Friday, September 26, 2025

Julia Louis-Dreyfus/Snow Patrol (03.17.2007)

The following blog post is a companion piece to the newest episode of the We Heart Hader Podcast…and, in a way, the soft launch of my cohost Deej Barens’ new podcast Saturday Night Ladies. Give BOTH of our/her podcasts  a listen, won't you?


SNL Special Report: Road To The White House


Chris Rock weighs in on the presidential primary race.


  • Apparently, this was supposed to be a Weekend Update commentary at dress rehearsal. I genuinely wonder what the original cold open to this episode was going to be that made them decide that THIS worked better?

  • Hmm, according to SNL Transcripts, the original cold open must have been a Sudeikis as Bush piece where he talked about March Madness. I can see why Lorne must have thought a sudden former alumni cameo might have grabbed the audience's attention more. Too bad not a lot of Rocks’ material stood out that well.

  • Anyway, if you’re familiar with Chris Rocks’ standup from…well, really ANY time period this hits just about all the specific beats you would expect (and if you’re familiar with Chris Rocks’ takes on current events and culture in general, you could probably guess which presidential candidate Rock was endorsing at this time).

  • I guess you can’t say that the basic premise of “white women have suffered like this but black men have suffered like this” doesn’t hold up today since Bill Burr tackled this topic in his first SNL host monologue just five years ago. He must have been taking notes during this. Too bad Burrs’ take on the topic came at a time when it wouldn’t have been largely scrutinized on social media and just swept under the rug like Rocks’ was.

  • One line that got me was Rock saying he thought “Farrakhan had died” when he saw Anna Nicole Smith had all black male pallbearers at her funeral.

  • Boy, does the line about Giuliani being “great in a crisis” not hold up today. Hell, he arguably helped create the crisis America is in right now. The line about how Giuliani is like a pitbull who “might eat your kids” probably holds up way better than anyone could have imagined.

  • Speaking of things that don’t hold up today, that last line…hoo boy. The fact that it’s an unoriginal burn on George W. Bush that Carlos Mencia would blatantly plagiarize a year later aside, that’s not something any TV show could get away with today. C+


Monologue


Coming off her recent Emmy win for “New Adventures of Old Christine”, Julia Louis-Dreyfus warns the audience to not judge recent candid footage of her too harshly because the media loves to take down beloved celebrities like her.


  • Jokes about trashy female celebrities behaving badly may have seemed pretty played out by this point, but I’ll be damned if Julia doesn’t have the innate charm and likability to make this play well. 

  • Even drunkenly vomiting into a wine glass while making “Green card” jokes aimed at America Ferrera, she’s endlessly funny in a “very primitive, unrefined shades of Selina Meyer” type way. Hell, she’s the only funny woman I’d ever want to see exit a limo with a Britney Spears-like crotch shot that reveals a bush so massive it spreads half way across her inner thighs. She even managed to add some class to THAT!

  • One of my favorite lines in this from Julia: “They can even make a nice woman like that lovely Ann Coulter look like a monster!” 

  • I liked how this was a very direct and to the point monologue that got in, got its laughs and got out. B-


Oprah 


Oprah Winfrey (Maya Rudolph) interviews author of “The Secret” Rhonda Byrne (Amy Poehler) on how her book can help regular people control the universe with their positive thoughts and energy. Recently divorced housewife Pamela Headley (Louis-Dreyfus) and Darfurian refugee Olessi Oneweja (Kenan Thompson) discuss how the positive thinking taught in “The Secret” has NOT changed their lives and are criticized for letting their own negative energy bring them down.


  • Geez, two seemingly laser focused pop culture themed sketches in a row? Was Tina Fey a guest writer this week?

  • Anyway, I’ve never read “The Secret” and my only context for it were the few parodies of it I have encountered around this time. Still, I would say the overall message to this sketch is that you still need fame, wealth and social clout to make “The Secret” work for you (otherwise you appear as a mentally unstable loser with a tenuous grasp on reality in the eyes of others) still resonates today.

