H. Nice thing for Sandler as well at least is that, hosting an episode in the modern era, the material in the open is likely going to suck so hard, anything will seem like an improvement. 
— “I was 23 years old when I started here. David Spade and Rob Schneider were 25. Norm Macdonald was maybe 60.”
— Now Adam’s launching into a song about how he was fired from the show. His firing does make a bit of sense when you remember how awful his era got in its final 2 seasons, but it’s also fair for the man himself to still be salty over it.
— “I tried to call Lorne Michaels, but he never called me back.” Ouch. Although Adam’s quick to clarify that he’s joking.
— Pretty nice melody to this song.
— Love the quick Farley reference. Lots of nice references to things from Sandler’s time on the show throughout this monologue. 
— Chris Rock joins in on the fun here, since he was fired after continually expressing frustration with his lack of screen time and his desire to leave the show and join In Living Color.
— I laughed at Adam’s little comment to Chris as he left to keep chasing after his dreams.
— Whoa, Pete gets almost as big a reaction as Chris did.
— Adam and Pete seem to have a pretty fun chemistry. We won’t see too much of that tonight, though there is a cut Chad sketch that I’ll talk about at the end of the review. They would also link up about next season in Pete’s “Stuck In My House” music video from one of the At Home episodes.
— A really fun monologue overall, and a great boost of energy after the typically tepid cold open. 
STARS: ****

WAR ZONE REPORTER 
Snapchat filters farcify TV journalist’s (MID) report from a war zone

— In typical Seiday fashion, this is amiable enough but extremely unambitious. It basically amounts to watching Mikey and Adam make silly faces.
— Having said that, Mikey does play his fear in contrast to his ridiculous filters well. 
— Why is Sandler’s character able to see the filters and not Mikey?
— Sandler is playing his amusement at the filters really endearingly.
— Could do without Beck as the anchor who’s really into the filters. That type of character worked in the Matt Schatt sketches, but I don’t think we need it here.
— Now Sandler’s character can control the filters? Feel like if they were going to break the reality of the sketch it could have been for a funnier bit than Sandler as a girl.
— Mikey continues to really sell his terror comedically here, with his panicked, hot-dog-filter-assisted performance at the end here being one of the highlights of this sketch. Especially love his quick aside of “oh my God, that’s a dead body.” 
— This sketch acts as a good microcosm of Seiday’s at this point in their tenure. By itself, it’s a fun, charming, mostly inoffensive piece. But look at the weight it’s been given: lead off sketch in the most important episode of the season. Sure, “fun, charming and mostly inoffensive” is a good descriptor of a decent amount of Sandler’s work on the show, but it still puts this sketch in a position where it looks worse than it really is. As it stands, this is truly decent fluff. 
STARS: *** 

HOLES 
(BEB), (KYM), (ADS) explain the topology of clothing via song

— A bit of a divisive short. I remember not loving it when it aired, though as always I’ll go in with an open mind.
— Love Kyle’s Kenny G-esque get up.
— An incredibly questionable conceit to line a song around, though at least this feels like the lack of a concept is part of the joke, instead of, say, Pete lazily dedicating a song to “Gucci” sounding like “Tucci”.
— So I guess the lack of escalation is part of the main gag, but I still feel like there’s a way to move past just repeating the word “holes” over and over. Like the last piece, this is amiable enough, and I’m getting some chuckles, but it’s never quite taking off. Although this is still working for me a bit more than that piece, since Beck/Kyle silliness is more pure and charming to me than Seiday’s sometimes forced brand of fun.
— Do we think that boxer was Evander Holeyfield? (Ducks incoming tomatoes)
— Sandler seems to be having a ton of fun here. It’s actually fitting this was picked over the Chad piece, as this more in line with his preferred brand of goofery than those pieces. It also seems fitting to have Lorne once again put on something he at best doesn’t get and at worst hates. Feels like we’re back in a Kevin Nealon Update! 
— The butthole bit felt like it was trying a little too hard.
— It’s a bit hard to articulate what puts this over for me. It certainly walks a fine walk between “smart stupid” and just plain stupid, and I’m honestly not really sure where I land on where the piece itself lands. I think, if anything, it speaks to the enduring charm of Beck and Kyle that the piece still manages to work for me. It’s interesting this appears in a Sandler episode, as it feels almost Norm-ish in it’s defiant anti comedy, yet that aforementioned charm Beck and Kyle bring keeps it from feeling antagonistic towards the audience, as a lot of the Norm pieces can end up doing (which is a mode I can like for sure, but I also enjoy this flavor more from Beck and Kyle than I would them trying to do a fully Norm type audience-squirming piece). 
STARS: ***

ROMANO TOURS
Joe Romano’s (ADS) tours of Italy are not a panacea for your troubles

— Now we’re really kicking into high gear, with one of my favorite sketches the writing team of Anna Drezen & Alison Gates would ever do. 
— For anyone who grew up on the East Coast, this will be immediately recognizable as a parody of the Perillo Tours ads.
— Funny lines here before we even get to the main premise of the sketch, such as Sandler calling Venice “the city of wetness”.
— Sandler’s earnest delivery of “if you’re sad now, you might still feel sad there, okay?” is fucking hysterical. This is the type of role he’s always been strong at, even if it’s not one of his modes that gets the most recognition, and he’s playing it better at this age than he may have ever been able to before. 
— Almost every line here is so funny and well-observed. I’d list some of my favorites but it’d just end up being the whole sketch. This is top notch work.
— Classic “Kenan reacts” moment in that third to last screencap. 
— Love Sandler’s little voice crack when saying “it really gets to me”. This is not only his most keyed in performance of the night, but among the best in his entire career at the show. 
STARS: *****

SANDLER FAMILY REUNION
ADS sees character inspirations & parents (JIF) & (KRW) at family reunion

— The third in these “celebrity family reunion” sketches, following the Walken and Carrey installments. 
— I know Chris’s part was meant to feel lame and forced, but still. Woof. 
— Did like Chris’s “that’s kind of a lame answer.”
— Kyle and Mikey’s vocal impressions are a bit iffy, but they more than sell it on energy.
— Speaking of woof, holy shit was that Big Daddy bit with Shawn Mendes lame as hell.
— I do like that Sandler’s ridiculous gibberish talk acts as a sort of internal language in the Sandler clan.
— Pete is pretty fun as Little Nicky.
— Liked Kenan’s description of Sandler’s weird little hand movements as an “invisible clarinet” (always have wondered what’s up with that, truthfully). 
— Each of these sketches have one performer who walks away with the whole thing for me. Amy as the little girl in the Walken one, Cecily as Fire Marshall Bill in the Carrey one, and here it’s Melissa as Bobby Boucher. Absolutely hysterical impression.
— Leslie as Chubbs from Happy Gilmore is another extremely fun choice/portrayal. 
— Beck’s Sandler actually sounds more like Rob Schneider. 
— Kristen Wiig makes her first of two random cameos tonight here. I love me some Kristen (when it’s not one of her characters I very much don’t love) so I don’t really mind, but it seems a bit odd she’s in this episode more than anyone actually from Sandler’s era. Especially surprised we didn’t get any cameos from Spade, Schneider, Timmy Meadows or Norm, all of whom Sandler seems to still be close with. 
— I especially can’t be mad at Kristen when she’s playing the mom from Carrie, who isn’t even from a Sandler movie or SNL sketch, but an album track of his. What a treat for Sandler fans!
— Jimmy Fallon shows up here, which makes more sense as he’s always had a fun Sandler impression.
— Chuckled at the crowd starting to sing along with the words to The Chanukah Song, only to quickly realize they don’t know the words.
— Frequent Sandler collaborator (aka one of those 4 or so guys who show up in every Sandler movie but nowhere else) Allen Covert shows up to take a snapshot of the Sandler clan.
— Shawn Mendes getting in a second cringey bit for good measure, I see. This one had nothing to do with him, to his credit, but still, that “Shawn/swan” pun…woof.
— A fun sketch, if maybe the least of these reunion pieces. Still, outside of a couple lame bits with Shawn Mendes, a good time.
STARS: ****

RECTIX
erectile dysfuction solution Rectix is a buttplug, not a pharmaceutical

— Lol at the bluntness of that Serpas description. Gotta appreciate he busted out both  “panacea” and “buttplug” for Sandler. 
— A juvenile but very funny reveal of the “pill” Sandler’s character takes for his erectile dysfunction. 
— Hilarious bit with the 3D model.
— I wish the sketch called out its own joke a little less, but I do like Sandler’s firm denial anytime Beck insists the pill is actually a buttplug.
— Overall, not much to say here. This did what a fake ad on SNL should do (I mean, it breaks the reality of the ad immediately, but I’ve learned to accept that modern SNL is never going to air a fake ad that actually acts like a real ad). This delivered the laughs and didn’t overstay its welcome. Certainly one of the best pre-tapes of the post Matt & Oz era.  
STARS: ****½ 

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “If I Can’t Have You”

Blue: This is one of the rare SNL episodes of the late 2010’s that I’ve seen, and yet I have ZERO memory of these performances. That doesn’t bode well.
— High-energy opening with Shawn and his backing vocalists belting out the song’s chorus.
— Something about Shawn’s voice sounds off, like he’s singing in a register where he’s not comfortable. 
— Is that acoustic guitar going to be played, or is it just for decoration?
— Okay, Shawn’s started to play the acoustic on the repetition of the chorus. Not that it’s audible- his guitarist’s part is overshadowing it.
— Speaking of which, I love that electric rhythm guitar. Probably the highlight of the song so far, besides the excellent work from the backing vocalists.
— ”I want all of you, all the strings attached…” Cue ladies of the audience cheering.
— Starting to get lowkey annoyed with the chorus. It’s a great chorus, but did we need to hear it so many times?
— I do love when songs go into half-time. It’s an effective variation here for the chorus breakdown.
— Shawn sings a great high note at the end of the breakdown. Why can’t the whole song be sung in that range? (I dunno, Blue, maybe because it takes a special kind of singer to pull that off in a pop song…)
— Along the same lines from earlier regarding instruments that aren’t being played, I just realized that the piano to Shawn’s left was not touched once during this performance. Talk about a spoiler alert!
STARS: ***

