Showing posts with label Will Ferrell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Will Ferrell. 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!

Monday, February 17, 2025

SNL50: The Anniversary Special (02.16.2025)

Simon & Carpenter (Homeward Bound)

  • Wow. Strange but intriguing combo right off the bat. Appreciate the deep cut, though. 
  • I do like the “wasn't born yet/neither were her parents” jab which Paul seemingly took in stride.
  • I gotta say Sabrina's doing a good job of holding her own against Paul vocally here.
  • Seems a little somber to open rather than close with, but no complaints here.

Montage

  • While this was visually dazzling, I found it a bit strange that Darrell Hammond only announced the musical guests but I also realized that if they announced all the cast members and guests on the show that might take five whole minutes. Plus, I do like the small sense of surprise this lends to the show.

Monologue 

  • Overall, I liked Steve's monologue (especially the end…heh, great job, Steve! Loved the whole thing!) but (*looks around and whispers once he is absolutely sure Steve Martin is out of earshot*) I honestly liked his 40th monologue a bit better. That one felt a bit more fresh and original (probably since we hadn't seen Steve host with or without Marty as recently in the lead up to SNL40 as we had leading up to this one).
  • I guess neither Steve nor Tom Hanks were entirely wrong about the monologue being “the weakest part of the show”.
  • Those “diversity hire” and “Gulf of Steve Martin” jokes came off odd to me but the rest of Steve's stand up.
  • I especially liked the sudden Letterman cutaway and the “writers’ tribute”
  • I heard Steve (and possibly Mulaney & Marty?) were workshopping material for this monologue at the Comedy Cellar a few days ago (and you can kinda tell since quite a bit of it seems personal and not about SNL in particular).
  • Yeah, I think maybe more than just two hosts may have committed murder, John (but that's a discussion for another time).
  • Marty's cameo was fine. He gave it just the right energy that the “ICE! Get him!” gag came off just right and didn't feel too inappropriate.
  • I mean, full disclosure, I may mot have laughed as much at the Martin Short/ICE gag because something like that actually happened to my sister at her job…but I'm also dealing with recent unemployment and a much more recent death in the family right now. I'm not gonna let either of those things affect my enjoyment of this special. I'm using it to distract myself from those things anyway. Moving on…

Lawrence Welk

  • Wow, is it just me or is Armisen really showing his age more than ever in his Lawrence Welk role?
  • Well, I've always been pretty ambivalent towards Dooneese…but I have always liked Ferrells’ Goulet. I also liked Kenans’ contortionist and the idea of Gasteyer and Johansson as backup Singers.
  • Most of all, I…can put up with them shoving Kim Kardashian into the background of this sketch where she can't steal too much focus until Wiig does a drum solo on her skirt covered ass which…guys, c'mon.
  • I did like the surprise gag of Dooneeses’ sudden third hand making an appearance.
  • It makes sense that they would work this into a new 21st century anniversary special that airs in prime time (especially the first third) but I probably would've liked this a bit better if it didn't so closely resemble the second iteration of Lawrence Welk/Dooneese they actually did during Ferrells’ second hosting stints (and the one with Jon Hamm they did during Wiigs final episode really).
  • They also did this as the cold open to the Betty White/Jay-Z episode from May 2010. I mention that as a positive because with this in a prominent spot at the top of the rundown and all the former cast cameos, this really does feel like a much bigger version of the “event” that episode was…which is good.

