Showing posts with label Rachel Dratch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rachel Dratch. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Christopher Walken/Christina Aguilera (04.08.2000)

 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?


Capitol Building


Former US President George H.W. Bush (Dana Carvey) coaches his son, current Texas Governor and GOP Presidential hopeful George W Bush (Will Ferrell) on how to “slip slide away”, “dance to the middle” and give the most vague, evasive, centrist non-answers to questions posed during press conferences and debates.


  • This was the first in a series of Father & Son Bush sketches that Ferrell and Carvey would do over the next two seasons.


  • I see that Ferrells’ Dubya isn’t quite fine tuned yet to what it would later become. The voice seems to just be a generic Texas accent and the characterization is just “southern goofball/cocky frat boy/manchild/daddy’s boy” (pouring and sipping a very heady/foamy keg beer was certainly a choice…hadn’t the real Dubya given up drinking around this time?)


  • Obviously, W. Bush hadn’t been “elected” yet at this point and maybe wasn’t a big enough public figure for an impressionist or performer to find any specific hooks to laser focus on. Still, it works for this sketch as Ferrell is going to be more of a second banana here. 


  • One particular Ferrell line that stood out to me was “I’m not sure about gun control…but there’s no better feeling than tying on a three beer buzz and firin’ off a sawed off 12 gauge into a beat up ol’ tractor.” I also liked Carveys’ response “lord have mercy, that is bad”


  • Nice to see the crowd go wild for the return of Dana Carvey as H.W. Bush. At this point, it was nice to see Dana Carvey back on the show in general playing a former president. I believe around this time he had just recovered from botched heart surgery and almost hosted the previous season (he would go on to host months later at the beginning of the following season) so he probably just wanted to get back to being funny in some public capacity again.


  • Carveys’ still got it at this point and he does shine here in perhaps his signature impression role from his time on the show. I get the feeling this was written by either Jim Downey or Robert Smigel because Dana does play this like it was written by someone he was still connected with from his era who knows how to play to his strengths as far as topical comedy goes. 


  • I got a kick out of Carvey pronouncing tonights' musical guests’ name as “Christina…A-gooly-la-lera”. The spalling and “slip slidin’ away” stuff was very charmingly silly. I wasn’t crazy about his referring to Elian Gonzales as “the little brown one”, though. Oof. The “nah gah da” callback seemed a little forced for my liking, though.


  • One thing that strikes me as odd (and almost quaint) about this sketch is that the basic premise is that politicians have to appeal to voters and win elections by being as bland, centrist and as afraid to take a stand on anything as possible when America is obviously WAY past that stage in our politics. In fact, whenever I've found myself rewatching political cold opens from season 25 I’ve noticed that the overall take is that W. Bush and Al Gore were too similar to each other and them winning their respective primaries over the much more bold and brash Bill Bradley and John McCain made this the most boring election cycle in US history. Heck, this sketch itself criticizes John McCain, calling him a “nut” for being too much of a “straight-talker” to win an election.


  • After W. Bush’s two-term presidency, McCain would go on to win his primary, but lose to Barack Obama. After that, America would somehow “elect” it’s “nuttiest”, most “brash” and DEFINITELY most “straight-talking” (to a ridiculous degree) president ever (who just months before this episode aired was on the fringes as a third party “reform” candidate who NO ONE thought ever had a chance at becoming president. Oh, how innocent and naive we once were.


  • Of course, as we saw during the first term of Trump' s presidency (and as we’re currently seeing in his second) our political system has all but become a parody of itself and SNLs’ basic response was…to become more bland and centrist rather than truly speak truth to power or take any bold stance beyond “Orange Man Bad”. Oh, how the tables have turned for the worse. 


  • Sadly, it seems now that you can never cozy up too much to the religious right to win an election. B-


Monologue


Christopher Walken talks about how different SNL is from his typical acting roles and sings “Saturday Night Is The Loneliest Night Of The Week” with Rachel Dratch, Ana Gasteyer, Cheri Oteri and Molly Shannon as backup dancers.


  • Charmingly awkward intro followed by delightful song and dance monologue that Walken excels at making more entertaining than any other host who has tried one of these. What else is there to say?


  • I got a kick out of Walkens’ “since I turned 39” line especially followed by Walkens’ talk of essentially being a homebody in his old age and doing an old timey swing number with the girls.