WEEKEND UPDATE 
Elizabeth Warren’s (KAM) candidacy emphasizes substance over style

Operaman sings about Game Of Thrones, the NBA, presidential politics

— That “Everyone Democrats Held Accountable” feels like something I’ve seen Jost do before and better. 
— I enjoyed Che’s bit about Trump banking with Capital One.
— Some good impeachment material from the duo, even if it feels a bit like their takes never really went deeper than “boy, everyone involved in this is sure a bunch of clowns, huh?”
— Kate brings back her Elizabeth Warren, an impression that’s amiable enough but always seems too reverential to me to really register as comedy. Still, far from her worst political impression. 
—  At the end of her segment, Kate’s Warren declares “I’m gonna be V.P.” Oof, sorry, Liz. 
— Some classic Che induced audience groans after his altar boy punchline.
— Che’s “tragically, no one filmed it” when talking about a woman suffering 20 bee stings made me laugh.
— Sandler brings back his biggest SNL character (other than “silly singing guitar man”) with Opera Man.
— It’s strange seeing Opera Man sing about more modern stories like Trump’s impeachment and the Game of Thrones finale. 
— Fun self-deprecating bit about Sandler’s significant others in his films always being much more attractive than him.
— I enjoy the “here we go again / 70 year old men” moment enough, though it is odd that SNL keeps pairing Biden and Bernie together as if they represent the same thing. 
— Of the two Update correspondents tonight, Opera Man had the much funnier take on the Joe Biden inappropriate touching scandal, though Liz Warren’s “Amtrak masseuse” comment was alright.
— That Wendy’s line got a shameful big laugh out of me when I watched this live.
— Another fun meta turn with Opera Man commenting on the length of the gap between Sandler leaving the show and hosting.
— A very fun return from Opera Man. Nothing here was particularly hilarious, but then again the original sketch rarely was either. This one has always gotten by one pure energy, and it did here again.
STARS: ***½ 

LAST CALL
Sheila Sauvage has a nauseating threesome with (ADS) & wife (KRW)

— The last call on Last Call, as this ends up being the final appearance of this reliable sketch. Probably for the best call, even if it was always one of my favorite Kate recurrers. 
— Sandler’s done this voice before, but it’s amusing here nonetheless. 
— Kenan mentions the CDC and viruses. Ooh boy, get ready to hear those two words enough for multiple lifetimes, buddy. 
— “I’m packing 5, if you measure from my hemorrhoid.” Gross. Love it.
— Kristen in her second pointless but fun enough cameo. She looks kind of like her Tan Mom character she once did on Update. 
— Kenan seems to be less of an element here than normal. Probably for the best, as his bits were starting to feel too repetitive, even with all the ‘whacky’ gags.
— The description of the “7/11” was pretty funny. 
— Kristen saying “we’re on board”, and then grabbing her breasts and placing them on the bar made me chuckle.
— Also love that during their makeout sesh, at one point Kristen starts straight up sucking Kate’s chin.
— “I didn’t finish, but I am done.”
— I love that for once Kenan’s character is really into this. All they had to do was go for an Italian theme.
— The drone strike ending felt like a bit too much.
— These feel purely designed to make the performers break at this point. They’re still fun enough, but it’s for the best this is likely the last we’ll see of them. Also since this is the last one, are we to assume the drone strike killed Kate and Kenan’s characters?
STARS: ***½ 

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “In My Blood”

BLUE: Following up on that spoiler alert from his last performance, here’s Shawn playing the upright piano.
— Another adherent to the “one upbeat song and one ballad” format, I see. 
— I’m liking Shawn’s vocal performance here better than that of his previous performance.
— The stage lights come up to reveal several cellists backing Shawn. I’m glad we were given that visual cue, because they’re pretty quiet in the mix.
— Shawn switches mid-song from piano to guitar. Meh.
— The chorus, though epic, feels a bit premature. I feel like we haven’t earned this moment yet. It’s also pretty weak, lyrically-speaking- just the title line repeated several times.
— I can’t deny that this is a pretty song, but it didn’t do much for me.
STARS: ***

CHRIS FARLEY TRIBUTE 
ADS plays guitar & sings a tribute to his friend CHF

Anthony: And now we close out the show with Sandler’s famous tribute to his former cast mate and friend Chris Farley. 
— Very lovely melody here.
— Sandler originally performed this song on tour and in his Netflix special 100% Fresh. That version had a nice guitar solo in the middle and more profanity throughout (for example “sweeter than shit” instead of “sweeter than honey”). I actually think a lot of the profanity in the original feels a bit unnecessary, and prefer this version. Not to mention how haunting it is to see Sandler perform this song on 8H. I was able to get through the Netflix version okay, but I’d be lying if I said this one didn’t totally get me when I watched it live. Hell, I’m even a little misty eyed this time around.
— Sandler himself said that he had trouble performing the song in rehearsals due to the weight of it being 8H, and that he was worried he was going to break down on live TV. 
— Apparently nearly the whole crew came down to watch this live, which very rarely happens. 
— Sweet touch ending this with a clip of the Bennett Brauer wire blooper, one of Farley’s best moments.
— I don’t think I can really rate this as it feels like a performance more than a sketch (also, just feels weird to “rate” a guy’s tribute to his dead friend), but it was certainly a very touching and fitting note to end the night on.
Blue: Anthony kindly suggested I share some of my thoughts on the performance of this song, as it’s essentially a musical performance (and a better one than the guest’s if you ask me…). 
— This song has a beautiful melody. So beautiful, in fact, that I used it as inspiration for one of my own songs, and since then I’ve been too embarrassed to admit that I can now name Adam Sandler as a legit musical inspiration.
— Love the audience’s reaction when Chris Farley’s image shows up on the screen.
— Also love the brief imitation of Matt Foley when Adam sings “in a VAN down by the RIVER!”
— “We said ‘slow down, or you’ll end up like Belushi and Candy.’ He said ‘Those guys are my heroes, so it’s all fine and dandy.’” Oh god.
— Really touching middle 8 when Adam sings about seeing Farley crying to a song that reminds him of his father, while a picture of Farley & his father appears onscreen.
— ”But a few months later the party came to an end, we flew out to Madison to bury our friend.” Double oh god. Adam sounds like he’s about to cry when he sings that line- I can’t blame him.
— That is the most beautiful way I’ve ever heard anyone sing “Grown-Ups 3.” Small margin, I know.
— Overall, I won’t bother critiquing this from a technical standpoint. How can I say anything critical about a heartfelt tribute to a deceased, beloved friend? The melody and lyrics are great, anyway, so I’d have no complaints from a musical standpoint even if I could separate my emotions from the performance. Playing this song at SNL was a major class act on Adam’s part, and I really respect him for doing that. 
STARS: N/A

GOODNIGHTS

— Several cast members are understandably still misty eyed following Sandler’s performance, particularly Heidi, Cecily, Kate and (when you can finally see her behind Mendes) Aidy. 
— Sandler’s exclamation of “I love that I know this cast now!” was very charming.  

CUT FOR TIME: CHAD’S JOURNEY

— As previously mentioned, a Chad short was cut from this episode. I’ve never been too into this character, only really liking his first appearance and the live sketch he was in from Saoirse Ronan’s episode, so…we’ll see.
Interesting look on Mikey, to say the least. We’d strangely see this look on Mikey again a couple times, including the “Making a Man” sketch from the season 46 finale. Sorry, but Mikey’s cherub is more creepy than angelic. 
— These Chad pieces are always shot well at least, but this is doing very little for me in the way Chad pieces typically do very little for me. It just feels like kind of played of “dumb bro” humor.
— Sandler as Chad’s father is interesting casting, seeing how many have compared the two and their unique appeals.
— Mikey is, as usual, just a shade too subconsciously “comedy” in his straight man work for me here.
— Okay, shameful laugh at the only real interaction between father and son being “you got a big dick?” “Oh, no doubt.” 
— Eh, not into the ending with Kenan’s paramedic character punching Chad as he returns to life.
— Overall this was fine. It was slightly more ambitious than your typical Chad piece I suppose, but some new ingredients in the broth is ultimately the same stew.
STARS: **½  

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— An extremely solid episode. The open was, as is typical for this era, a big scoop of shit, but once the episode proper got started everything was good to great. Sandler himself was a great host – he only truly exerted himself once, but he remained charming, game and committed throughout, which is all you can really ask of an SNL host. Tonight’s episode felt like what it needed to: a party, and I really like that to get there we (mostly) avoided pointless cameos and retreads like the show has often done in these event episodes, and instead just crafted a night of genuinely strong and fun comedy. 

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


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
Romano Tours
Rectix
Sandler Family Reunion
Monologue
Weekend Update
Last Call
Holes
War Zone Reporter
(CFT: Chad’s Journey)
Family Feud

TOMORROW 
Make sure to call your mothers, because Kabir is covering SNL’s annual Mother’s Day episode, this time with host Emma Thompson

April 13, 2019 – Emma Stone / BTS (S44 E18)

by Matt

JAIL CELL
Julian Assange (Michael Keaton) & other celebrities share a cell

— The weird MSNBC/Lockup opening graphic to this sketch feels really unnecessary.
— The obligatory nod towards the Lori Laughlin controversies going on at the time. Although the writing is pretty par for the course with how these cold opens tend to go, I like the other prisoners’ deconstruction of how insane it is for her to spend $500,000 to get her daughter into USC of all places, among other strange personal choices Laughlin made. Maybe that’s just the rush of getting a cold open that’s aiming to poke fun at pop culture more than politics… at least so far.
— Garry Richardson cameo! A small role here but I appreciate that he gets a laugh-line.
— The version I’m watching clearly must be from dress, because I recall during the live airing, the camera cut oddly to Pete as Michael Avenatti before he walks into the scene, causing the audience to scream out for him. Speaking of: Pete as Michael Avenatti. Why is the cold open extending its focus and muddling what its conceit is?
— And now Michael Keaton’s appearing as Julian Assange. As much as I adore his last hosting stint, he certainly doesn’t need to be here, nor is he adding anything to the cold open aside from doing that stupid little thing these political celebrity cameos do where they make a winking reference to the actor’s career (De Niro doing Meet the Parents, Matthew Broderick doing Ferris Bueller, or in this case, Michael paraphrasing from Batman). Further proof this is the dress recording of the cold open, though: Keaton absolutely BOMBED with the audience from the live show, which I recall being insanely tough across the rest of the episode. We’ll see how things continue.
— Woof at Michael’s “WikiLeaks” pun.
— Melissa marginally saves this with her brief walk-on as 6ix9ine, but overall, despite a decent start to the cold open, this thing fell apart as soon as the show took it as an opportunity to round up as many stray news stories as possible across the past week. This just felt overwrought.
STARS: ** 