  • I liked the small detail of Julia's character having unexplained adult braces. Even though Amy was mostly the straight woman in this sketch, her deranged facial expressions paired with her labored Australian accent were something I got a kick out of. Julia played her derangement well too but it’s a shame that Amy Poehler didn't get quite as many chances to play crazy eyed not-all-there Australian women as Kate McKinnon did.

  • Mayas’ Oprah didn’t add too much here besides some necessary historical context and Kenan’s part was fine (if not a bit too telegraphed for my liking). Otherwise, this was a pretty decent sketch. C+


Monex


Ros Gentle (Kristen Wiig) wants you to invest in, lovingly caress and decorate your home in gold.


  • Geez, yet another parody of a very specific advertisement from this time! (at least I think it is as I noticed Wiigs’ character was listed as an “impression” on SNL Archives).

  • Anyway, this was very well acted on Wiigs’ part. She underplayed her main to the exact right hilt. It seemed like Kristen knew when to really rein it in here but it probably helps that this is a pretape and another focused impression of a specific pitchwoman from this time (again, hey! Two in a row).

  • Some of my favorite moments in this were Wiig's line about the value of gold having “gone up a little bit”, the Goldie Hawn photo in her living room and her drinking Florida Gold brand Orange Juice. B+


Restless Penis Syndrome


Karen Danbury (Dreyfus) is highly suspicious of her husband's (Jason Sudeikis) claim that his staying out late is a result of his uncontrollable RPS diagnosis until his physician Dr. Highsmith (Thompson) suddenly shows up to help plead his case along with two commercial pitchmen (Hader and Samberg V/O). Karen suddenly changes her tune when she finds out that she is featured in a sudden PSA.


  • Hmm, given what we know about Jasons’ dating history during his time on the show…I wonder how much of this sketch was drawn from real life?

  • Anyway, this was another well crafted sketch that started with a hint of semi-dramatic, slice of life acting turning into a committed sophomoric gag and ending with a fourth wall dissolution. It almost felt like something out of a different era of the show. It even reminds me a bit of the “National Uvula Association” sketch from season one!

  • Bills’ first appearance of the night. A-


La Revista Della Televisione


Italian talk show host Vinny Vedecci (Bill Hader) welcomes Julia who awkwardly stumbles through her outlandish interview as she doesn’t speak or know any Italian causing a spat between Vinny and his crew (Fred Armisen, Will Forte). Vinny's daughter Fabiola (Rudolph) makes an appearance.


  • Bill actually debuted this character in the previous seasons’ Catherine Zeta Jones episode as an Italian hotel manager. Here, this character makes its debut in what would more or less become its regular form.

  • This was a great “official” debut for this character and Julia was the perfect first guest for him. His Kramer and Jerry impressions were great here as was his dubbing over Julias’ part in “Old Christine”. Maya reciting the days of the week in slightly broken English was charming. 

  • This sketch seemed more focused on establishing its own format and setting rather than setting up the sleaziness of its main character (which would come later in future installments). It seemed more focused on recreating the baffling absurdity of foreign talk shows to viewers from outside their culture and it really serves this sketch as well as the vibe of this season/episode strongly.

  • Anyway, what else is there left to say about this sketch that I haven’t already mentioned in a previous blog and podcast? A-



Snow Patrol Performs “You’re All I Have” and “Chasing Cars”


  • “You’re All I Have” lies somewhere between “indistinguishable from all the other bland mid aughts power pop out there” and “what if Mumford and Sons did indie rock instead of butt folk?” That is the best way I can describe this song.

  • Now, “Chasing Cars” is the song that most people remember from this group. Typical sad indie rock that fits right in with the alt rock trends of this era.


Weekend Update w/Poehler & Meyers


Judge Larry Seidlin (Armisen) cries while reading a list of names of federal attorneys fired by Alberto Gonzales for not exhibiting enough “loyalty” to George W. Bush…and then tells a story about encountering elephants and monkeys with red plastic asses in the Bronx Zoo as a young peanut seller


Amy takes a shot to celebrate St Patricks’ Day and drunk dials Seth from across the desk who quickly offers her a cup of coffee to sober up.