Black Jeopardy 

  • Ok, now HERE'S something I could always get on board with! I liked them including Tracy as “Darius” and Eddie as Tracy.
  • Eddie's impression of Tracy was fun. The voice he used was a bit high but he's got Tracy's delivery down perfect. If anything, Eddie just sounds like a much younger version of Tracy (or he may have been channeling Tracy Jordan from 30 Rock/TGS more than Tracy Morgan of SNL fame).
  • I really liked them using Black Jeopardy as a way to address the shows’ troubles with diversity that apparently lead into it's troubles attracting (let alone keeping) a black audience at times.
  • I did like the “wrong” guesses of In Living Color, Showtime At The Apollo and Soul Train (as telegraphed as they seemed).
  • I do appreciate how they tried to work in Chris Rock and Tom Hanks’ character “Doug” to make it seem reminiscent of the Jeopardy sketch from the LAST big anniversary special (as sloppily executed as those seemed but, hey they never have enough time to rehearse the live sketches in these so I can forgive that) but was the audience just…AFRAID to laugh at the “handshake” gag they rehashed from the original Black Jeopardy…that had Tom Hanks in it?
  • Even if it came out feeling like the second Black Jeopardy sketch in history that Eddie Murphy participated in that was slightly…botched. This was the first genuine highlight of the special for me.

Stone & Shannon

  • Ok, I guess this was one of three definite “crowd pleasing” moments they just HAD to do but I appreciate the meta acknowledgement of this being too “on the nose”.
  • I guess a similar meta acknowledgement of how Sally O'Malley should chronologically be 75 now would've been too much to ask or just ruined the whole bit. I don't want to nit pick. It's supposed to be a fun night.

Physical Humor Montage

  • Ok, if we do absolutely HAVE to have some clip packages in this I do appreciate what a unique and clever theme this feels like.
  • I do like how they expanded on this theme so it could include everything from Chevy, Farley and Mollys’ falls and general body slams to genuine heartfelt dancing to modern pretaped blood and gore (even sneaking Aykroyd's Julia Child in there).

Kelsey and Matts’ Vow Renewal

  • Oh God, here it comes. Let's just get the most inevitable moment out of the way. 
  • I do like Shannon and Short flubbing their way through this intro.
  • I heard a rumor that Steve Carell was originally supposed to be in this but had to drop out at the last minute. Is there any truth to this? Is that why Marty's in this?
  • Hey, there's Sabrina of course. I think maybe they wanted to make sure they put her only two segments on as early as they could since they figured she might have young fans who need to get to bed early in case they're school ISN'T closed for Presidents’ Day. (I know she's not exactly a teeny bopper or anything but I do know she got her start on the Disney Channel, so a lot of youngins must've followed her from there).
  • Ok, back to this sketch. Don't put it off any longer.
  • I guess they're spoofing a song from Wicked I don't quite recogni…oh, it's “Defying Gravity”. Cute.
  • Yeah, this by far my least favorite “You Belong With Me” parody ever. (I mean, it's T. Swift so I don't think we really need to ask ourselves “why now in 2025?” here). I think you can all easily guess what my actual favorite “You Belong With Me” parody is but just in case…
  • Yeah, Sabrina. What the hell IS this song? I mean, really.
  • The inclusion of Bennet, Mooney, Samberg & Yang might have been my favorite part of this. Sadly, it crumbled after this with the introduction of Pedro Pascal as Domingos’ bro “Renaldo” (who may or may be Bi, apparently) and Bad Bunny as “hot brother, Santiago.”
  • Couldn't they have just said Matt cheated on Kelsey with Sabrinas’ character and left it at that?
  • This last third of this seemed like a jumbled mess with all the additional “lore” to the Domingo saga they tried to tack on but at least it somehow didn't feel like it ran on too long or anything.

Deep Thoughts

  • Oh hey! I really dig this quick little palette cleansing throwback to the era that introduced me to the show!