MONOLOGUE
castmembers scramble to make host feel special during her 4th SNL gig

— First thing about this monologue, Emma Stone “tests the sound levels” by announcing BTS as the musical guest, causing the audience to scream louder than an audience has probably ever screamed during SNL. Man, what a bad omen for the sort of crowd we’re dealing with tonight.
— A fun premise to this monologue, with Emma Stone trying to downplay her excitement that the cast could be planning something to commemorate her fourth time hosting, then dragging cast members on-stage who try tricking her into believing they’d done anything so she’s not disappointed.
— Decent use of Melissa, wheeling her out to do some on-the-spot impressions. (Ash Ketchum, though… not the most relevant.)
— I absolutely love the ending, with Emma getting excited that Kyle is on the show tonight. (She even continues that excitement by reaffirming that he’s here in the middle of the commercial break segue.) It does feel like a bit of a jab at how undervalued he is by the show at this point in his tenure, but Kyle sells it with that brand of awkward excitement that he’s so good at.
STARS: ***

POSTERS
Krissy Knox & other poster models get highschooler interested in history

— A questionable sequel to a sketch from Emma’s last hosting gig.
— Ego getting to do her fun, African accent for the first time.
— The choice of Emma using a “long, fat garden hose” isn’t anywhere as fun as her hot dog from the last installment.
— The twist of Emma playing her original character’s twin sister isn’t working any more for me than this sketch was before. It also feels like this sketch is milking Emma’s mannerisms far more than the last one did, and it’s revealing how thin the characterization is.
— Meh, the exact same ending as before. I enjoyed the original, but there was no reason to bring this one back. It epitomizes the biggest problem with this current era’s efforts to establish recurring sketches: the writing tends to be a lot more concept-driven, meaning that bringing a character back almost always means that the scenario that they were originally involved in gets rehashed near-identically without distinct, new variables to suggest any sort of development. What’s the point of seeing the same sketch again, no matter how good the first one was?
STARS: *½

FASHION COWARD
Fashion Coward is the clothing store for inhibited, unadventurous women

— A solid, relatable premise to this fake commercial, taking the form of a clothing store for women afraid of taking risks with their fashion sense. If there’s anything that I feel deserves a lot of praise of the current writing staff, it’s that they’re incredibly good at working with humor that’s universal to some specific, niche aspect of life and filling it with absurd but on-point details.
— I love Cecily’s description of their products as “clothes that suggest the general idea of a person.”
— Cecily detailing the traumatic nature of a Kohl’s fitting room (“where your mother said something so harmful it seared off the top layer of your brain”) has always been one of my personal highlights for this sketch.
— I also love the detail of the fitting rooms emitting a knock-out gas if a customer takes too long to make a decision, followed by them being carried out by a “big, strong man” who ambivalently picks out the rest of their clothes.
— “Fashion Coward: it’s just Ann Taylor.” Perfect out.
STARS: ****½

THE VIEW
anti-vaxxer Jenny McCarthy (host) rejoins the bellicose panel

— One of two sketches this season where SNL briefly revives its parodies of The View. 
— Something that’s worth commenting on is how nice it is that we can finally have a sketch centered around The View where every panelist is played by a woman instead of including male cast members in drag. I recall Whoopi in particular singling out how long overdue it was that she could be played by another woman, Leslie, rather than Kenan.
— Aidy’s Meghan McCain is my favorite part of these sketches (and notably, Meghan McCain’s least favorite). I love her introducing herself as “the princess of Arizona,” which sets the precedent perfectly on how obnoxious McCain is.
— A funny turn with the intense staredown between Kate’s Joy Behar and Aidy.
— Leslie’s Whoopi: “We are not gonna do this. This is The View, we are five best friends with nothing in common.”
— Emma-as-Jenny McCarthy’s anti-vax comedy is a bit too predictable for me.
— Overall, despite some aforementioned highlights, this sketch was too listless and unstructured to work super well.
GRADE: **½

HOBBIES
after invading host’s dressing room, MEV raps about her many hobbies

— It’s fun to see Melissa carry a sketch like this for once—she’s been having one of her strongest nights in general across this episode, actually—though I have fairly mixed feelings on it. Maybe I’ll have a different opinion of it this viewing.
— I loved Melissa entering and immediately telling Emma about how good she’s gotten at self-care. She’s able to sell the awkward confidence that line needs perfectly.
— This sketch features a few animated aspects, which reminds me that this particular point in the season experiments with animation here and there, most notably in the “Daria” segment from the preceding Kit Harrington episode. I remember that it made me think that the show would attempt to do more animated content in general within the show a la “TV Funhouse,” though aside from a handful of exceptions (“Middle-Aged Mutant Ninja Turtles”), that never fully comes to pass.
— Melissa: “Emma Stone? More like I’m-a Stone, ‘cuz stones don’t have feelings, and that’s you.”
— A cute turn, with Emma going into a hardcore rap about her own hobby of maintaining a model town, though I could personally do without Melissa’s uncertainty towards Emma’s hobby. I feel like that’s taking away from the wholesome nature of the piece a bit.
— Alright, so here’s the thing: I absolutely love Melissa. I think she’s such a distinct performer and a sweet, wholesome presence that makes the show stronger to have. But she’s also a performer who has constantly struggled to find writers who can channel her voice into strong material, and this sketch is, sadly, not much of an exception to that rule. It’s very cute, but it’s not that funny or well-written. More than anything else, it’s a fine display of Melissa’s charisma that she’s able to will the sketch into getting over, but it’s sadly a mediocre piece overall rather than the badass song declaring her adorable wackiness that it was probably intended to be.
STARS: ***

LADIES ROOM
“Meeting In The Ladies Room” mistakenly convenes in a fitting room

— A spiritual successor to the “Raz P. Berry” sketch from last season’s Donald Glover episode, featuring a spoof on an equally-esoteric song from the ‘80s: Klymaxx’s “Meeting in the Ladies Room.”
— I like the very spot-on recreation of the music video’s setpieces.
— Not getting many laughs from Emma, Cecily, and Leslie’s lines, but the sketch has a naturally fun energy to it, and I like the appearance of Beck as Cecily’s brother in his “electric dancing chair.”
— The shaky camera zoom-ins are giving me flashbacks to the “Deep House Dish” sketches, which I believe had the same writers as this one: James Anderson and Kent Sublette.
— Kenan immediately scores the first big laugh of the piece in his reliably Kenan way of walking on and shouting, “Hey, what the hell is going on in here?!”
— I can’t help but feel that the reveal that this is “a fitting room at Limited Express” is a bit niche, though maybe I’m just exceptional in having no idea what a Limited Express is.
— The material in this sketch is a lot weaker than “Raz P. Berry” and has largely turned into bathroom humor, but Kenan and everyone else is selling the absurdity of the situation well enough.
STARS: ***

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Boy with Luv”


Blue: Lots of screaming after Emma’s introduction. 
— I’ve never delved into K-pop myself, but it’s very nice to see a K-pop band receive this level of exposure in America.
— Starting off with some cheeky choreography from all seven members of the group. 
— The first singer, Jimin, is very confident and smooth with his movements.
— The second singer, V, is let down by the sound engineer—his mic is too low in the mix.
— Speaking of which, the recorded vocals are drowning out the live vocals at times.
— Now that’s how you do a strong chorus! The choreography here is very tight and fun to watch. I also love how seamlessly the lead vocals are being traded among each group member.
— I especially love the moments where they jump into the air.
— Great raps from Suga and J-Hope.
— Wow, I am loving this. “Kinetic” is the word that springs to mind. 
— More screaming for RM’s rap.
— Overall, what a joy—so much confidence and sheer fun onstage.
— Interestingly enough, I recently found out that the recorded version of this song features Halsey. If she’d appeared to perform this song with BTS, that would have been her third appearance on SNL in one season, which is rare for a musical guest.
STARS: ****

WEEKEND UPDATE
Carrie Krum’s Spring Break travel recommendations have narrow appeal

a mercurial relationship pierces the lovey-dovey facade of Nico & Brie

— Another nod to the frenzied, BTS audience that’s currently filling the studio.
— Colin: “This Monday is Tax Day, so if you haven’t paid any taxes yet, you’re Amazon.” Oh, so now you’re biting back at Amazon?
— Aidy reprises her Carrie Krum character. I enjoyed her first appearance, but she’s never worked too strongly for me outside of that.
— Yup. Aidy’s performance is really charming, but she’s not bringing anything new. I wonder if she was rolled out again because SNL thought it might click with the BTS audience watching tonight’s episode.
— Ha, quite the interesting news graphic visual of then-writer Andrew Dismukes sitting in an infant car seat (fourth screenshot).
— Continuing my theory about the Weekend Update correspondent choices being specific to the audience of this episode, we get the return of Mikey and Heidi’s passive-aggressive (or maybe just aggressive-aggressive) Instagram couple.
— The “#flatearth” joke in the picture of Nico and Brie’s Instagram post is something I don’t quite know how to feel about. On one hand, it’s kind of a lame, overdone joke to clue us in on how vapid the characters are, but at the same time, I like that this segment didn’t devolve into anyone over-explaining how weird that hashtag is, because it gets immediately glossed over. I guess I’ll choose to give credit for the latter since it feels rare to see that in Seiday’s pieces.
— Our third BTS reference of the evening.
— Honestly, these Nico and Brie bits work for me pretty well; while Mikey would continue to tap into this well of characters as his tenure continues in addition to working with Heidi on Update pieces more, this stands out to me as one of his most finely-realized character pieces, bringing a specific energy to the show that feels rare to see of this current era. Thankfully, this is the final reprisal of the characters, though, with them even breaking up at the end of the segment. I don’t know if they’d fare well being dredged up beyond this point.
STARS: ***