  • I have heard Walken does these monologues mainly to please his mother who got him singing and tap dancing lessons and wanted to see him put that to use somewhere in his showbiz career when he’s not playing creepy villains. That’s very sweet. B+


Behind The Music


Blue Oyster Cult members Bobby Rondinelli (Jimmy Fallon), Buck Dharma (Chris Kattan),Eric Bloom (Chris Parnell) and Danny Miranda (Horatio Sanz) clash and come to blows in the studio with cowbell session player Gene Frenkle (Will Ferrell). Frenkle and legendary rock producer Bruce Dickinson (Walken) save the session (and the day) with their impassioned defense of the cowbell.


  • Ah, yes. The reason this episode is well remembered enough to be included in any SNL related top ten countdown. It may actually be one of the rare few sketches to be included in two different “best ofs” (Ferrell & Walken).


  • As for the sketch itself, it has earned its’ all time classic status. It works due to its sheer levels of high goofy commitment (both physically and emotionally) to such a silly and stupidly small detail. 


  • Recently, I talked about how there are some SNL sketches that you can tell will become classics even when you watch them air live because of how unique and different they feel from anything else the show is doing in that time period. I’d put that sketch in this category because even when I first saw this sketch at age 9 I could tell it would be a classic. Yes, this sketch aired before the era of streaming when there was still a “monoculture” but this sketch had a timeless feel to it and had a universal appeal to it that allowed it to be enjoyed by all ages.


  • Walkens’ absurd intensity works so well here I can see how this might not have worked as well with Norm Macdonald in the Bruce Dickinson role (who is apparently a character Ferrell made up for this sketch and NOT an impersonation of any real rock impresario).


  • Perhaps the funniest parts of this sketch are Ferrell gyrating his gut around when Walken tells him to “explore the space…I mean, really” followed by Ferrells’ entire “we don’t have a lot of songs that feature the cowbell” speech. Yes, Fallon does crack up during this (somehow Horatio doesn’t…at least not on camera but I even got a kick out of his line “he speaks for all of us”) but with the way this sketch progressed it is easy to see why. 


  • Even Ferrell himself cracks up during this part and this may be one of only two possible times I can think of that this has happened during his run on the show. The detail at the end of his character having just died at the age of 50 managed to be pitiful yet silly.


  • Fun fact #1: crew member/musical technician Speedy Rosenthal can faintly be seen in the background behind the glass in this sketch. This and Sandlers’ shout out to him during his 50th anniversary song are, to this day, his only on camera appearances on this show.


  • Fun fact #2: I actually sat next to the real Eric Bloom at a “Weird Al” Yankovic concert in Denver a few years ago. That’s a story for another time, but let’s just say I have a connection in the Weird Al fan community who offered me a backstage pass and some upgraded seats. A-



Band Shot


Dinosaur Jr frontman J Mascis sits in with the band this week.


  • Apparently, the copy I am watching is a network rerun from December 2, 2000? It advertises the Val Kilmer/U2 episode as being “next weeks'” show. Gee, I sure hope they didn’t change the lineup. It’s not often they air a rerun from a previous season to the current one in the 11:30 slot.


Elian, The Cuban Boy


A preview of a new Broadway musical from the producers of “The Lion King” and “Aida” about the saga of six year old Elian Gonzales starring child actor David Mack Wilson (Dratch) in the title role, Walken as Fidel Castro, Sandra Milhart (Gasteyer) as Elians’ American relative, Richard Kyle Pierce (Kattan) as the boys’ father Juan Gonzales and, somehow, Janet Reno (Ferrell) as herself


  • Hoo boy, we instantly go from “timeless sketch” to “sketch that ONLY would have made sense this specific week”.


  • Still, I’d say this one gets over on sheer commitment alone. Gasteyer and Walken bring the talent, Ferrell and Kattan bring the charisma. Even the implied homoeroticism between Will and Chris isn’t played up for laughs as much as you’d expect for this era.


  •  The opening boat number didn’t add much, but it wasn’t so unnecessary as to get rid of.


  • Rachel Dratch as her child actor character that she’d only get on the air one other time in the following episode playing Elian as a 1950s Leave It To Beaver/Dennis The Menace golly gee whiz type was charming.


  • I have to admit, this is pulled off in a way that makes it still entertaining even removed from the context of that specific weeks’ headlines it was pulled from.


  • Boy, this episode almost has the perfect rundown the way its two biggest and most dynamic sketches are placed back to back up top. B-


The Continental


The Continental (Walken) lures in his neighbor with her own mail that was mistakenly delivered to him. He attempts to seduce her with “cawiar”, “chom-pawn-yay”, telescopes, possible roofies, paintings from Target and bathrooms with two way mirrors.