Poehler & Fey's Q&A

  • Overall, I liked this much more than the Seinfeld hosted Q&A from tye 40th (much more clear, concise and coherent, free of any moments that will age horrendously years from now) and it managed to beat the high bar set by the Hanks hosted Q&A from the 25th.
  • Mostly I liked this for how they tried to pack some sheer strangeness into this (especially with Paytons’ odd commercial rant which was the perfect note to end this on).
  • Hey, Conans’ in the audience! 
  • Tina & Amys’ “beauty secrets” were very funny and I liked the back & forth between Quinta & Tim (although I am enough of an SNL nerd myself to point out that Sade was actually on in November 21, 1992 and December 14, 1985 but NOT March of 1993)
  • I'm…not really sure Blake & Ryan should legally even be there (I mean, I'm sure they need a break from everything) but I did like how they didn't even address the lawsuit drama (maybe outside the “what have you heard?” part)
  • I liked Nate Bargatze teeing up a random tribute to a specific wardrobe crew member named Donna.
  • The Lovitz bit was funny and I liked the back and forth between JLD, Driver and her dog. Good to see JLD finally make an appearance at one of these anniversary shows!
  • Gee, I sure hope Cher has the answer to MY question: why the hell is Kevin Costner here?
  • I especially like the Keith Richards/Zach Galifianakis bit but now I have another question: how come Mick Jagger has never been at one of these anniversary shows?
  • I could've done without the Hamm/Bad Bunny bit (and Momoas’ bit if I'm being honest).
  • I liked the Seth/Sharpton/Romano bit for the self awareness (they pretty much said what I was thinking)
  • I also liked Fred Armisens’ bit referencing an obscure cut sketch from his era. Only a true SNL nerd would appreciate the humor in Fred Armisen calling a 2005 episode “pretty bad…front to back”.
  • I appreciate how they didn't make the Kevin Spacey/Kanye jokes feel too gratuitous either.

Digital Short: Anxiety

  • While there may have been a small part of me that may have preferred a Please Don't Destroy or TV Funhouse over this, I will always have a certain fondness for The Lonely Island and their digital shorts so this was a welcome sight.
  • I thought the Duran Duran/Flock Of Seagulls-esque heavy 80s synth pop beat dovetailed well with the theme of this (although I feel like they could've backed off the IBS stuff a little bit) and I appreciated the Molly & Ana cameo. Bowen and Andy work very well together (even if this mostly seems to be Bowen gently airing out some personal issues with the show itself). 
  • Somehow, I doubt that Eddie Murphy and Billy Crystal were among the cast members who suffered the most anxiety while on the show.
  • Of all the vintage anxiety A.I. deep fakes in this, the melting Mr. Bill was my personal favorite.
  • I also appreciate how well they worked in Sarah, Parnell, JAJ, Kenan, Taran, Beck and Forte along with various crew members.
  • Speaking of Forte, did the first two verses of this remind anyone else of his “Women's Herstory (Did You See What I Did There?)” Weekend Update song from March 2010? Come to think of it, this whole song sounded like they just mixed that with "Space Olympics" and an inverted version of “Here I Go (feat. Charli XCX) but I don't really have a problem with that.

Nothing Compares 2 U

  • This might have been a stronger performance than their number at the homecoming concert on Friday night.
  • This song fits Miley Cyrus’ and Brittany Howard's vocal and musical styles so well it almost makes you forget how “out of left field” the choice of song feels.

Weekend Update w/Jost, Che & Meyers

  • Ok, well…I guess they didn't have too many other choices if they DIDN'T want to just repeat what they did at SNL40 but Jost & Che had decent jokes and seemed to know what wouldn't be appropriate for this event.
  • I especially liked Che's “Norm/O.J” joke and Josts’ “Chevy/Kenan” and “Quademic” jokes.
  • Mostly, I liked how this was more focused on showcasing the best (well, most of the best) characters from 2010s era Weekend Update and their original performers rather than having the big name celebrity guests reenact their favorite characters from the 20th century. I liked seeing Drunk Uncle, (I especially cracked up at the line “cam you yassify my chickpea pasta?”) Cecilys’ now pregnant party girl and especially Fred and Vanessas’ “Lornes’ Friends From Growing Up”. 
  • Wait, didn't Colin himself write most of these? What a coincidence (if true).
  • I loved seeing Bill Murray subtly tease Colin Jost with his own Top Ten Update anchor ratings (even though it seems like he or someone mixed up his old Oscar picks with the old top ten bit from Wayne's World for some reason?)
  • I especially liked Murray's “ignorant slut” callback as well as his “girl on girl” and “could OJ have really done it?” lines.
  • Boy, I guess ol’ Billy here decided to treat anyone who hosted Update during the non-Lorne years who wasn't a blood relative of his like the best supporting actors and actresses at the Oscar's, huh? (Sorry Charlie, Gail, Mary, Christine, Brad, Christopher, Joe, Tim, “Fernando” and most of the hosts from late season 9 and early season 10).