ROYAL BABY VIDEO
Prince Harry (MID) greets guests on video of the royal baby shower

— The second and final installment of those Mikey-led royal family video sketches.
— As with the last variant of this sketch, Aidy plays a British celebrity in drag. This time she’s reusing her James Corden impression, one which works for me in spite of everything about it. 
— The return of Alex’s fun Prince William impression, though he sadly doesn’t get anywhere near as fun stuff to do here as he did in any of his previous uses.
— Emma’s appearance in this sketch is alright, though as with most everything else here, it feels inferior to Fey’s character in the original. She’s selling it well, though.
— Alright, one big laugh from me due to Pete’s incredibly brief cameo as Ringo Starr passing by the camera (“Peace and love.”). 
— A very odd choice to have Ego play Meghan Markle’s cousin and not the woman herself.
— Aidy’s Corden re-emerging made for a solid out.
STARS: **

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Mic Drop”

Blue: Whereas “Boy With Luv” was a pretty powerful pop performance, here we see BTS taking a more rap-focused approach.
— Not loving these outfits.
— Strong rap from J-Hope. I like his voice here.
— Love the choreography on the chorus.
— Is Jimin singing his part on the verse live at all? All I can hear is the recording.
— Come to think of it, there’s a LOT of “why not sing the pre-recorded vocals?” going on in this song. Although considering the energetic choreography, I think I know why they’re not singing all the pre-recorded vocals. 
— Really cool aggressive rap from RM.
— Man, the choreography on the breakdown is awesome.
— Ending with an actual mic drop… I see what you did there.
— I didn’t like this song as much as the other one, but it also made me feel nostalgic for the sort of stuff I’d hear on the radio in middle school, plus I loved the visuals, so this is getting an extra half-star.
STARS: ***½

THE ACTRESS
(host) takes her marginal porno role far too seriously

— Ah, fuck yes, Julio’s swan song as an SNL writer (co-penned with Bowen) and one of his greatest works!
— A great reveal that Emma, after her self-serious set-up as an actress out to play fully-dimensional characters in film, is cast as “the woman who gets cheated on in the gay porn.”
— Beck’s director: “Go put on whatever you want from the ‘woman bin.’”
— Funny little moment where Emma’s character slips on the floor and says, “Hah! Lube!” That clip also appears in the season’s blooper video with some laughter afterwards, which leads me to believe it may not have been scripted.
— I love how you can detect the true, observational root of this idea for Julio: Emma’s method actress character taking the miscellaneous, filler props in the “woman bin” and attempting to construct a compelling, personal narrative out of them as “Deirdre.”  
— Fun little trivia note: the actor playing the grandson is a real porn actor, Ty Mitchell. In the spirit of supporting independent artists, enjoy the free publicity! And apologies if this sends a horde of obnoxious comedy snobs your way…
— Emma suddenly digging into the root of her character when she walks in on her fiancee having sex with her godson is a brilliant moment, weaving a narrative out of the props from her bin across her character’s life. My favorite has to be the repurposing of the two batteries in the box as a gift she gave her godson on his 18th birthday (“I know how much you like batteries.”). Having all of that emotional attachment, too, before her character forgives them per the porno script, is such a great way to return to the shallow reality of the shoot. 
— Another great flourish: Beck disinterestedly telling a crew member that they’ll edit out her tearful exoneration.
— Overall, one of my favorite pieces of the season, and of this era. It’s very poetic that Emma could take part in one of Julio’s first big pieces as well as his last as a staff writer. Despite popping up to make occasional contributions (“Sara Lee” in S45, the cut “Beanie Babies” sketch from S46), his unique brand of pathos is dearly missed.
STARS: *****

CHALMERS RESERVE EVENT WINE
Chalmers’ (KET) & (CES) Reserve Event Wine is low-quality & high-alcohol

— <in Abraham H. Parnassus voice, stabbing through episode with a cane> And now we RETURN the show to earth!
— Kenan and Cecily paired up in the same sketch? Could it be any wonder who wrote this one?
— You can rather clearly make out a pipe sticking out behind Cecily’s shoulder through most of this sketch. Or maybe that’s just me, because I couldn’t be arsed to pay attention to what’s actually being said.
— Okay, I do guiltily enjoy Emma and Kyle’s maximum-ham Italian accents.
— This was a sketch that happened.
STARS: *½

GOODNIGHTS


IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— This episode was two fantastic sketches away from being a strictly average episode for the season. As with her excellent hosting gigs in the past, Emma was given a lot to do and performed all of her material enthusiastically, though the writing just wasn’t quite there most of the night. The tough crowd didn’t do the episode any favors, either. 

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


And I’m sorry, but…


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
The Actress
Fashion Coward
Ladies Room
Hobbies
Monologue
Weekend Update
The View
Royal Baby Video
Jail Cell
Chalmers Reserve Event Wine
Posters

TOMORROW
Adam Sandler makes his triumphant return to 8H, as covered by Anthony

April 6, 2019 – Kit Harington / Sara Bareilles (S44 E17)

by John

BIDEN HEADQUARTERS
personal space invader Joe Biden (JAS) receives sensitivity training

— Nice recognition applause for Jason. His buoyancy puts a big smile on my face immediately.
— Jason is one of my favorite cast members of all time, but I feel like way too much attention tends to go to his Biden impression rather than his whole body of work on the show. Perhaps this is because he never had the big breakout moments the others in “the four” (Kristen Wiig, Bill Hader, Andy Samberg) had, I don’t know. I just sort of resent that the two are so intertwined, when this impression, while fine, was never something I saw as the best use of his talents.  
— We also have, right off the bat, the central problem with Jason attempting to play Joe Biden in 2019—Biden was a very different person to the man Jason had played a decade earlier (even that version was not quite the same, but was closer than what we get here). To Jason’s credit, I do think he tries to mix things up a little, and it’s not as if SNL has ever demanded stringently accurate impressions, but they are caught in a difficult bind, because he is technically trying for the impression (rather than just doing like Chevy Chase used to do with no wigs or voice, only bumbling), which just points out how different he is. Jason was a live wire while in the cast, in the best of all ways—it just does not sit right with the man he is impersonating by this point in time. 
— There are several glimpses of the harder edge the characterization will take during Woody Harrelson’s brief appearances in the role—namely, “I’m a hugger, I’m a kisser…I’m a little bit of a sniffer,” as well as his tone deaf attitude toward Kenan’s character.
— Speaking of a harder edge, Biden says the r-word in the dress version, apparently. Not sorry to see that go…
— Kate gets huge applause for walking into the room.  
— The first of several songs which presumably gave the sketch a short life on Youtube (a running theme for this episode).
— My pick for the strongest moment of the sketch is when Biden responds to Kenan’s character turning off Lou Rawls: “Of all the people.” Sharp writing, terrific delivery, great reaction from Kenan.
— The bit where he asks if he can still do the Dirty Dancing lift with “whoever’s strong enough to pick me up” amuses me, mostly thanks to Jason’s delivery. 
— Kate is pretty flat in her role, and is doing that thing where I’m not sure if she is trying to avoid a break.
— It’s tough to know how to react to most of this sketch once we get into the more direct material about Biden’s behavior with women. The audience also seems to be unsure, as moments likely designed for big laughs or applause—such as Aidy’s character punching Biden in the stomach, or Cecily’s saying that unlike Trump voters, their voters care about sexual harassment—barely get a response. 
— The section with Leslie’s character, who ignores all precautions and immediately launches into groping Biden, is something of a throwback to her early years in the cast, and also feels like the Michael Che type of interlude which helps make sketches like these completely indecipherable. Are we meant to take this as showing the difference between black female supporters and white female supporters? Or to show that the allegations were overhyped? Who knows. If nothing else, Leslie is the only one in this sketch Jason gets a chance to connect with. I wish she had been in Kate’s role.
— “Biden and some woman 2020.” Indeed…
— Jason has a lot of energy, which, again, does not really fit Biden by this point, but is invaluable in keeping this very confused piece afloat. Outside of a few lines, he is the only reason this gets to two stars. 
STARS: **

MONOLOGUE
Emilia Clarke, John Bradley, Rose Leslie [real] seek spoilers from host

— Written by Colin Jost.
— Kit has a very endearingly geeky charm from the start, when he jokes that without a beard he looks like a member of the Yankees, then adds that he has no idea what that means. 
— Kit is a good sport to make fun of his various flop films. 
— This now segues into the audience Q&A filled with writers, a stalwart of SNL in the ‘90s and ‘00s, not very much since that time. 
— First up is Gary Richardson, who brings a quick laugh with, “Bitch, I didn’t come here for sketches,” when demanding Game of Thrones spoilers.
— Emilia Clarke’s cameo is pleasant enough, but is made much better by the man who is seemingly fanboying out when he realizes who she is. 
— The whole premise of Emilia also asking Kit for spoilers is much funnier when you remember her (unknown to viewers at this point) less-than-thrilled response to the final episodes. 
— I got a laugh out of Emilia asking Kit if she remembered when they had sex in season 6: “Did you know they filmed that?”
— Writer Sam Jay gets a lot of mileage out of a bit where she assumes Kit is from the Harry Potter franchise.
— There isn’t anything special about John Bradley’s cameo, aside from his likeability, but I liked the part about his only dialogue being “argh” and the page before reading “Dragon opens its mouth.” 
— You have to wonder how much time they spent in makeup to make Pete the Night King for a quick flounce. Still, this appearance has more weight than what happened with the character on the show…
— The writing is pretty shaky, but the banter between Kit and his wife Rose Leslie is charming.
— The (planned? unplanned?) ending with Pete tackling Kit as he goes into the “we have a great show” routine is a real blast. 
— This whole monologue is an exercise in sloppy charm—very breezy and just fun. It also serves as a time capsule for the last months of Game of Thrones mania, and is a better way to say goodbye than anything you will get if you try to watch the end run. 
STARS: ***½ 