  • Geez, jokes about federal attorneys being fired for not being “loyal” enough to a sitting Republican US President play WAY differently in 2025, huh?

  • Anyway, Amy had the lion's share of good jokes this week with that “Haliburton/Dubai, Alberto Gonzales, Bush visit Colombia, fat talk/The View” run.

  • Armisens’ commentary was typical Armisen shtick from this era that’s easy to tune out (overly long, self indulgent, heavy New York accent) but I did get some chuckles from his absurd Bronx Zoo story.

  • The St Patricks’ Day shots bit was cute and focused enough to not feel too self indulgent on Amys’ part. It definitely had the energy of a bit where one performer is desperately trying to get the other performer to break but the audience also feels like they are in on the joke.

  • Seth’s only stand out joke was the salmon/grizzly bear one. I also liked Amys’ ski mask/James Brown/Angelina Jolie/Stray Cats jokes, too. B-


Deep House Dish


DJ Dynasty Handbag (Thompson) and T’Shane (Samberg) welcome edgy girl group Legguns (Poehler, Rudolph, Wiig), singer DeDe Wells (Dreyfus) and DJ Quality (Sudeikis)


  • Ooh wee. Here’s one of the more low-key divisive sketches of this era from two of the most low-key divisive writers of any new millennium era of SNL (James Anderson and Kent Sublette).

  • Personally, I’m not as down on these sketches as some were at the time. If you weren’t a fan of the less matured, less “grown up” pre-season 38 Kenan, I can see why you might have a problem with these. 

  • While I’ve always thought Kenans’ character was the biggest demerit of these sketches, the songs were usually just ridiculous enough to work for me here. Plus, the season 32 versions of this sketch worked better for me because Samberg was a better “dumb, goofy sidekick” to Kenan than Rachel Dratch’s character Tiara and these sketches felt more punched up and focused in general by that point.

  • That being said, Legguns did a fine job of answering the musical question “what if The Ting Tings were also The Bangles and Klymaxxx?” Julia and Jasons’ songs were great. Hell, Julias’ whole character was great in this. I liked Sambergs’ character admitting to being a guest at Julias’ disastrous hot tub chilli party. Seeing Jason break out his future “What Up With That” dance moves was also very fun. Could’ve done without Kenans’ direct message to Britney “Spurrs” though, but Andys’ jokes about her freshly shaved head were a funny enough counter to that. 

  • Come to think of it, I did get a kick out of Kenans’ “Ann Coulter/Isaiah Washington” joke (I’m not even going to bother researching that one let alone explaining it). C+


CBS Cares


As Mike Underballs (Hader) directs Julia in a mammogram PSA, he must settle a spat between his star and his boom mike operator Jeff (Sudeikis)


  • Hey, another sketch where Jason and Julia are stand out performers…oh, and Bill of course!

  • Well, we just went from “low key divisive” sketch to “low key terrific” (as Ralph Nader would inspire That Week In SNLs’ Andrew Dick and Tim Cicalli to say).

  • This might be more a Sudeikis showcase but once Hader suddenly shifts out of straight man mode, this really becomes a showcase for the two of them and how differently they play “angry/frustrated” off of each other and Julia.

  • Jasons’ various insults to Julia were great, especially his pointing the boom mike at her breast and crotch level.

  • Bills’ best moments were the various “Jyyyeeeffffs” and the line “I don’t need the jingle on every bad take.” B+


Homebots


A married couple (Julia and Jason) try to convince their friends (Hader and Wiig) that winning the lottery hasn’t changed them despite their newfound appreciation of three way sex acts between their new house cleaning robot (Forte) and the other two robots (Armisen and Thompson) whose sole purposes are to repair the other two robots after their many malfunctions


  • Ok, this is obviously a very Will Forte-ish premise considering his affinity for playing various robots throughout his SNL career (and the fact that he actually did audition for the show with an old trunk bit of his where he sings as a robotic street performer about how he performs certain oral favors just for his face paint).

  • Unfortunately, this is the type of Forte weirdness I’m not typically a fan of since it feels more like testing the audiences’ patience and boundaries than being truly weirdly funny. This seems more designed to get the type of audience reaction that the Vogelcheck sketches do than anything.