  • This is the fourth installment of this well known Walken character (and my first introduction to it). It’s so heartwarming to hear them still use Hartmans’ voiceover in these.


  • Again, this is something that Walken and only Walken could make work back at a time when a sketch like this could “work” comedically (well, up to the point where he put something in the woman's drink, but him lusting over her champagne covered boobs and the reveal of the two way mirror was funny). 


  • He handles the situation with such over-the-top goofiness that he strips away about 99% of the lingering ick. This character is basically a human Pepe Le Pew, so thankfully Walken had the good sense to play him almost like a living cartoon character.


  • Some choice lines here “I love women. I can read their mail. I mean, MINE”, “...and may I say, you have exquisite taste in underwear” (after the reveal of his telescope pointed out his window)


  • I did like the ending where she straight up chokes and maces him causing him to admit to having developed mace immunity. I also got a kick out of seeing the pink gloved camera man hand Walken, Aguilera and Kattan champagne during the good nights. C+


Viagra


Disgusted, annoyed wives (Gasteyer, Tina Fey) aren’t nearly as thankful for the erectile dysfunction drug as their older, more amorous, sex crazed husbands (Walken, Phil Hymes, Rich Francese)


  • I got a kick out of Walkens’ line “we’re doin’ like bunnies”.


  • Writers Rich Francese and Tina Fey are a couple. Always nice to see one of Tina's rare pre-Update appearances as a writer. I’m guessing she wrote this, too? Seems like it’s completely in her voice.


  • Lighting director Phil Hymes cameos near the end. Funny how he appears in this AND the first SNL Viagra pretape from the Matthew Broderick season 23 episode filled with various men (including Regis Philbin and Leon “The Ladies Man” Phelps) all swearing up and down that they DON’T need it.


  • I’m sure Viagra jokes seemed old and tired two years later, but at least it was nice to see one from a female perspective for a change. Not much else to say about this quick piece. C-


Jenny Jones


Jenny Jones (Dratch) brings out former “freaks” turned “hotties” (Shannon, Parnell, Kattan) to confront their former high school bullies (Fallon, Oteri, Tracy Morgan) and welcome frequent interjections from audience member Ray Stockton (Walken)


  • Oof, speaking of old, tired sketch tropes, its’’ something SNL started in earnest between seasons 18-20 and MADtv made one of their staples from the beginning. It’s a daytime trash TV sketch. Maybe Tina wrote this too? Rachel Dratch makes for a decent Jenny Jones. She’s no Mo Collins, but it works.


  • I liked the back and forth between Parnell and Oteri (her second appearance in this episode and first with any lines of dialogue). I got a kick out of Parnells’ lines the most, especially his weight loss secrets being consuming nothing but candy necklaces and Pedialyte for a year and then getting Scurvy and his working as an exotic dancer as a club called “Bulges”. Cheri then admitting she has 19 kids and is on welfare in response to this…kinda worked?


  • Honestly, the only other thing that works for me is Walken of all people as the loudmouth audience member spouting AAVE tinged slang. The Molly/Jimmy part did nothing for me and the less said about the reveal of Kattans’ character being transgender, the better. I wouldn’t quite call it punching down, but…at least Tracys’ character is…accepting of her? D+


Weekend Update w/Colin Quinn


Jacob Silj (Ferrell) can’t get through his report on Microsofts’ anti trust suit as he has to spend his entire time addressing his voice immodulation disorder to Colin


  • The Elian jokes from Colin were okay (aside from the Reno one). I especially liked the Elian callback at the end. Funny how he dates his Elian “News From The Future” joke as being from 2015 because at that point future SNL castmember Pete Davidson will have played an older Elian (in the last episode of 2014…the only possible time he could’ve gotten away with that, too!).


  • Aside from those and the Census/Beatles Anthology/rising gas prices jokes, nothing stood out for me here. Everything else was just lost to the April 2000 time fog (especially that Mets tickets/John Rocker joke that got legitimate boos from the crowd. Bet he wasn’t expecting that, huh?).


  • At least it's good to see Colin getting a decent response from the crowd on his jokes. Quinn' s never been a bad comedian. Weekend Update was just too constricting a format for him.


  • Ferrells’ Jacob Silj character is always fun to see. I always loved the writerly absurd details being shouted at me along with him straight up insulting Colin “under his breath” to his face at the end. B-


Christina Aguilera Performs “I Turn To You” & A Medley Of “At Last/What A Girl Wants”


  • Girls’ definitely got some pipes on her…


  • Hey, she’s covering a deep cut from the Space Jam soundtrack. Nice!