2019 NEPHEW PAGEANT
celebrating siblings’ sons (host), (KYM), (MID), (CRR)

— Written by Anna Drezen and Aidy Bryant, this is the first of several pageant sketches we’ll be seeing over the next few seasons. 
— “Who’s that boy? He’s clever and fun, he’s my sibling’s son…”
— Like most Anna Drezen sketches that involve Kate and/or Aidy, this is very densely packed with details that will make a portion of the audience say, “This is so relatable, yet quirky!” 
— Kit debuts the flat, nasal American accent he’ll rely on for much of the night. 
— We get a little of the character work I often miss from Cecily’s later performances.
— I like the detail of the ridiculous crown Kit is wearing, which looks like something thrown out by Burger King. 
— Kyle, still rocking the blonde wig he has on standby, wrings laughs out of teenage awkwardness in a way few others can. As he is doing some of the same moves he did in the talent show sketch from Tina Fey’s last episode, I’m just going to pretend he’s playing the same character.
— “Remembers being an angel” for Mikey’s character is a nice touch. Apparently the dress version also has a talent portion where he tries and fails to flip sticks. I wish we’d seen that.
— Aidy tends to be at her best when playing seemingly normal characters who are vaguely disturbed. This sketch is no exception. I especially like her story about her intense sobbing when Kit’s character got his first detention…and the cutaway to his very nervous reaction.
— Chris and Leslie aren’t given much to work with, although he does some good physical work with his trying to show off while on crutches. 
— The parade of nieces holding pets (“nephews are gold, nieces are silver, pets are bronze”) is the absurd touch I would have enjoyed more of here. 
— Kenan gives more depth to repeated readings of “The Boy” than most could. 
— The ending, with Kit’s character winning for a second time, makes a lot of sense with what was set up before, making this sketch better-constructed than many modern SNL pieces.
— This is probably my least favorite of the pageant sketches from the last three seasons, but it still has its charms. 
STARS: ***

NEW HBO SHOWS 
Game Of Thrones spin-offs include Ice-T & Mariska Hargitay [real] vehicle

— This got a creating SNL featurette.
— Written by Mikey Day, Heidi Gardner, Sudi Green, Fran Gillespie, and Streeter Seidell.
— I was going to say this pre-tape was a few years too late for pop culture saturation, but then I remembered there actually were several GoT spinoffs in the works at this time. 
— The Riverdale (?) spoof with Kit and Heidi is forgettable, but Heidi’s penchant for dramatic acting is put to good use. I’m surprised that Kit—who has given some praised comedic performances—did not have more to do in this pre-tape.
— The Daria/Arya mashup is my favorite part of this whole thing. I’m so glad they made the decision to animate as it has a punch the live portions just don’t. 
Queen of King’s Landing is such a reach for a cute name, I wish the payoff had been better than the warmed-over material Kyle and Cecily are given. 
— The Wildling n Out bit serves as a fun full-circle moment for Mikey and Pete, but other than the energy burst at the end with Pete jumping on Mikey and sticking his tongue out, it’s hard to have much reaction. 
— Most of the highlights are the titles for shows we won’t get to see—my favorite is The Marvelous Mrs. Melisandre
— The cameo from Mariska Hargitay and Ice-T is a needed dose of momentum; it’s not hard to see why this was moved to the end. That so much of this is reminiscent of the John Mulaney routine is all the better. 
— Something called RuPaul’s Dragon Race was cut from dress. A photo can be seen in the card at the end—I believe that’s Ego as Ru (?). 
— The contrast between the hard-working crew in the behind the scenes video and the lazy writing throughout most of the pre-tape sum up a longstanding problem for SNL. I get the commercial appeal of this type of segment—the video has nearly 7 million views on Youtube—but it seems to exist for no other reason than Youtube hits and conversation. I want to like this much more than I do, but it just never happens.
STARS: **½ 

SINATRA IMPERSONATOR
Michael Jackson impersonator (host) perfunctorily pivots to Frank Sinatra

— Another sketch not on Youtube due to music rights.
— “That’s Billie Jean.” Thanks for telling us, Heidi…
— In an interview a few days after the episode aired, Kit said he told the writers to just give him anything they had been trying to get on. This is our first glimpse at just how seriously they took his request. 
— I will say Kit throws himself into a very stupid part, complete with moonwalking and hip thrusts. He’s doing more to get this over than anything else.
— For some reason, I really want to see Bruno Mars in this part, although I have a feeling he would not agree with me.
— Characters literally explaining every detail to us while Beck shouts indignantly feels less like a sketch and more like a macro gone horribly wrong. 
— The closest I’ve had to a laugh or a smile is Kit-and-Kenan’s unified indignant shouts of “Ma’am” after Leslie asks why a Macaulay Culkin impersonator is in the act. 
— The entire end of the sketch ends up being about Heidi and Beck and how put off they are by Leslie trying to hang out with them. This was a story thread at the start of the sketch and then dropped most of the way through. It does not work—we even stop with, “Leslie shouts to end a sketch,” which is another homage to her use in the earlier seasons. Just a waste.
— This is one of the reasons why I blame the headwriting and writing supervision for many of the show’s current problems. This is a completely incoherent sketch that never should have gotten on the air in such a state. 
— Rather than focus on MJ or Frank Sinatra, I will end on Fleetwood Mac—Not That Funny. 
STARS: *

NEW VIDEO GAME
(PED) endures nonplayer-character office politics in virtual reality game

— Written by Mikey and Streeter. 
— Thanks to Matt for pointing out this idea is very similar to a cut pre-tape from season 42’s Dave Chappelle episode.
— Alex pops up for the first time tonight, in a completely thankless role. A harbinger for his next few seasons…
— Kit is great as one of the needy, annoying NPCs. 
— Mikey is also very good, especially the subtle swaying back and forth he does while waiting for Pete’s character to respond. 
— I love the part where Pete’s character just keeps punching Kit’s NPC as he stammers the same few lines on a loop. Well done.
— As we start to get other characters repeating the same beats, the familiarity of Seiday kicks in, but they are helped by the pop that Ego and Chris both tend to bring to minor parts. This was still very early in Ego’s tenure, and, looking back, I see how much she did with anything they gave her. 
— Often when SNL tries to talk about video games, the end result veers toward the “how do you do fellow kids” meme, but this sketch manages a funny take on the widespread complaints about NPCs and too much dialogue. This feels a bit too slick for me, which can often be the case with this team and is why I’m a little hesitant on my final score. Still, it is a good sketch, with a creative concept, and overall it’s one of the more underrated Seiday sketches.
STARS: **** 

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Fire”

John: I love the way Kit introduces Sara Bareilles. If that Host Musical Intro Twitter account is still up by the time this review is published, I hope Kit makes an appearance…
Blue: I actually saw Sara Bareilles perform this song at a live variety show a few weeks after this episode aired. In person, I was floored. 
— I love seeing Aoife O’Donovan and Sarah Jarosz, two folk singers of whom I am a fan, performing with Sara’s band. (They’re the blonde white woman on the far right and the dark-haired white woman on the far left.) 
— Already the building energy of this song has fully engaged me.
— Sara Bareilles is in fine voice, but then again, that’s hardly worth mentioning when we’re talking about Sara Bareilles.
— The harmonies on the word “fire” are gorgeous and an improvement from the album version. I’ll never understand why she harmonized them in such a way on the original recording.
— The singer to Sara’s immediate right (the black woman in the black dress, whose name I sadly don’t know) is really feeling the song and is fun to watch.
— The drummer is doing a great job.
— Cue effortless and healthy-sounding high note… and cue my intense jealousy for singing such an effortless, healthy-sounding high note.
— I always loved the way Sara applauds for her own band at the end. Very sweet.
STARS: *****

WEEKEND UPDATE 
hallucinogen-user Terry Fink’s (ALM) film reviews cover unreal cinematics

gambling loser Charles Barkley (KET) enjoyed Auburn’s Final Four run

— We go straight into the Biden allegations, which reminds me that the show was much tougher on Biden before he became the likely Democratic nominee for President. 
— Jost mostly has thin gruel with Biden’s apology video, but, as is often the case, Che’s delivery on the joke about the 75 year old woman in his apartment saves the material. 
— It took a while to get there but I did enjoy Jost’s joke about the pro-Trump, anti-sexual harassment group being called Independent Republicans of New York.
— Too much of this Update so far is devoted to clips and reacting to clips. That’s never what I want to see on here—it’s the reason why I do not watch most of the late night shows.
— After an extended period on this catnip, I did finally respond positively to another  line—Che riffing on Trump “declaring war on white women” by taking away avocados. 
— And now, just in the nick of time, we have the arrival of the one and only Terry Fink.
— Until recently, I assumed we’d never see Terry again. Why? Mostly because some Tim and Eric fans hit the roof over the character, claiming he was a rip-off of On Cinema. A followup installment was cut in dress, and did not appear again for over two seasons.  
— Others have claimed Terry is more of a homage to film reviewer Sandy Kenyon, and I can see why. There’s also a twinge of Casey Kasem.
— Alex is an expert at tongue-twisting dialogue, but the main opportunity he gets to show this talent is Guy Who Just Bought a Boat, which is often overlaid (no pun intended…) with a lot of gross dialogue. Terry is no saint, but he allows for a fuller palate. 
— This initial appearance really kicks into gear for me when he says you’ll never forget Dumbo’s “touching Jihadi message.” 
— Now we’re at the most famous line from this debut: “Oh, Colin, you still believe in time?”
— I like the little attempts here at showing the character’s screwed-up life, like “36 missed calls from my wife.”
— When I saw Terry’s return, my first thoughts were that it was very good, but not as good as this one. I still have that opinion, but I will say the second version plays up the tension and banter between Colin and Alex in a way that enhances the character work for me. Still, this is a hilarious debut that manages to combine classic Update foils with a streak of unpredictability, wrapped up in one of the most unheralded talents in SNL history.
— It’s a silly thing, but the character first appearing in an episode hosted by a Kit and next in an episode hosted by a Kim amuses me for some reason.
— You have to wonder why this first appearance seemed to fly under the radar, aside from some positive fan commentary, while his return generated high praise from the likes of Patton Oswalt and Edgar Wright. I guess it’s all down to timing. Or more eyeballs depending on the host. Either way, I’m glad it finally struck gold for Alex.  Very long-deserved. 
— Back to this Update, Jost’s bit about the Twitter feud between Jim Carrey and Mussolini’s niece just being typical of today is too long (as per usual), but still has some great points. 
— Jost’s joke about the chicken in a wheelchair was not well-received by the chicken owner in question.
— Loved the joke about how a Star Wars orgy just means you find out the guy in the mask is your father. Maybe one of my favorite Jost jokes.
— Kenan returns as Charles Barkley.
— As is often the case, my favorite part of Kenan’s work here is his cracking Che up. 
— “The only thing worse than lake people are river people.”
— Kenan can do so much with that Barkley cadence, helped here by some funny lines (like the Harry Potter league from an old Wayans brothers script, and the line, “The ‘80s was a crazy time—dancing was illegal, and every dog wore sunglasses”).
— Surprisingly short commentary, but given how many times we’ve seen this impression, short and sweet is a good thing.
— Ego had a cut piece as a tired mother who took her kids to Disneyworld. This was not the first or last time this would be cut, but it finally shows up in the Elon Musk episode, presumably because by that point Ego had connected with the audience after carrying so much of season 46 on her back. 
STARS: ***