  • Bill, Jason, Kristen and Julia were great at playing their disgust off them, though which really added to this and I’ll admit I did get a kick out of Kenan coming in at the end just to utter the closing line “extreme robot threesome”. C- 



The Search For The Next (Pussycat) Doll


Judges Robin Antin (Dreyfus), Lil Kim (Thompson) and McKenzie Jazz (Samberg) lead the search for the most mediocre and unremarkable moderately attractive female singers and dancers (Poehler, Wiig, Rudolph) to join The Pussycat Dolls and blend into the background perfectly against the lead singer


  • Wow, this really is 2007, huh?

  • From the way Bill as the announcer pretty much spends 75% of this sketches’ runtime laying out exactly what SNLs’ whole take is here, this sketch felt more like a watered down version of something MADtv or Family Guy would have done around this time. SNL doing this in the same episode as the Oprah/Secret sketch just shows that they weren’t quite as removed from seasons 30 and 31 as I remembered.

  • Yeah, this sketch mostly consisted of the same tired “trash culture” observations about reality competition TV and prefabricated, oversexualized pop music girl groups you could find anywhere at this time but the performances from the female cast were the only thing this had going for it. Samberg did the most he could with his one and only line here.

  • Ugh, Kenan in drag as Lil Kim seems like a grim sign of things SNL may be going back to in season 51 now that Ego Nwodim is out…and Kam Patterson is somehow still in. Let’s just all hope and pray that it doesn’t come to that again. C-



Overall Thoughts


  • Like most SNL episodes I have reviewed from this specific time period, there’s a couple of well-remembered and often replayed classics in this that somehow managed to not get lost in the shuffle of more than a few bits that don’t hold up. That same thing could be said about this episode, too. 

  • Fortunately, this episode didn’t have a lot of blatantly noticeable “punching down” as much as just a running theme of “sorry folks, this is just where our culture and politics are at right now” contributing to what doesn’t hold up.

  • Even more fortunately, Julia Louis-Dreyfus was the ideal host to carry this episode and bring the best out of this cast (especially the women). Thankfully, this episode had an infectious energy to it that was somehow missing from Julias’ first hosting stint a year earlier. It also probably helps in that regard that they were too far away from the end of the season to be completely burnt out yet.

  • Not only does this episode have enough notable Bill Hader moments for Deej and I to dissect it on our own podcast, it has enough moments with SNLs female cast from two different eras collaborating together that we both thought it would the timing and synergy of it all would be the ideal cross promotion for Deejs’ new podcast Saturday Night Ladies with cohost Shari Fesko (who you may also have seen on the SNN Patron feedback shows much like Deej and myself). 

  • The only better cross promotion we could think of would be if we could’ve gotten Shari to be a guest on this episode with us, but sadly, (much like all the other guests we have tried to book for We Heart Hader besides Jon Schneider who’ve expressed interest) we couldn’t get our recording schedule to sync up with their availability. Don’t worry, Shari. You’ll get your chance some day!


Closing Thoughts


  • Once again, I can’t guarantee what will be coming up next on this blog or my own podcast at this time as we haven’t nailed down any more specific future plans yet. The only thing I can even come close to confirming right now is that I should have a new review of SNLs’ Season 51 premiere up sometime on October 5th, 2025. See you then!

  • Oh, one more thing. Due to the new demands on Deejs’ podcasting schedule, new releases of We Heart Hader episodes will now be pushed back from Thursday to Friday. I know our previous episode dropped on a Saturday but this was due to technical difficulties and various illnesses (on both sides).

  • Full disclosure: I’ve been visiting my father in the hospital for the past two weeks, so if something seemed a little off about our previous recording, that’s on me. I was still getting into the right headspace to record as we started recording so only about halfway through it was I fully “there”.

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

REReview Plus: Dave Chappelle/A Tribe Called Quest (11.12.2016)

 The following blog entry is a companion piece to last weeks’ episode of the Saturday Night Networks’ 50 Greatest Episode Countdown series. Give it a watch OR a listen, won't you?