  • Ok, this episode gave us “More Cowbell” and the next sketch. I can’t believe that the moment that made me laugh the most the last time I watched this was someone in the audience mooing, not booing, but MOOING at Xtina during one of her songs!


  • Definitely wasn’t expecting a partial Etta James cover either, but she makes it work. The transition to her next song was surprisingly pulled off well.


Census Taker


Mr. Leonard (Walken) frustrates a door-to-door Census taker (Tim Meadows) with his strange, confusing and wildly inaccurate answers to the simplest of questions.


  • Here it is, folks. The only sketch in this episode that rivals Cowbell in terms of hilarity.


  • This was written by Tina Fey and may be considered a deep cut, but a successful enough deep cut that the show would decide it a good idea to do a spiritual sequel to this a decade later with Tina, Betty White and Kenan Thompson.


  • This was perfect for Walkens’ innate strangeness and Meadows' innate ability to sell himself in a straight man role. The only negative thing I can say about this sketch is that it happened to be Tims’ first and only appearance in this episode.


  • So many great lines from Walken in this sketch, it is hard to choose very specific ones. What stood out to me was “80” vs “4”, “part-time” vs “full-time” employment, “you’ve got a bobcat in there?”, “passport to Florida/hell of a forgery”, “let’s just proceed as if this is going well”, “I really want to win that car” and the reveal that he has been out of jail for an hour. A-


Beauty Pageant 


50 year old Sally O’Malley (Shannon) invades The Miss Greenwood Hills Beauty Pageant. Although we don’t see host Brett Lighthorse (Walken) actually crown her, we do see from a newspaper snapshot that she beat Miss Clarksdale Mall (Oteri) and Miss I-95 Interchange (Gasteyer) for the title


  • This is probably the most low key and least remembered of the Sally O’Malley sketches due to its’ being cut from Comedy Central reruns.


  • I’ve always passively tolerated this character and there’s nothing unusual or different from Miss Shannon here. 


  • What worked for me here the most was Walken's odd delivery (it's especially odd for him as he attempts a southern accent with an effeminate lisp), Gasteyers’ opening answer to what she would do if she wins and Oteris’ reaction to finding out she is only runner up.


  • The rest of this just felt like a less packed version of the previous two Sally O’Mally sketches (and the next three or four, really) so not much else to say here.


  • Fun fact: longtime SNL choreographer Danielle Flora is one of the contestants. Makes sense as she and everyone else begins doing Rockette-like kicks during the big musical number.


  • Hey, another sketch where Walken gets a chance to sing and dance. Too bad his mom was probably asleep by this point in the show. C+



Overall Thoughts


  • Well, when you look at what still holds up 25 years later (and there's not a lot that doesn't) this episode as a whole does still deserve it's “all time classic status”. 

  • It's not just the two well known sketches that stand out. The whole show is carried on the strength of a legendary host's performance. Some assists from former and current all time great cast members certainly help, too.

  • Obviously, Ferrell stood out quite a bit. He and Walken feel like they dominated this episode with some assists from Gasteyer and Kattan. Oteri and Meadows had light nights, but really worked well in their parts. Everyone else got a fair amount of airtime (see, because this was back when SNL still had a reasonably sized cast).


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 REreviews of the Tom Hanks and Dave Chappelle episodes from 2016. Have a great end of summer, everyone!

Thursday, April 10, 2025

Steve Martin/Prince (02.04.2006)

The following blog entry is a companion piece to the newest episode of the We Heart Hader Podcast which you can listen to here.


The Sabotage Of Baldwin

Steve Martin makes a mad rush to 30 Rock from a sexy dinner date with Kelly Ripa (Herself) when she reveals to him that Alec Baldwin (Himself) is hosting SNL tonight, tying his hosting record. Steve sneaks in and strangles Alec, wraps his unconscious body in a rug and dumps him out a window onto the skating rink.