BACHELORETTE PARTY
at (CES)’s bachelorette party, fiance (host) performs a burlesque routine

— The second be-careful-what-you-ask-for-Kit sketch of the night, but it is also one I generally enjoy.
— This is also the second sketch of the night where our host does crotch thrusts.  
— Kit has some outrageous lines here that he sells with real aplomb, possibly the best being, “You’re about to see some bespoke ASS.”
— There are a number of overly crass moments here that should not work for me, like his stripper name being “Eva Braun” and telling the ladies they will be “edging,” but Kit’s determined performance and the utter ridiculousness of the whole thing somehow turn the lemons into lemonade. 
— Melissa is a lot of fun as the party guest constantly asking to see “that body-ody-ody.”
— Kate getting an extended break to do her usual Kate routine (just in French) is unnecessary. The entire sketch just stops for her segment.
— “Lookie lookie, you might see my cookie cookie,” has been one of those unfortunate SNL lines stuck in my head since I first heard it.
— “Nice big panties.” Ego working that one comic line…
— The ending, where Melissa’s character praises the hot body one last time and Kit’s character replies with, “Thanks, sis,” is just perfect—perfect buildup, and great delivery on both sides. It is, for me, the best example of the quirky appeal Melissa brings that few others in her casts have brought. Even Leslie’s double take/repeat reaction works, instead of seeming like overkill.
— I assume this is not exactly a popular sketch, but it’s one of those times where the stale camp aspect tips so far over the edge that the whole thing spins around into becoming anti-comedy in the most delirious of ways. It helps that the energy and performance levels are consistent throughout.
STARS:  ***½ 

A DAY IN THE LIFE OF THERESA MAY
musical guest’s “She Used To Be Mine” chronicles Theresa May (KAM) pathos

— Our third and final piece that is not available on Youtube.
— Not everyday you see Ann Widdecombe on SNL
— I don’t really know what to say, honestly. The best I can start with might be: what the hell is this?
— The only comment I could find from Kate about Theresa May is that she found her “endearing” and liked her speaking voice. Kate also said she did not know much about May’s political views. If that is the case, why use the actual May? Why focus on a prime minister most people here do not know…and why three different times, the final time being a lavishly produced pre-tape? Why did Kate not just create an original character who could be plucky without the political baggage, like Tracey Ullman’s evergreen Kay
— It would be one thing if this material had any real weight, but it’s just minute after minute of Theresa May being put-upon. Imagine if Jim Downey and Jan Hooks had read the stories about Margaret Thatcher being pushed out of her Prime Minister role and had decided to write a long sketch about how noble she was, with little to no point or comedy. Do you think that ever would have gotten on the air? Where did those standards go?
— Maybe it’s unfair of me to harp on all the above and not try to focus on the contents themselves, but, talented as the directors, wardrobe people, editing people, etc. are, all I can think of is the gowns, beautiful gowns meme. 
— I assume the part where she makes out with Winston Churchill is meant to add some kind of actual comedy, to which I would just say…OK? 
— Why is Kate doing artistic dancing in a Union Jack unitard? I guess this is parodying something else, or beyond that, the joke is that she really loves the UK in spite of how mean they are to her…hee hee, ha ha?
— The end has May responding to criticism of her Brexit deal by saying, “Fuck you, at least I’m trying.” This is the part that goes into open sycophancy, and also makes the least sense, because even many of May’s supporters would say her choice to call an early election, one that backfired and nearly cost her party the majority, is what led to most of her problems. She was not some brave figure fighting against the tides. You can say “Why would you expect SNL to go into those types of details?” to which I would say, I never expected them to have a puff piece on Theresa May either!
— From 2016 to 2020, a good chunk of Kate’s tenure in the cast was defined by borderline deified portrayals of female politicians (May, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Elizabeth Warren), where, if there was any negativity, most of that focus went to people not giving these women a chance. It’s not my place to speculate on just why this very draining shift happened, and that is why I do not like these types of pieces. This is more a form of therapy than a form of comedy. Most viewers are left shut out (and I can’t imagine UK viewers would have any use for it either). I am all for SNL having unique, challenging types of content, but for me, this is the epitome of a vanity project. 
STARS: *

GRAPHICS DEPARTMENT
nerdy co-workers (host), (BEB), (KYM) LARP to be employee of the month

— This caused some controversy at the time. As I had just started watching again on a more regular basis, it was one of the first moments where I was aware of how many “controversies” SNL seems to spawn on social media. Claims that the sketch ridiculed D&D players (it never mentioned D&D) led to a campaign of various players showing their diversity. I think my favorite part was the people on Twitter who chimed in to talk about how this wouldn’t have happened in the Farley and Sandler days. You’re right—that sketch would have ended with a large newspaper headline announcing the men had been raped and murdered.
— As for the sketch itself, I do think the beginning is a tad labored, although that isn’t helped by the audience being dead for the first half.
— This is also one of the increasingly rare chances we have to see Beck and Kyle together, or to see Beck getting to cut loose this much. I had wondered if they wrote this, but no credits are available.
— Mikey is also in good form as the weary boss.
— Cecily is fine, but I think her part is a reason why people may take this sketch the wrong way, as Kit’s character being shut down by her makes you think we might get the trope of creepy nerds annoying the “normal” people. 
— Once we get into the “battle” between Kyle, Beck and Kit, things improve, but I must point out how bad the blocking is. Kyle and Beck are staring at a wall rather than Kit, while Kit is standing further back, staring right into the camera. It’s unfortunate that, yet again, I have to enjoy a sketch in spite of the direction.
— I know it’s easy to play a stereotypical nerd role, but I appreciate Kit getting his performance so in line with Beck and Kyle. They are a good trio. 
— Kyle could have done a mean Tom Green impression…
—  I like that through the battle, rather than big mugging reactions from those who are watching, we see an extra working in the background and Cecily mostly just making annoyed faces while also trying to work. It feels more authentic.
— The audience finally starts to kick in when Mikey’s character is exposed as masturbating under the stairwell. 
— The part where the three guys all start saying “Duplication spell!” and throwing around various-sized photos of him under the stairwell really makes me laugh.
— I’m not sure if it was intentional or not, but Kyle and Kit repeatedly “crowning” each other rather than Beck adds another fun character beat. 
— The end, with Cecily’s character asking why they can leave and being reminded of the photos, was not needed. Just showing them leave would have been fine. 
— I can understand the complaints about the sketch, especially if you just skim through. SNL always has a problem with diversity and stereotypes, similar to much of the industry. However, many guys who are into LARPing do look the way Kyle, Beck and Kit look here, which isn’t a particularly bad thing in of itself. The sketch never claims all people who are into D&D or LARPing look like them—the main point is in (and I know how tired this term has become) subverting expectations, as the clean-cut boss is shown to be much more toxic than the easier targets. 
— The sketch has its flaws, but overall, is well-performed, mostly cohesive, and an all-too-rare hint at slice-of-life material. I hope that cuts through all the controversy of what now feels like a million years ago.
STARS: ***½ 

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Saint Honesty”

Blue: I see Sara is utilizing the “one upbeat song and one ballad” format. 
— This also happens to be a song that I saw Sara perform live, at the variety show I previously mentioned. 
— I’m really liking the understated performance from Sara’s backing vocalists.
— The clear focal point of this song is Sara’s performance on lead vocals- which is outstanding. Just when I think she can’t impress me anymore, she goes and does it again.
— It’s fun to watch the organist play a little run up into her entrance. Shame the organ is mixed too low.
STARS: ****

EXAM
patient (host) vets long-fingernailed proctologist (LEJ)

— Written by James Anderson and Michael Koman.
— I see that Kit has dropped his American accent for the closer.
— I got a cheap laugh out of Kit’s character’s response to the “You can’t put a price tag on colorectal health” line (“Where would you hang it?”).
— The sight gag of proctologist Leslie and her long nails reminds me of one of Anderson’s first pieces, the…erm…one-of-a-kind Corn Tips Nail Chips.
— Leslie is fun in what feels like yet another throwback for her, as she repeatedly reacts with indignation to obvious concern about a proctologist having such long nails. It also shows how she has grown as a performer, as she is not just shouting her lines in response. 
— The part where they react to her nails is still too long, and they mostly just worked as a sight gag. Apparently, there was a moment in dress where Leslie would put on gloves only for them to get cut up by the nails. That’s a fun visual idea, but I can see why it would not work on the live show.
— A welcome jolt of chaos here when Pete and Leslie try to pin Kit onto the bed, since, as Cecily mentioned in an Instagram post, Kit really did fight back. (she also shows a clip from dress where Leslie nearly fell off her stool)
— The Undercover Boss twist doesn’t really add anything to this beyond giving us another example of not knowing how to end a sketch, but the charm of the performers carries it over. Which describes this sketch as a whole, really.
— Geez, that last shot is meme/chop fodder waiting to happen…
— This will be my last chance to cover Leslie Jones, who brought a spark of life to every moment she had on SNL. I’m glad she left when she felt the time was right, and I’m glad she left early enough to where I still miss her. 
STARS: **½ 

GOODNIGHTS

— Leslie’s T-shirt is a tribute to Nipsey Hussle, who had been murdered several days earlier.
— Emilia Clarke is not onstage. This is not a snub—I believe she had to go right after the monologue due to filming commitments. 
Jason’s shirt generated quite a bit of conversation, which has since become a thing for him. Their staggered departures and the lack of a proper goodbye for Jason tends to add a melancholy air to “the four,” and it feels especially poignant here because this is around the time their appearances on the show start to fade: Kristen has made a cameo and hosted twice, but Andy has not appeared since season 43, Bill, aside from a memorial cameo for Hal Willner, has not since season 44, and Jason, until his hosting gig, had last appeared in early season 45. So it feels like a special moment for a very special group. 
— I normally do not ask this type of thing, but I see Tim Robinson’s name in the writing credits. If anyone has any idea if any of these sketches involved him, please let me know. (I have my suspicions, but I’m not good at playing guess-the-writer). 