These are excerpts from the original review of this SNL episode I posted back in the fall of 2016 with new comments from 2025. Excerpts from the original review are posted here in italics. New comments are presented in standard format text.



Hallelujah 


This cold open set the most appropriate tone possible for this episode. I seriously considered whether this episode would open with something as somber as what they followed events like 9/11 and the Sandy Hook/Paris shootings with and I honestly think they made the right call here. Given the mood of the country, they eased us into the rest of the show well. The nods to Leonard Cohen (RIP) and Kates' message at the end were quite touching. (not going to assign a letter grade to this because, obviously…)


Yeah, people did poke fun at SNL for doing this type of cold open weeks and months after the fact. Even SNL poked fun at SNL for doing this in its own finale to this season with Baldwins’ Trump singing Hallelujah with the rest of the cast (and ScarJo) playing others in his orbit. I’m sure that was meant as just as much an act of catharsis/wishful thinking in the season finale as it was here.


Most people were only able to see how overly maudlin and navel gazing this seemed once Trumps’ first term in office actually started and we were far, far removed from the moment itself in time. The quickest to jump on and criticize the show for this were the Chapo Trap House “dirtbag leftist” DSA types…and SNL’s own Rob Schneider who used the opportunity to declare the show “dead” at one point.


Still, when you look at this IN the actual moment, you can see how the show came up with this out of desperation and necessity. The mood of most of the country at the time was indeed quite dark. People were certainly fearing for their livelihoods and wondering how life would go on. On a much less important scale, people were wondering if SNL itself would be legally allowed to continue. Of course, these feelings would be intensified in the next four to eight years for different reasons, but no one would know exactly what to expect all the same.


Part of me thinks that there were other song choices that would’ve made a bit more sense than Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" (or even John Lennons’ “Imagine” which may have been their first choice according to The Hollywood Reporters’ oral history of this season's political coverage…which in my mind only makes sense as what they would’ve done had Hillary WON) but in the context of the week that was, Leonard Cohen had passed away that week and Lorne, being an old Canadian, was fan of his, so it had to have been one of those things that just came together in the moment and seemed appropriate to run with.


It’s hard to make an argument that SNL didn’t meet the moment here. As I wrote back then, the show has always known how to properly address the elephant in the room in times of national distress and tragedy in an emotionally sincere and heartfelt manner and provide a gentle segue into the show itself letting people know that it’s OK to laugh for a bit in order to move forward. Kate/Hillary’s line about “not giving up” was that segue.


Speaking of Kate as Hillary and “emotional sincerity”, our dear friend Stooge bought up a potentially hot take from around this time that Kate should have done this cold opening as herself instead of Hillary…which I think makes sense when you consider that this is the only one of those “somber” cold opens that has a character/impression in it rather than Lorne, a cast member or another special guest sincerely addressing the audience as themselves.


It is easy to sit back and wish SNL had the guts to be angrier in the moment (or at least as “cheeky” as they would be around this time eight years later) but we needed at least a couple weeks to get over the initial shock of what had just happened this week and see what would actually happen during this presidency in order to get to that point.


Monologue 


That was the best monologue done on SNL in at least twenty years. Dave Chappelle is still a stand up legend and it's great to see he still hasn't lost his touch. The Obama and White protest bits cracked me up in particular (hell, he’s the only person to make a truly funny and worthwhile Harambe reference EVER) and I liked that he chose to end on something poignant and thoughtful. My only complaints would be that I thought the Pulse/ISIS allegiance and pussy grabbing references weren’t in the absolute best taste (okay, I chucked at the former even if it felt a little misguided to me…) but rather than split hairs on those two points I will leave well enough alone. A+


Hoo boy, um, well…I would still say this was the best monologue that Dave Chappelle has done on this show...ever...by default. 


Keep in mind that in 2016, Chappelle wasn’t yet catching flak for punching down on any particular group yet because his infamous Netflix specials were still years away at this point. In fact, he was just starting to make his big comeback into the standup scene at this time so it wasn’t like he was doing a whole lot publicly. 