  • Already this episode has a unique and special feel to it. This cold opening is pretaped (like a much more refined Digital Short) and sets up a meta backstage runner. Plus, the return of Steve Martin as a host after a 12 year absence (minus a few small cameos here and there) makes this feel like a big “event.”
  • The gag with Steve taking a Viagra was a bit cheap, but like I said…setting up a runner.
  • The gag with Steve hailing a limo instead of a regular taxi was fun.
  • Even as a gag, it seems a little weird to have Alec back “hosting” so soon after he actually did host in real life just barely three months earlier (or at least a cameo this soon from Alec WOULD'VE seemed strange prior to 2016) but hey besides the “runner” of it all at least it adds to the “meta/backstage” nature of this cold open since Steve set that record back in the days when Lorne was cool with having him, Buck, Elliott, Eric Idle & Michael Palin host multiple times in the same season.
  • Fun fact: longtime SNL writer James Anderson plays “Jimmy” the wardrobe guy who gets Alec ready for the show. Even as divisive of a figure as James is in the online SNL fan community I liked the “inside baseball” feel this adds to this cold open. I also love how Steve snuck in with a fake beard to match his own.
  • I loved Steve just casually and nonchalantly just “sneaking” past a cleaning lady and then casually walking through a hallway, holding a body rolled up in a rug while chatting with Andy Samberg.
  • I especially love Steve not even letting Lorne finish his line “We can't find Alec! Somebody call Tom Hanks!” before suddenly punching him (which us where we get our very first glimpse of Bill Hader in this episode, by the way). Very rapid fire Tim-and-Eric-esque timing on that one. B+


Monologue 

Steve shares vague, half-muddled memories and super tightly cropped photos of his time with the original SNL cast. He then praises the women of the current cast and welcomes Maya Rudolph back from her four month maternity leave. Suddenly, the Viagra he took before leaving his dinner with Kelly decides to kick in.

  • Ah, I see we're starting the live portion of the show now.
  • Immediately I liked Steve's line “it's gonna be HARD TO KEEP FROM CRYIN’!”
  • My favorite gag in this might be his attempt to tell an old anecdote while constantly correcting himself on the exact date and concluding the story took place in December 1980 because he remembers John Belushi asking about holiday plans.
  • The bit with Steve showing old show photos from the ‘70s but super cropped/pulled into closeup so you can only see Steve's face was fun too as a quick gag to move this along.
  • Wow, it's uh…real nice to see Maya back again after such a long absence from the show this season. She and Steve's obligatory mention of Prince made for possibly the ideal conclusion to the “Viagra countdown clock” from, oh roughly 15-20 minutes ago. 
  • Luckily, Steve Martin is one of the few male comedians out there with enough charm and likeability to wash out the “horny/dirty old man” vibes this gives off. B+


A Teddy Bear Holding A Heart

This Valentine's Day, get your wife the gift that says “No, I certainly DIDN’T forget that today was, in fact, Valentine's Day and Yes, I was DEFINITELY planning to give you this extravagant gift of a small stuffed animal well in advance!”

  • While it may now feel like this is the type of sketch SNL does some version of every single Valentine’s Day, this was actually the first if at least three of this type of “sarcastically fancy ad for the cheapest gift imaginable”.
  • Forte and Poehler as the couple sold this well as did Wiig and then writer Liz Cackowski as the spectators.
  • Paula Pell was great as the announcer for this.
  • Some cute quick filler material, not much else to see here. C+


Oprah

Oprah Winfrey (Rudolph) invites author Stone Freeman (Martin) on her show to come clean in a very serious interview and admit that his devastating new memoir “Skating At The Bottom Of The Ocean” is 100% true…as he gradually admits that the book is 100% full of lies.

  • Obviously, this sketch is a reference to the then current controversy surrounding author James Frey exposed as a fraud after his memoir “A Million Little Pieces” was revealed to be full of largely fabricated details about his life...and the Oprah invited him back on her show to berate him in an interview.
  • I guess the writers and Maya thought this would be the best possible excuse to use her Oprah impression that she's so fond of since they knew she would be back at work this week.
  • I did like the fake audience reactions within the sketch getting to the point where Wiigs’ voice was the lone audience member shouting “oh my God” to which Maya replies “exactly, lady.” 
  • Maya uttering the line “steaming pile of shizz” caught me off guard. I did like her line to Steve “you doopity duped me” and that James Frey had just “dicked her over…as Maya Angelou would say”.
  • Anyway, this seemed to be a little dry on the surface but it was full of fun dialogue with Steve having to constantly contradict every word out of his mouth.
  • I especially like Steve pulling the old “hey, look over there” trick on Maya and then just tearing our a full page of the book she just read from. I also liked Steve briefly trying to trick Maya into leaving, acting as if he was the host and she was the guest.
  • I can see how some might not find this sketch funny due to it being tied to a now long forgotten real life news story that happened the week it aired nearly 20 years ago, but if you look past the surface there's a lot more cartoonishness in the execution that can still put it over at least for me personally. B-


Don't Buy Stuff You Can't Afford

A groundbreaking, revolutionary new debt relief/money management program is centered around not buying things unless you actually have enough money saved to pay for them.