50th Close Encounter (*someone whispers in Casey's ear*) oh, what's that? They actually did fewer than 50 of these? Hmm, that sounds about right

  • I figured they might be doing another one of these. Well, it's definitely a decent way of working Kate and Aidy into this special
  • Hamm, Pascal and (especially) Harrelson are nice additions to this.
  • This is another series of sketches I've always been pretty “eh” on. They never quite hit right for me because of all the manufactured breaking but I don't hate it.
  • These do hit all the same beats comedically and the addition of Ana Gasteyer? Nope? Nora Dunn? Hmm, not quite? Meryl Streep? Yes! Wow! Meryl Streep as Colleens’ mother is putting this above all the others already.

The Stagehand

  • Wow, I never thought a “Chad” Short could make me this emotional. This was a great way to work in Laraine as herself into the show. I also liked how this was different from other Chad pretapes in that it wasn't centered on Laraine either falling for him or hitting on him in some way.
  • While we're on the subject of the surviving original female cast,I do wish they could've somehow worked Jane Curtin into the actual show though, but hey…I understand that Jane may have only wanted to be in the audience given what she's said publicly about her experience on the show and the fact that she seemingly only likes to appear on camera in every OTHER anniversary show since she wasn't featured in the 25th (and if not…well, I also understand why some cuts definitely had to be made)

50 Years (Sandlers’ Song)

  • Jack Nicholson makes his obligatory “huh, why hasn't this guy ever hosted?” appearance.
  • Speaking of goofball cast members that the youngins’ like bringing unexpected emotion out of me, I loved how Sandlers’ song here had the exact right mix of nostalgia, reverence, accessible inside jokes about the show and sheer silliness.
  • I especially liked the digs at Speilberg, NY mag critics, anti semitic musical guests, nepo interns, Downey and Jost. I wonder how much of this is from Sandlers’ own personal experience with the show anyway?
  • Who the hell is this “Speedy” guy anyway? I'm genuinely curious.
  • This also seemed to serve the same function that the actual “In Memoriam” reel that Bill Murray introduced in the 40th Anniversary since referenced much loved cast AND crew members who are no longer with us. I guess this provides some balance for those who may think this special was too focused on modern recurring sketches and lacked real sentiment or proper tributes to the shows’ history and to those we lost.
  • Funny that he should mention Forte and show a clip from the “Spelling Bee” sketch as I'm wearing my “Business” t-shirt with the image from that sketch on it as I type this.

History of New York (Hotdogs & Heroin)

  • This was another heavily recurring sketch I was expecting them to bring back for tonight and honestly I wasn't totally against this.
  • Even though we literally got another big Mulaney musical four and a half months ago the last time John hosted a regular episode, this felt appropriate for a big 50th anniversary celebrity gala special that they'd go all out for. 
  • Also, it still feels even more appropriate to give Mulaney a spotlight to acknowledge his contributions to the shows’ comedic sensibilities (and just modern comedy tastes in general stand up or otherwise) given how big of a name he's become in the world of comedy in general.
  • Maya Rudolph, Adam Driver, Paul Schaffer and G.E. Smith did a stellar job with the first number.
  • Nathan Lane was a pleasant surprise but “Cocaine And Some Vodka” to the tune of “Hakuna Matata” didn't quite work for me (thankfully that was really the only one)
  • The Forte/Sudeikis/Wiig Les Miserables Times Square number was fun if not incomprehensible. Jenna Ortega and Kevin Costner really made it for me.
  • Perhaps what I liked most about this one was how it made full use of the studio space and sprawled around from set to set, into the audience and back to home base.
  • This was honestly a really fun way to dig Kates’ Rudy Giuliani out of mothballs. Lin Manuel Miranda was a fun addition to this and they really slammed ol’ Rudy here.
  • I'm already sick of seeing Sarah play male political roles after seeing Kate & Aidy do that exact thing so much for nearly four years, but I did like Mulaney calling her out on the weakness of her Bloomberg impression. I always liked Armisen's portrayal better anyway.
  • Oh, so THAT’S what they put out that casting call for a 7 foot tall guy for. A non-impression of Bill Deblasio. Ok. It was also nice to see Devon Walker as Eric Adams again.
  • The Scarjo/Rudd/JAJ “Suddenly eBikes” number was fun too. I got a small kick out of Spade sitting out the finale. Nice enough way to work him in there. 
  • I liked the small callbacks to Diner Lobster previous Mulaney Musicals in the “One Day More” finale. Nick Jonas? OK.
  • Most of all I liked how they snuck in Taran, Ana and most of the male cast members from that mid-to-late 2010s era when these were more or less a regular fixture on SNL as Mulaney kept hosting (Alex, Beck, Kyle, Cecily, Mikey et al).