It felt like a lot of people who used to like Chappelles’ stand up and sketches (or grew to like them at one time) were just pleased to see him on TV performing again. That, plus this obviously being a time when most of the world was looking for small pockets of calm, comfort and optimism wherever they could find it were what most likely led to this episode being as highly rated as it was (especially at the time).


After my experience of having to parse out all of his previous monologues for my reviews of his other SNL episodes (and thus re-parse this one a bit better), I can confidently say that this was Daves’ least offensive host monologue.


His bits about “knowing the whites” and America having “elected an internet troll as president” ring as true as ever…and I have to say the white riots, gorilla costumes and blue lives matter bits still hold up. The “gentrified Brooklyn/balloon basket” bit probably gave me my biggest laugh out of all of this. I stand by my original comments about the Pulse nightclub/ISIS and “Trump hotel” bits being in questionable taste (he did say “sorry, Lorne” after that last one. Was that supposed to be an adlib or dress cut that he just threw back in there just for the hell of it?). Sadly, his bit about wanting to get a tax break under Trump and then later imploring that we “give him a chance” seemed more like a subtle hint toward the unfortunate direction his standup was heading in than anything now.


The White House party/Frederick Douglass story was quite poignant and thought provoking I’ll admit (I do have to wonder which Roosevelt swore off inviting any black people to the white house? I’m sure it HAD to have been Teddy), but it points to a bigger problem I have with Chappelles’ stand up now where I feel he can get too preachy and self insistent for his own good. 


He’s well versed in history, I’ll give him that. I can also see how this could be him wanting to provide a bit of positive hope for the future in his own way but when he does this, I feel it comes across as too sermonizing and self-indulgent in a way that interferes with him being all that funny and doesn’t quite gel with the more abrasive “punching down” humor he’s become more known for lately.


Thankfully, this seemed to be a point where he knew how to reign that in. He does mention Bradley Coopers’ name in the middle of this as a quick laugh line. I wonder if this would’ve been around the time they were working on the Gaga version of “A Star Is Born” together?


Speaking of self indulgence, I see that this monologue only clocked in at fairly reasonable for any stand up host length of 11 minutes rather than the 16-17 chunks that have become his trademark. Like I said, he DID know how to reign it in at one point and the show seemed to know how to reign HIM in at this stage as well rather than just letting him walk all over them.



Election Night 


The election night sketch was extremely well done, too and had hints of that classic Chappelle's Show style to it. Most of all, it was dead on with the way it accurately captured the raw panic of white culturally liberal America and put it in a perspective of real historical racism. Chris Rock's appearance was icing on the cake. B+


Yeah, I’ll admit this still holds up. It really captured the creeping anxiety felt by many (including myself) on election night 2016 (and election night 2024 for that matter) and adds a different slightly more cynical perspective that many would gain some insight to in the ensuing years. I guess that joke about “undocumented immigrants…not going anywhere hasn’t aged well, huh? 


I guess the “hints of that classic Chapelles’ Show style” I was referring to were just…frequent quick cuts to establishing shots and title cards whenever Dave would react to something? I know Neal Brennan and Bryan Tucker co-wrote this sketch (and probably the very next one), but it’s not quite dominated by their voices as it seemed quite a few of SNLs’ writers punched this up on Thursday (at least Beck, Cecily, Aidy and Vanessas’ parts)?. Chris Rocks’ appearance was nice even after his disastrous season 40 episode.


Chappelle’s Walking Dead Show  


This was a great tip of the hat to all the old Chappelle's Show fans out there tuning into see one of their comedic idols. I appreciate how he worked in all his funniest and most memorable characters and even introduced the sketch in the same way he introduced every segment on his old show. Lil Jon seemed pointless but the Player Haters gave me a laugh and I love how they chose to work in Clayton Bigsby in reasonably good taste (although he's admittedly low hanging fruit at this point). My only real complaint was that the ending w/Tyrone Biggums was a little too outlandish and silly. A-


Okay, this is OBVIOUSLY much more in the old Chappelles’ Show style (what with Dave just introducing a pretaped sketch with all his characters on stage into a mic). It was fun seeing all these old characters again, even Lil Jon (WHAT?!?!), the ever pitiful Chuck Taylor and the mysterious Clayton Bigsby. Hell, Dave even impersonates Jeffrey Dean Morgan well. Nice of Donnell Rawlings to show up and reprise his “playa haters’ ball” character and I think I can be a bit more forgiving of the ending with Tyrone Biggums


As I have said in the past, I’ve always had a much easier time enjoying Chappelles’ SHOW than Chappelles’ stand up (in fact, I’d go as far as to say a lot of his comedy translates better to sketch anyway), so this will always hold up for me. Hell, it must hold up well for everyone if SNL still includes this in the same primetime Halloween compilations they run every single year.