DRESS REHEARSAL CUTS
— You can find an extensive list of the cut sketches here. They mostly seem to continue with the “how far can we go?” theme of many of the sketches that made it to air, including one where Kit runs into his ex (Beck) wearing fetish gear at the grocery store, and another about men having sex with an “alien with 4 boobs.” I’m not that shocked these were cut, but there’s another (where Pete plays a grandfather who quizzes his granddaughter’s beau on what type of “cake” he likes) that sounds more typical of material that would make it to air.

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— Similar to many other season 44 hosts, Kit is very likeable and throws himself into every challenge. He may not be a laugh riot, but he does the job, and what would otherwise be a forgettable night (as you can see by the scores, several of which were lower than my memory had anticipated) is elevated by his presence. I always felt bad for Kit (yes, I know, first world problems) because he tended to get a lot of stick over his work on GoT and elsewhere, so I’m glad he got this night of his own. 
— I’m glad the show avoided cashing in on more GoT related content, as the soullessness of those types of plugs bothers me more than the weird, thrown together sketches which at least have some type of sense of creation.
— I think every single comment I made about Kate was negative. I don’t dislike Kate, and even up to the more recent episodes, she has had moments that I find worthy of praise (she was very good all through the Nick Jonas episode). But when she is used the wrong way, she is a real burden to the goings-on, and unfortunately, that was the case here. Negotiations for her season 45 return went down to the wire, which I was thinking of during this episode, because she feels like a performer who has given everything they have left to give.

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


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
New Video Game
Graphics Department
Bachelorette Party
Monologue
Weekend Update
2019 Nephew Pageant
Exam
New HBO Shows
Biden Headquarters
Sinatra Impersonator
A Day in the Life of Theresa May

TOMORROW
The marvelous Matt reviews what is Emma Stone’s fourth and (so far) final hosting gig, with musical guest BTS.

March 30, 2019 – Sandra Oh / Tame Impala (S44 E16)

by Matt

THE MUELLER REPORT
Donald Trump (Alec Baldwin) digs Robert Mueller’s (Robert De Niro) report

— Welp… looks like it’s my turn to put up with Mueller.
— Something that always annoys me about how these sketches are directed nowadays: if De Niro’s Mueller is reading from a letter during this cold open, why is he staring into the distance at cue cards? Why can’t he just read from, y’know, the physical letter that has the words that he’s saying?
— I do somewhat appreciate the format of this cold open and how it’s trying something a bit different—cutting between Mueller, Trumpwin, and Aidy’s William Barr as they disseminate and interpret the same basic information—but no amount of changing presentation masks the weak, watery-ass writing at the heart of it.
— Oh, speaking of watery-ass writing: Trumpwin singing Smash Mouth’s “All Star” for no discernible reason besides… funny?
— De Niro has been reading his lines lifelessly but dutifully enough that this is probably one of his better live performances on the show. High praise for Bobby!
— For heaven’s sake, why has Kate-as-Giuliani come into this cold open? Admittedly, the line about him actually being Rumpelstiltskin would probably get a laugh out of me in Update, but I’m tired of this sort of joke delivery.
— Yeesh, a pretty lousy LFNY for this cold open, with only De Niro’s Mueller being properly mic’d up, Kate entering the frame later, and De Niro missing the first half of the chant entirely. Not a good way to get the energy up for the show like it’s supposed to, guys.
STARS: *½

MONOLOGUE
LEJ helps host overcome her Asian-Canadian self-deprecation propensity

— “I’m Sandra Oh, and if you don’t know, ‘Oh’ in Korean means, ‘Huh.’”
— Not too much to say about this monologue, but Sandra is coming off very enthusiastic and excited—the show already feels like it’s in good hands for the night. Leslie offered a nice assist as well without feeling like back-up.
STARS: ***

DISCOVER
Red (EGN) is Adelaide’s (EGN) tether & her Discover Card operator

— A really fun combination of those identical twin Discover card commercials and the concept behind the movie Us.
— It’s really refreshing to see Ego leading this commercial pretape off, and she’s doing a fantastic job portraying her Us variant. I remember being blown away by her acting in this sketch the first time I saw it, having been unfamiliar with her work prior to being hired by the show; it felt like a window into her capacity, and it makes me all the more happy that we get to see that every week all these years later.
— Shout-out to the cinematography as well, which is adding delightfully to the horror-fueled atmosphere of the piece.
STARS: ****

EMPIRE MEETING
Jussie Smollett (CRR) fabricates attack to avoid being fired from Empire

— The return of Chris’ Jussie Smollett impression. 
— I love Jussie reacting in shock to his “discovery” that he’s holding a “bag of clues,” and the premise is enabling some fun, stupid visual gags, but there’s nothing too special or unpredictable about what this sketch is going for.
— If nothing else, this is a great display of Chris’ comedic face acting; he’s cracking me up more than the material is.
— Jussie: “Oh, a Telly-Tubby?? And it’s the gay one.”
— Sandra playing a strangely thankless role here.
STARS: **

THE DUEL
“The Duel”- suitors (BEB) & (PED) repeatedly shoot (host) by mistake

— Ah, the latest of SNL’s gore fiestas. I’m usually not the biggest fan of these because I’m very squeamish at over-the-top gore, but while I haven’t revisited this one since the first time I saw it, I think I’ll like it more than usual given the other concepts surrounding the piece.
— I’m immediately a huge fan of the 19th-century flavor here, which the cinematography once again does a great job of capturing. Feels like a rare sort of visual style for SNL to utilize.
— Hmm, it seems like the focus of this piece is shifting around a lot. On one hand, you have the joke of Pete and Beck’s dueling suitors (refereed by Kenan) constantly trying to shoot each other, cheat each other, or accidentally firing their guns, all of which redirect violently onto Sandra, but you also have Sandra chastely accepting the pain inflicted on herself as being secondary to the pan her suitors feel, deflecting any autonomy over the situation as a “lady.” There’s a curious satirical element that occasionally props up throughout the scene, but the fact that it never fully devotes itself to that angle leaves me a bit curious about what sort of perspective I should walk away from the sketch with, if any perspective at all—maybe the violence is supposed to be the ultimate point. I’m enjoying the sketch’s attempts at something a bit different, at least.
— A particularly sick visual of Sandra’s leg detaching from underneath her dress as she limps out of frame.
— Not sure how to feel about the overly-cartoonish ending of Sandra shooting herself and her body flying into the distant lake but points for being unexpected.
STARS: ***½ 

FUTURE SELF
teen’s (MID) future selves (ALM) & (BEB) love middle-aged weirdo (host)

— This is a very Seiday sort of piece for sure, featuring Mikey as the befuddled straight man and some crazy character, but it’s always worked for me better than most. A lot of that is just Sandra’s acting as Tishy, which is both insanely improbable and something that she executes perfectly.
— I like the revelation that Tishy met Mikey’s character the night he got beat up, and she was the person beating him up.
— Another good laugh from the fact that even twenty years in the future, Tishy’s arm is still broken.
— The ending that Tishy owns Samsung and is actually a billionaire is pretty abrupt, though I like that this sketch tried for an ending; I don’t think she works as well as a Kevin Roberts or a David S. Pumpkins in terms of being enhanced by their enigma.
STARS: ***

KREMLIN MEETING
lack of Trump collusion calls Vladimir Putin’s (BEB) clout into question

— I’m just gonna say upfront: this sketch is pretty bleh for a number of reasons, and I doubt I’ll have a ton to say about it leading up to a very crucial and exciting moment towards the midpoint.
— The central premise of this sketch, with Putin’s aides reacting in disappointment and shock that Trump didn’t collude with Russia, is alright for a good laugh but it’s proven to be very aimless. It does feel somewhat interesting for SNL to basically admit to the erroneous nature of all of the jokes it’s made of Trump being a pawn for Putin, but it isn’t reading as particularly introspective of the show.
— A major moment: writer Bowen Yang walks on as Kim Jong-un!! It’s not uncommon to see writers appear in sketches here and there, but this is the first time in what feels like ages for a writer to step out and play a pivotal role in a sketch akin to a proper cast member instead of merely a glorified extra.
— Bowen is making an amazing impression, even if he’s just quietly uttering Korean that’s being translated by Sandra; the way he’s able to express his demeanor through the language and make catty faces is killing me. I believe Bowen also went on to say that he learned his lines in Korean with Sandra’s help, which is all the more impressive.
— Overall, a nothing-burger of a sketch saved by a star-making performance from Bowen. When I saw this, I instantly knew Bowen was gonna make the cast next season, and as an Asian person who’s always felt unrepresented by the media he enjoys, that filled my heart with joy. That he’s gone on to become one of the most regarded and loved current cast members is just the icing on the cake! I can’t wait to cover some of his highlights next season and beyond.
STARS: *** (at least * for Bowen)

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Patience”