  • This was a simple, straight forward sketch with Parnell as a pitchman and Poehler and Martin as the couple in need of debt relief (but simply can't grasp the concept of NOT making purchases solely on credit that they can't pay off).
  • None of these characters have names or even much else in the way of identities, so they might as well just be playing themselves. It's rare to see something like that from any long established sketch show with a well known cast.
  • This was another sketch that fit Steve Martin like a glove. He's one of the best of all time at selling “smart humor based slightly in stupidity” so it's only natural to place him with the two members of this SNL cast who are also the best at this exact thing.
  • Boy, if this was live, Steve must have had to make one hell of a quick change to make it in on time here (even if said “change” was just him taking off a wig and beard and putting on a jacket).
  • Bill Hader’s voice can be heard at the end as the announcer. His pitches for things like “a monthly subscription to ‘Stop Buying Stuff magazine” were neat.
  • Perhaps what worked best about this particular sketch is that it had such a timeless, ageless feel to it, so it's kind of funny that the shoe sandwiched it between two other sketches that are certainly neither timeless nor ageless. B+


Hamas Party

Steve has some second thoughts about his latest “corporate” stand up gig in Palestine as he learns that he is about to go on stage at the Election Victory Party for Hamas, broadcast live on Al Jazeera…until he is told he can get paid extra and shamelessly promote “Pink Panther.”

  • Right out of the gate, we get Steve talking lovingly on a cell phone to a woman he identifies as “Britney Spears”...in 2006. Continuing the “Steve Martin lusts after younger women” theme tonight, I see?
  • We get our first live Bill Hader appearance of the night…playing one of three Palestinians/Hamas members along with Fred Armisen and Seth Meyers (gee, I wonder if he and/or Colin Jost wrote this one?)
  • Well, we may be getting two white guys and a predominantly Hispanic man playing three middle easterners but this doesn't score quite as bad as you'd think on the “oopsie-doo” scale since it's quite forgettable really. The guys’ attempts at “accents” are doing most of the heavy lifting here.
  • Speaking of continuing themes, we get another instance of “foreigners being hopelessly behind on American pop culture” comedy trope as the Hamas members confess to Steve that the only movies of his anyone in Palestine has seen are “The Jerk” “The Muppet Movie” and “The Man With Two Brains” (and of course Bills’ line that “the previews for ‘My Blue Heaven’ look hilarious”).
  • Speaking of Bill, I noticed he kept touching his mustache in this sketch and I'm wondering if this was due to his anxiety or if his mustache was hastily applied and about to fall off?
  • I did like Bills’ “EXCUUUUUUSE MEEEEEE!” line at the end.
  • Perhaps the thing that ages the worst about this sketch (given what we've learned via modern social media about the actual Israel/Palestine conflict in recent years) is the idea that someone in the entertainment business appearing to publicly take a staunch pro-Palestine stance would be shameful or antisemitic on its own (even if it may still be treated as bad PR by the producers of the new “Scream” sequels of whoever) but it's probably for the best that we not get too heavily in to this topic right now and just move on. 
  • …but hey, at least we got the added wrinkle to this sketch of “Steve Martin makes fun of himself for completely selling out.” C-

Digital Short: Two Inches 

Two old, dear friends (Martin & Forte) catch up and have a friendly chat at a near kissing distance. Things get a bit tense but they quickly apologize to each other.

  • This was a rare Samberg/TLI-less Digital Short but it expertly blended real heartwarming pathos with Steves’ charm and oddball Forte humor.
  • I still get a kick out if these early Digital shorts where they were clearly experimenting with the format and how they would use them in the show. B+


Quick Zoom Theater 

In a hospital scene sponsored by the Cannon Ultra Zoom camera, each line read is punctuated with a dramatic music sting and an unnecessary quick zoom.

  • Even though this came off like blatant product placement (almost as much as the actual product placement for Polaroid the original cast had to do at one point) there was fun to be had.
  • Parnell was a fun, dramatic host and everyone (Armisen, Rudolph, Martin, Thompson) played well off each other, heightening the most banal doctor's appointment.
  • I liked Kenans’ botched closeup and I liked Steve trying to force a closeup on his own after uttering his final line to Armisen (“she's carrying your BABY!!!”) B-


Prince: “Fury” & “Beautiful, Loved & Blessed”

  • What else is there to be said about this man that hasn't already been said?
  • Even though he can be a bit pretentious at times and he was quite a bit rude and dismissive to “Weird Al” Yankovic for years, there's no denying his flair or his sheer musical talent.
  • These songs may have been deep cuts but they certainly highlighted his excellent guitar skills supremely well.
  • His second song prominently features guest vocals from a woman named “Támar”. I wonder whatever became of her?
  • He dropped a Mary Katherine Gallagher “Superstar” reference at the end of his second song.