I still much prefer this to the Chappelles’ Show crossovers the show would do with Game Of Thrones: House Of The Dragon and Pop The Balloon they would do in his most recent episodes.


A Tribe Called Quest Performs “We The People” and “The Space Program” ft. Busta Rhymes & Consequence


These were pretty powerful performances with a strong statement and pretty much the exact thing Americans needed at this moment.


This was a pretty significant booking because not only was this their first ever SNL appearance, it was also the group's first new album in nearly twenty years and also one of their first performances since founding member Phife Dawg passed away months earlier (whom they included a lovely tribute to).


Given SNLs’ previous history with booking rap and hip hop musical guests, I think this might have been the only time that A Tribe Called Quest COULD have been booked on the show. I liked Busta rhymes and Consequence joining in on their second performance



Weekend Update w/Jost & Che


Update may have taken a few extra seconds to get going but Jose and Che really did a great job addressing the ideological divide that ended up REALLY deciding the outcome of this election. Plus, the VERY loose vibe really added to this (especially when Che flubbed his Mexican/Puerto Rican) joke. If there was any time that we NEEDED a long form Update, it was this week. Kate made her best appearance yet as RBG and it's especially good to see HER of all people fired up right now. B+


The only jokes I liked were the ones comparing Democrats to the golden state warriors, Leslie Jones/addicted to white guys and Che’s flub. 


I especially liked Josts’ “founder of ISIS/drain the swamp/Pence transition/Hillary Letterman retirement beard” run (as well as his “won’t take a bridge” ad lib after that). The Disney/Aladdin joke I could see from a mile away. It’s sad how well Che’s bit about Trump empowering white guys holds up today. Really sad.


I liked Kates’ “Emergen-C” bit and Pence jabs (even as rote and hack “lol Pence is secretly gay” jokes would soon become on this show). Pretty interesting to hear her make a joke about Rudy Guilliani being a vampire since she would wind up playing him a year and a half from now.


Jheri’s Place/Inside SNL 


 I didn't know where the Inside SNL piece was going when it first started out but I'm glad to see they were breaking the fourth wall. The press conference was very funny and Dave, Kenan, Aidy and Leslie had the best lines. B+


Ah, a nice little “TV verite joke” as Dennis Miller would say. This may not be the first parody of sulking post game sports press conferences I’ve seen (Conan did one around this time) but it still worked


Leslie was a great sport (no pun intended) for being able to poke fun at her very real problems with missed cues and flubbed lines around this time. Kyle and Mikey had funny bits. It’s funny how Mikey had to deal with not getting any questions seeing as he would become a much more respected and talked about player on the show later in his tenure.


Aidy and Kenans’ belligerence was funny and I cracked up at Daves’ line about thinking his Jheri curl wig would make him “the next David S Pumpkins”. Alex and Bobby did solid straight man work as the reporters.


Kids Talk Trump 


This short film almost seemed like a direct ripoff of something Jimmy Kimmel would do (if he hadn't already) but went for something bigger with the addition of Dave and his daughter. Overall, its short length was its biggest drawback. It did get its intended laughs (albeit awkwardly) but it definitely felt like they could've done more with it because it already went to a couple of different places. C+


Gee, I don’t even remember what Jimmy Kimmell was doing around this time that made me compare this to him (boy, his show would sure change a lot during Trumps’ first term, huh?)


I don’t even remember why I said I thought this should be longer either. This was the ideal length for what it was and Daves’ real life daughter, Sanaa, really shined here.