Blue: Strong piano chords to open the song.
— The lighting here sure is eye-catching, though I can’t decide if I mean that as a compliment or not.
— Oh hell yeah at the introduction of the percussion… this sounds like something you’d hear in a 70’s/80’s dance club.
— I love the wash of colors saturating the stage.
— Kevin Parker sounds amazing live, just like he does on Tame Impala’s records, although I can’t be sure if he’s genuinely an excellent singer or if the heavy use of effects is exaggerating his talent. Either way, he’s doing a great job.
— I like when the percussion drops out at the end of the first verse, so the listeners’ ears don’t get used to it and tune it out.
— Nice to see an actual conga player in the back.
— That fat, squelchy synth coming in on the second half of the chorus is really hitting the spot.
— Love the bass’s reentrance after the first couple lines of the second verse.
— Kevin’s now picked up a guitar, but it’s barely audible. The keyboard is drowning it out. However, I love the eighth notes that the keyboardist is playing, down in the bass register. I wish the camera would pan out so I could see which keyboardist is playing.
— All the synth sounds colliding into each other is pure bliss for the eardrums. I’m absolutely vibing to this.
— Kind of an abrupt ending.
STARS: ****½

WEEKEND UPDATE
Trump exoneration narrative has Jeanine Pirro (CES) head over heels

astronaut Anne McClain (AIB) claims to be fine with spacesuit snafu

— Colin, regarding the mass happiness on Fox News regarding the outcome of the Mueller Report: “I haven’t seen Fox News anchors smile like that since ICE agents pulled into a Home Depot parking lot.”
— Continuing tonight’s strange theme of trying to bounce back unscathed from how much SNL was banking on the Mueller Report, Michael is doing a bit on Update about white people’s “toxic optimism.”
— The debut of Cecily’s Jeanine Pirro on Update!
— “Mama’s got one volume, and it’s three Chardonnays deep at a crowded party!”
— Even though I’m absolutely burned out from this episode on its Mueller material, Cecily’s selling everything with her performance, which is far overpowering any of the politically-oriented things she’s saying.
— Every Pirro segment at Update finds some fun way for Cecily to overreact to a piece of news regarding the president, but the simplicity of her inaugural flopping out of the chair remains my absolute favorite. Cecily is crushing it.
— Aidy’s Update piece as Anne McClain, the female astronaut who couldn’t go on a space walk because there wasn’t another female-fitting spacesuit, is a lot more enjoyable than I was anticipating it would be. Aidy plays a lot of pitiful characters but her performance here feels very different from the sort we usually see from her; it’s reminding me a lot of how Heidi would play a character with the sorts of ticks that she has. 
— “To all the little girls out there, I just wanna say you can all become astronauts. Just, not at the same time!”
STARS: ***½

LOUISE’S BIRTHDAY
for her 85th birthday, (KAM) wants to watch co-workers kiss each other

— Kate in extensive old woman prosthetics. We’ve hit that weird point where sketches are seemingly written as an excuse for Kate to just play dress-up and go ham.
— The central joke of Kate just telling multiple people to kiss is, um… not great? I don’t think this is dreadful but this is incredibly pointless, and not in some absurdist way. It relies on the goodwill that the audience has in Kate doing her thing, and while I’m sure a lot of people who don’t follow the show as religiously as me and a lot of other diehard fans do, this just feels like exploitation of that goodwill to create complacent, indulgent material rather than to challenge us or craft something more nuanced.
— The idea is at least escalating appropriately, but I remain generally unsold because the aspects that are being escalated, like Kate taking out a clipboard and dictating more elaborate and erotic instructions, aren’t really advancing things into a more engaging place.
— Kate’s character dying and the other characters deciding to kiss after all is an alright ending, but the lack of commitment on that, followed by the close-up of Kate winking (apparently alive again) weakens it significantly.
STARS: **

CHEQUES
cheques are the form of payment most suitable for illicit transactions

— Ah fuck yeah, a Julio sketch! (Also co-penned by Bowen Yang; credit where credit’s due.)
— Cecily’s commercial voiceover shift from light-hearted to aloof and melodramatic when the sketch shifts into its primary focus, cheques, is perfect.
— The dialogue is so quintessentially Julio, lovingly-crafted and painfully specific with that air of sophistication, and Sandra and the female cast’s acting in it is fantastic; we rarely see sketches that allow them to shift into this mode of acting, and it’s something I’ve felt Kate, Aidy, and Cecily have always pulled off super well when granted the opportunity.
— Oh, I forgot Ego was in this one! Great to see her getting into the fun, too.
— Sandra breaking down the blank spaces on the cheque is something I’ve always remembered very vividly. (“Here, how much. Here, the same, but in letters.”)
— I love the out-of-context dramatic scenes carried out by the cast, with other cast members fading in and simply uttering, “Cheques.”
— This is probably one of Julio’s lesser-remembered works, but as is standard for him, it is excellent.
STARS: ****½

ROOTS OF ROCK
1966 footage shows (KET)’s endless encores preempting blues singer (LEJ)

— Kyle playing a role that he’s always been strangely capable of: that weird old guy who knows a lot about music.
— Kenan is, to nobody’s surprise, fantastic, channeling every ounce of his infectious, Diondre Cole energy into his role in the sketch. It feels rare to see a sketch these days that’s just willed into working out of pure energy but hot damn is it working. 
— I love how you can hear the live band playing immediately try to quiet themselves whenever the camera cuts back from the “archival footage” to Kyle.
— A fantastic reveal of Kenan hiding in the jazz band and taking over Leslie’s performance.
— God, I love how this sketch even has Kenan running around the studio audience! It’s weird to say for a show that is usually 70% live, but it’s great how much this sketch is really feeding off of the benefits of being able to perform a sketch live; it’s so high-energy and silly that it feels like a legitimate spectacle.
— I could honestly go for another round of Kenan’s show-stealing but the ending, with him running out and continuing the song next to Kyle “15 years later” was a fun little button. For all I know my enjoyment of “Electric Shoes” might be an unpopular opinion because this sketch features a lot of Kenan mugging, but I feel like he’s one of only a few cast members who can pull that off with this current cast and be endearing rather than draining. Perhaps it’s because I find he’s usually a more generous performer, and cutting loose feels like a treat from him rather than a tired expectation.
— All in all, an underrated, forgotten little gem.
STARS: ****½ 

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Borderline”

Blue: Great choice of sound for the keys. It’s just a piano setting, but I love its tone.
— Hey, that’s the second time this season we’ve seen someone using a Hofner Beatle bass! 
— I like this chord progression.
— Interesting post-chorus, with every other line alternating between a high, ascending series of notes and a lower descending series of notes. There’s something hypnotic about the repetition. I feel like I’m being put into a trance.
— Could do with more of the fuzzy synth eighth notes that appear every four bars.
— Just like in the first song, I’m loving the texture of all the synth parts together. It’s creating a great soundscape.
— Okay, now the post-chorus is starting to sound overly repetitive.
STARS: ****

TEST PREP
high schoolers give lengthy & dramatic answers to SAT test prep questions

— Although this sketch is held down by another pairing of Kate and Aidy, making things feel dangerously indulgent, I enjoy the premise at play, with Sandra’s class answering SAT 2 prep questions with deeply personal, teen drama-esque speeches. It really is a game of trying to supercede their performances with the writing, though.
— The extra behind Aidy is acting way too hard in this sketch and distracting me a bit…
— Kyle’s speech as a football player is fantastic, and he’s far and away the highlight of this sketch.
— Sandra’s substitute teacher doing an emotional speech is a predictable way for the sketch to escalate, but it’s fine, if nothing special. 
— Kyle: “Wow, I guess I learned a lot today. But the thing I learned the most… was each other.”
STARS: ***

GOODNIGHTS


CUT FOR TIME: COLLEGE ADMISSIONS
college admissions board favors familial connections over hard-earned academia

— This sketch is clearly based off of the Lori Laughlin college admissions scandal that was going on at the time.
 — The first reveal of this sketch with them discussing Lou Ferrigno’s son “Johnny Ferigno” as a candidate isn’t too funny, but we’re getting the wheels greased up.
— I like how the photo of “Jackie Keebler, heir to the Keebler Elves’ fortune” features a hand in the corner inexplicably holding several hundred-dollar bills.
— Another great reveal that Jackie Keebler’s sole extra-curricular was “snails.” The characterizations from everyone up to this point have been fairly one-note (if enjoyable enough), so a lot of the humor for me is coming in from the peppering in of those sorts of details.
— Alright, now things are getting pretty delightfully absurd with the whole discussion over if an applicant with the last name “Jeffries” has a relationship to Geoffrey, the Toys “R” Us mascot. (Cecily: “Well, Toys ‘R’ Us is currently bankrupt, so I would say a donation from their cartoon giraffe is highly unlikely.”)
— A strange joke about how the college’s current mascot is the “gay Redskin.” I get how it’s poking fun at poorly-aged mascots, but it feels like a bit of an indulgent jab that distracts from the sketch’s overall conceit.
— Heidi, regarding a picture of an applicant’s face poorly photoshopped onto Stephen Hawking’s body: “I know I’m not supposed to say this about the applicants, but… would bang.”
— All of the college admissions board turning on the first applicant, who lacked any family connections, is pretty funny. (Kenan: “Listen to her essay: ‘I would be the first person in my family to go to college.’—it’s not a race.”)
— Aidy’s walk-on as the coach of the women’s crew team is a bit on-the-nose with the Laughlin scandal, but she’s doing her usual good, low-key badass characterization. I love her declaration that a horse is a “land boat.”
— I’m amused by Kenan’s voice crack when saying “Is this a trap?” and his little, acknowledging smirk afterwards.
— A surprisingly solid ending to this piece, with Sandra revealing that she’s part of the “Admissions Police” and putting everyone under arrest. I love Chris’ ending line, too: “You mean this whole time she wasn’t really Asian? God…”
— This sketch is a bit too long, but I feel like with the right cuts being made, this could’ve been a lot leaner, and ultimately a good addition to the episode. It would’ve been a nice way to add to the overall ensemble feel a lot of the night had.
STARS: ***½

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— A pretty alright S44 episode, if assisted by one great live and pretaped sketch that helps it stick the landing. Sandra was an energetic and game host, though I wish she was served more material that utilized her skills. 

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


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
Cheques
Roots of Rock
Discover
Weekend Update
(CFT: College Admissions)
The Duel
Kremlin Meeting
Future Self
Test Prep
Monologue
Empire Meeting
Louise’s Birthday
The Mueller Report

TOMORROW
John rides out the last wave of Game of Thrones hype with Kit Harington

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