Weekend Update w/Fey & Poehler 

  • Amys’ “ban on human/animal cloning/Bad news for the mangaroo” joke stood out to me for it's sheer strangeness. Her “Brownback Mountain” joke was OK but…meh.
  • The Tina/Amy double handed “Samuel Alito/abortion ban” joke may still be hauntingly prescient today.
  • The “African History Museum/congressional Black Eyed Peas” jokes may have been the hackiest things in this episode.
  • Tinas’ joke about a 17 year old high school girl setting a new record “playing against the Knicks” stood out as a nice antidote to the types of cheap, misogynistic WNBA jokes we got frequently from Michael Che last year.
  • A rare shockingly short Tina & Amy Update with no guest commentaries. After the last Update of theirs, I just reviewed…this (while not absolutely perfect) is a substantial improvement. C+


Super Bowl National Anthem 

Aaron Neville (Sanz), Aretha Franklin (Thompson) and Dr. John (Sudeikis) are too distracted by their own hunger and dry, cocoa butter starved skin to make it through their own rehearsal for The National Anthem at the Super Bowl.

  • After seeing Kenans’ Aretha Franklin, I think I may have spoken too soon on what the hackiest thing in this episode was. Thank God Kenam swore off female/drag roles when he did.
  • I get why they would want to use Horatios’ Aaron Neville in this sketch (that year's Super Bowl WAS in New Orleans after all) but I still don't get why this impression even exists in the first place (when even they themselves admitted in the 50th anniversary “In Memoriam” that it shouldn't have.
  • Frankly, the only thing this sketch had going for it was Jason as Dr. John. If I'm not mistaken, this happens to be Jasons’ first live appearance in this episode. Amy and Seth were OK in their straight roles. C-


Backstage

Steve wants to renegotiate his contract with Lorne mid-show after instant high ratings and glowing reviews have come in. He wants to get paid $5500 to host instead of his usual rate of $5000 for hosting. When Lorne refuses, Steve refuses to go on and finish the show. Lorne forces his hand by pointing out that Jimmy Fallon (Himself) and a potentially brain damaged Alec Baldwin are on standby.

  • A nice conclusion to this episodes’ “runner”. A little dry with the salary talk but Steve gets to really poke fun at his “sellout” image here (and I liked Lornes’ revelation that he earns 12 million per show).
  • Nice of Jimmy to make a quick cameo here. At this point, Jimmy is more removed from hosting “Late Night” than he is from leaving SNL.
  • This got in, got its punches in and got out pretty quickly. B-


Prince Show

Prince (Armisen) and (Beyonce) interview Drew Barrymore (Wiig) and Princes’ personal chef (Martin)

  • Speaking of impressions the show now admits are problematic…
  • This is the second to last Prince Show ever to air. I remember watching this one with my mom. She kept comparing this to John Belushi & Joe Cockers’ duet of “Feeling Alright” from 1976 (not too far removed from Steve's first hosting stint either) but Prince never showed up on screen (to the disappointment and confoundment of many, I'm sure).
  • I have heard that Fred and Maya did get to watch Prince rehearse in an effort to ask him if he wanted to be in this sketch. They missed their chance because after his performance he took a sharp left and walked right past them.
  • I see Fred is wearing a different wig to more exactly match Princes’ real hair which we saw on stage just now.
  • Anyway, this sketch had its moments. It obviously felt like it was missing something, but it was largely saved by Steve doing a slightly less ridiculous French accent than he did in “Pink Panther.”
  • Wiig did a serviceable Drew Barrymore. Again, I like revisiting these early moments I'm Kristen's tenure where we got to see her genuine talent for impressions.
  • The rest of this was typical Prince Show shtick I've been pretty ambivalent towards since it aired but Maya as BeyoncĂ© looked real…nice this time. C+


State Of The Galaxy 2145

The Brian Williams 3000 (Meyers) reports on the State Of The Galaxy address given by Earth President George Q. Bush (Forte) with commentary from Hologram Chris Matthews (Hammond) and Hillary Clin-tron (Poehler, Dratch)