Sheila Sovage 


I didn't expect Dave Chappelle to be a host that warranted this sketch but if anything, his delivery really sold this one. Plus, all of Kenans' reactions really made this as well (although Bleach isn't supposed to be clear, last I checked). B+


I liked Kenans’ “yellow card” bit and his reaction to the “Bellagio”. I even liked the visual of him pouring bleach into his eyes even if its’ not the most original joke ever. 


I liked Daves’ “A-Rod” line (can’t believe they got away with naming his character “Corey Dipships” but I liked Kates’ response to that being “I was banned from Chinatown”)


These all kind of blur together to me but this one was fun. Hell, this character kind of blurs together with her Colleen Rafferty but I liked this character better.


Love And Leslie 


This short film was something that sure started out poignant and revealing but then took a turn for the silly when it was revealed that she is dating Kyle (who's quite jealous of Colin) and she plans to take his virginity. Overall, this worked well from a few angles and I think the segments featuring Beck, Alex, Lorne and the anonymous page really added to this. Dave's cameo at the end really made this for me. A-


This was a genuinely heartwarming and emotional start to a long running, layered meta gag that would carry over for three more seasons until Leslie left the show. Kyle would make meta backstage shorts like this on his own from time to time (and so would Leslie) but their dynamic together made for much more memorable pretapes. Daves’ cameo at the end still works for me.


Football Party 


This sketch revolving (seemingly entirely) around adult breastfeeding was funny enough and ambitious for what it was but overall it stretched its main joke too thin to the point where everything felt too telegraphed. I will say they pulled out the exact right ending for this. I'm not totally against gross out humor or anything but this just felt too awkwardly executed. Plus, while I realize Leslie is one of the shows' biggest draws right now, it may be cause for concern when SNL has a prominent black host like Chappelle and Sasheer has only one appearance all night at the end of the show. C-


This also felt like a Chappelles’ Show sketch that got watered down for the network.


I liked Daves’ rant about not getting any diseases. Strange to see this be the first appearance of both Pete and Sasheer all night. Melissa was just starting out this season so it wasn’t THAT strange to see Kyle in the role she typically gets.


Yeah, the long silent stretch in the middle where they just cut back and forth between all the guys for no reason almost killed this. Good thing they did end this immediately after the “Visible prop” gaffe.


Overall Thoughts


The lineup for this episode alone was enough to put this episode on a fast track to becoming the best episode of the season, but the team effort and unprecedented historical context that it found itself in put it WAY over the top! Dave Chappelle and the cast all came together to prove they and SNL still have what it takes to reach us through the power of satire. Without missing a single comedic beat, they provided much needed relief, comfort and hope for tomorrow to a deeply divided nation that is frightened over an uncertain future. Once again in our lifetime, they showed us exactly why it’s okay to laugh in these types of moments in order to help get over such fear in the face of a national tragedy. Still, I don’t want to oversell it or anything so just judge for yourself. This episode was also consistently strong both in writing and performing even when the material wasn’t explicitly topical. The cast was a little uneven in terms of airtime tonight. We saw very little of Pete, Bobby, Cecily and Sasheer…We saw absolutely NONE of Melissa and for the first time Alex Moffat managed to get more screentime than Mikey Day (although they were still mostly in smaller, non-consequential roles that show very little of who he really is). Plus, I think we may have hit the absolute all time record for most uncensored N-bombs and GD-bombs dropped (hey, let’s make sure the rest of us don’t let them get too “normalized” now) as well as instances of the host being caught visibly smoking on camera (and inside a post Bloomberg era New York building no less) in a single episode. 


Ok, yeah. I pretty much DID oversell this episode, but as I explained, I think I can be forgiven due to the events of the week. This episode has a few standout moments but is more uneven than I remembered looking back. It’s definitely one of those things that it best viewed as its own little time capsule given how much the world has changed since.



Closing Thoughts


Well, I have no idea what else I will be doing for this blog until October 5th but right now you can also read my new REreview of the first Tom Hanks episode from this season as well as my brand new “classic” review of the Christopher Walken episode from season 25. Have a great end of summer, everyone!