Baldwins’ Best Commercials 

  • Ok, maybe literally any other person in this building could've read Alecs’ lines here (I did like that “Alex” joke) but he is part of the shows’ history for a reason and he did just fine with his material here (although “Third Year Veneers” landed better for me than “After Update” sleeping pills did).
  • I did like his inclusion of Sarah here and I liked how this commercial montage was a mix of old crowd pleasers and quick deep cuts.
  • This may seem like an obvious choice for a clip package, but I liked how they did something different here considering that at the 40th, some of these commercials were just folded in to the general pretape/short film package we saw. I always thought it made a bit more sense to give the fake commercials their own segment anyway.

50th Bronx Beat (*someone else whispers in Casey's ear*) What? Oh, don't tell me…

  • This is another “take it or leave it” sketch for me. I appreciated the Conan “shoutout” and I'm glad they did more than just playfully flirt with Miles’ Teller (why him of all people, though?)
  • Looks like the fixed the mic/audio issues for the YouTube edit
  • Speaking of “take it or leave it” estrogen heavy talk show sketches, I genuinely appreciated seeing Mike Meyers as Linda Richman again. 
  • While I wasn't always the biggest Coffee Talk fan, I am always intrigued to see characters from long gone eras of SNL interacting with one's from this century.
  • Honestly, it's nice to see Mike Meyers dig another old Chara out of mothballs that WASN'T Wayne Campbell or Dr. Evil.
  • Most of all, it's gratifying to see the show acknowledge the similarities between these two sketches and make me feel like I wasn't the only person who wanted to walk up to Maya & Amy in the middle of one of these and say (with love of course) “Hey ladies, Mike Meyers just called. He wants Coffee Talk back”.
  • I did like Mayas’ “stem cells/snail sperm” line and Amys’ line about “only drinking six days a week”
  • Yes, it's both the 50th anniversary of SNL and the 34th (?) anniversary of Mike Meyers repeating these same jokes in every Coffee Talk sketch he's ever done.
  • (*Casey sees a third person approaching him and tries to cut them off*) Ok yeah, I know this isn't literally the 50th Coffee Talk either. I wasn’t even gonna make that joke again. Thank you. Moving On…

Lil Wayne & The Roots

  • Well, at least this was the only time we saw Dave Chappelle on this special considering he just hosted the second to last regular episode that aired before this special (and a lot of people certainly weren't happy about it then).
  • Yeah, possibly the weakest musical performance of the actual special (the concert on Friday night was AMAZING but who cares?) but hey, I'm a sucker for that song “Lolipop” (heh, see what I did there?)
  • Speaking of the Homecoming concert, anyone else legitimately get chills during that Lonely Island medley? (particularly the “Dear Sister” shoutout?) Anyone else hoping they'll eventually put up the ENTIRE Culps medley on Peacocks’ YouTube channel? I mean, that was my second favorite moment of that whole show and I'd like to watch it as a standalone clip in more than just bits and pieces online.