  • Seeing Seth play Brian Williams feels odd since I've seen Forte play a dead on Brian Williams that he admittedly stumbled ass backwards into while trying out a totally different unrelated impression. The real Brian Williams of this era was never quite as boisterous as Seth portrayed him.
  • Good use of Hammonds Chris Matthews here, too.
  • While this sketch was well-performed, visually dazzling and I for sure liked the Space Mutiny-esque elements to it, the rest of the dialogue was almost white noise to me. It was a little too closely tied to the politics of the second term of the Bush 43 administration to truly be funny.
  • “The Expedia.com US Capitol Building” feels like something Mike Judge edited out of the second draft of the Idiocracy screenplay.
  • The gag that they are “very close” to capturing Bin Laden in 2145 got a bigger reaction in 2006 than it could've after May of 2011 for obvious reasons
  • Bill can be seen here as a very elderly, wizard-like vice president who gets up and runs away in a panic when Fortes’ Bush states that “every American over 50 will be launched into the deep recesses of space” to solve the social security crisis.
  • Horatio is seen as a speaker of the house who mistakenly applauds when Fortes’ Bush announces that Jupiter has pledged to destroy Earth within the year.
  • What was the gag with both Poehler and Dratch playing a two-headed version of Hillary Clinton at the end? We're they also supposed to be robots or just some kind of two headed clone? Or were they just a two headed robot? I didn't quite get that one. B-

Digital Short: The Tangent

Joel (Armisen) is discovered on the street by two movie studio executives in the middle of a long, rambling endless rant about a restaurant. Joel is signed to a movie deal and cast in a space epic alongside Scarlett Johansson (Herself). After promoting the movie with interviews on MTVs’ TRL and Late Night With Conan O'Brien (Himself) the movie bombs at the box office and he is shunned. He is chewed up and spit out by the movie business before he can even bring himself to stop talking.

  • TWO Digital Shorts? In one episode? In THIS economy? Neither of which have Andy Samberg in them? Just one of the many oddities of season 31 as SNL transitioned into a new era, I guess.
  • Anyway, this was a fun inventive sketch that was stylistically very different from anything else on the show at the time.
  • It seems like this may have been one of Armisen's ideas as it featured his usual collaborators and played to his better comedic instincts. It just came across like this was unique to him and his sensibilities as a writer. 
  • Either this character is just the polar opposite of Nicolas Fehn or I'm detecting slight hints of Documentary Now! here.
  • It's obvious this was made for a different episode but got cut at dress and used again here to fill time. Scarlett Johansson was in this and she hosted a few weeks prior to this episode. 
  • This was kept afloat quite a bit by cameos from the likes of Conan and Brian Williams (weird sketch placement, huh?). I'm glad this did eventually air because it was quite fun. B+


Surfers

Ted (Martin) stubbornly refuses to accept that his surf group is kicking him out of the circle for being old, unhappy, just genuinely ruining the surf sessions and being the “un-gnarliest bro-ham in the tube”.

  • This is definitely the weakest sketch of the night. I remember thinking this even at 15 when I first saw this episode.
  • Bill Hader appears in this along with Samberg (who makes his first live appearance here and also wrote this sketch), Wiig, Sudeikis, Meyers, Forte and Armisen.
  • The main thing this sketch had going for it was that it pretty much ran one joke into the ground. It's a shame this got a worse and worse reaction through the week because Steve, Andy, Jorma & Akiva fought so hard to make it work and yet it still pretty much bombed on air so badly it's a failure that still sticks with Steve to this day (at least according to the Lonely Island and Seth Meyers Podcast). Oh well, I'm sure the signs were there all along. D+


Naturally Crafting

Midge Hartsinger (Dratch) welcomes guest Jack Patrick (Martin) onto her craft show to make heart shaped organic Valentine's Day wreaths. He repeatedly turns down her invitations to stay the night or “crash” here at Craft Holler since he can drive in even the worst of snowstorms with his four wheel drive and abundance of supplies…until his passions get the better of him seeing her in winter gear and notices they have been snowed in.

  • This sketch may be honestly better than I remembered. It's not up to much premise wise but only Steve Martin and Rachel Dratch can perfectly sell the budding tension of this perfectly.
  • One highlight of this for me was when Steve mistakenly flubbed a line and “crash holler” when he was supposed to say “craft holler” and overcorrected himself the next time he had to say it. B-


Overall Thoughts

  • This was honestly a stranger episode than I remembered, but not a disappointing one in the slightest.
  • The episode was pretty much dominated by Steve and Mayas’ returns (still, nobody except Finesse was completely shut out)
  • Still, at the same time, there was enough reliance on pre-tapes (and enough impressions done by people who shouldn't have really been playing the roles they were playing) that it felt like I was watching a season 10 episode.
  • Maybe the abundance of pretapes was to cover for Steve Martin not being as able to participate in much of the show due to age or just nerves from not having performed live in several years?