In Memoriam (for sketches & characters that did NOT age well)

  • I do love the misdirect here but even more than that I love that they just leaned straight into the fact that as a show that has been around 50 years they will have a LOT of material that will not hold up now so, yeah…they might as well put it all out there since they know people are gonna complain about all of these (or have already done so at some point…or made some idiotic comment along the lines of either “lol this was the actual funniest part of the show” or “lol remember when SNL was actually funneeeeyyy?” or that this is somehow disrespectful to do this in place of an actual SNL40 style In Memoriam reel. Grow up.)
  • So yeah, while I did like this initially, it does lose a bit of it's luster the more I chew on it and see other useless online reaction to it.
  • Is it just me or did they PURPOSELY leave out that clip of Jimmy Fallon as Chris Rock out if the pixelated "questionable makeup" montage? (And yes i've watched it closely enough a few times to notice it wasn't actually in there). However, I do see that they included Horatio Sanz as Aaron Neville in there, so…I feel a bit vindicated there from when I mentioned it on the premiere episode of my podcast. (See that, Deej?)
  • Their definition of “body shaming” is a bit more questionable than the clips they labeled as such.
  • Plus, people can still at least use it as a cudgel against Baldwin himself (hell, the show itself even did that when they still prominently featured him more than the actual cast).
  • Perhaps most shocking of all would be their decision to exclude Trump and Musk from their list of “questionable hosts”. I mean, why SHOULDN'T they be up there with Simpson, Blake, Diddy and Fogle? As Jost said during Update, they know this may be their LAST season anyway.
  • One thing I'm surprised by is the treatment of the “Word Association” sketch. I remember just before SNL40 (y'know, the LAST big anniver…ah, you know what I'm talking about by now) they aired the sketch completely uncensored (with a content warning beforehand, but still) and treated it with the utmost reverence as if it were as groundbreaking as “All In The Family” was at the time. I'm not even going to argue with their decision now to air a censored/beeped version of the sketch. I'm just gonna say that I think it's quite baffling.

Debbie Downer 

  • Ok, I'm glad Rachel Dratch is finally getting her flowers (and getting featured as much as her female cast mates, really) and I appreciate seeing Fallon actually keyed into a modern day SNL sketch performance. I even liked a lot of Dratchs’ jokes. Other than that, this came off pretty damn awkward.
  • Did anyone else think that we were getting a five timers club/platinum lounge sketch at first until they realized that Drew Barrymore was the only actual five timer onscreen and that Jimmy Fallon and Ayo Edeberi have only hosted four times between them?
  • Speaking of sketches that feature Fallon and Dratch together, is anyone else a little bit disappointed that we got this instead of an Update on what Sully & Denise have been up to these past eight years? I realize it might be a bit of a stretch to fit them into the theme of this special but we kinda already got a cameo from Debbie in the 40th…but not a full sketch like this, so…Yeah, all right. Now that I think about it this is actually fine.
  • Robert Deniro was actually OK here. He didn't really help this feel less stilted or anything (Barrymores’ intense energy with him was…odd) but I liked his speech about wanting a break from the state of the world with this special (hell, as I've stated much earlier that is the exact same reason I was watching this). I also liked his sternness with Dratch and his gently strangling her.
  • The “I can't have children/I told you that, Jimmy” line was cute and not too over the top but, eh.

Scared Straight

  • Here's another late 2000s/early 2010s sketch that I may have semi soured on due to it's repetition, forced breaking and over reliance on “scatalogical” humor but looking back I remember liking these a lot in spite of all of those things. I guess I've been too mentally conditioned by the “samey-ness” of seasons 34-37.
  • I do like how they used Marcello and Longfellow as the “young punks” in this but Mikey Day seems a little old for his part. Maybe Emil or Dismukes could've been used here instead?
  • I did like how they referenced Harry Potter as the first movie…because, what the hell? This feels like as right a time as any to urinate all over J.K. Rowlings’ legacy…y'know, given what she's like now.
  • Most of all, I liked how they worked Eddie Murphy (couldn't he have played Tyrone “C-I-L-L My Land Lawd” Green?) and Will Ferrell (someone must've been watching himself some Reno 911 recently) into this. 
  • Even though the “scatology” can get a little gratuitous in these at times, I appreciated the added meta twists of Murphy and Ferrells characters referencing real life movies they starred in.
  • I also liked the added twist of Ferrell's character initially putting a positive twist on things trying to show the kids the upside of prison life before getting aggressive. I especially like him rushing through the first half of his own “Elf” reference and getting straight to the point on that one.
  • Everyone's timing and delivery seemed a teeny bit off due to breaking and probable lack of rehearsal time but, hey…that honestly just made it more fun.
  • Did I just hear Eddie try to slip through an MF bomb on air? Boy, I was sure THAT would've gotten people talking…but somehow it didn't.

Garrett Morris Presents “Don't Look Back In Anger”

  • Nice to see Garrett again introducing one of the more poignant Schillers’ Reel films of the original era. 
  • It functions well as a Gilda/Belushi tribute (in that it reminds me of the type of tributes they gave just to those two specifically in the 15th and 25th anniversary specials)

Paul McCartney Medley 

  • Even though Sir Pauls’ voice…ain't what it used to be, he's still got it and this was a very strong performance nonetheless.
  • I guess I was wrong about which singer/songwriter named Paul should've closed this special (especially since Macca is literally performing a song with the words “and in THE END” in it). Nice additional Farley nod, by the way.

Goodnights

  • I got a big kick out of seeing Gary Kroger (right next to Lorne) Terry Sweeney, Ellen Cleghorn, Finesse Mitchell and (eventually) Chevy Chase featured so prominently right up front on stage.
  • I also thought Laraine holding up a photo of Gilda was very sweet.

Now, I've determined that there was enough new live content in this special for it to qualify as two actual episodes of this season and thus it should be ranked with the rest of season as such, so…

Ranking The 50th Season Best To Worst

  1. SNL50: The Anniversary Special (02.16.2025)
  2. Nate Bargatze/Coldplay (10.05.2024)
  3. John Mulaney/Chapell Roan (11.02.2024)
  4. Bill Burr/Mk.Gee (11.09.2024)
  5. Chris Rock/Gracie Abrams (12.14.2024)
  6. Paul Mescal/Shaboozey (12.07.2024)
  7. Timothee Chalamet (01.25.2025)
  8. Martin Short/Hozier (12.21.2024)
  9. Dave Chappelle/GloRilla (01.18.2025)
  10. Charli XCX (11.16.2024)
  11. Ariana Grande/Stevie Nicks (10.12.2024)
  12. Michael Keaton/Billie Eilish (10.19.2024)
  13. Jean Smart/Jelly Roll (09.28.2024)

Ranking All Of The Previous SNL Anniversary Specials From Best To Worst

  1. SNL50: The Anniversary Show (02.16.2025)
  2. SNL 40th Anniversary Special (02.15.2015)
  3. 25th Anniversary Special (09.26.1999)
  4. 15th Anniversary Special (09.24.1989)

Ranking All Of This Seasons Official SNL50 Branded Retrospective Material From Best To Worst

  1. SNL50: The Homecoming Concert (02.14.2025)
  2. Ladies And Gentlemen…50 Years Of SNL Music (01.27.2025)
  3. SNL50: The Anniversary Special (02.16.2025)
  4. SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night - Season 11: The Weird Year (01.16.2025)
  5. SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night - Five Minutes (01.16.2025)
  6. SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night - Written By: A Week Inside The SNL Writers’ Room (01.16.2025)
  7. SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night - More Cowbell (01.16.2025)

Overall Thoughts 

  • Even though it got off to a slightly rocky start and had a strangely rushed and jumbled together feel from the get go, I absolutely loved this special. It was the very best I could've hoped it would be for the culmination of SNLs’ big 50th anniversary special airing in the year 2025.
  • I mean, hey…when you're covering five whole decades of television history you kinda HAVE to rush through or gloss over some things from the distant past, so…why NOT just focus as much attention and effort as possible on legitimizing sketches and performers from the last 20 years to honor the last 50? I'm sure others my age and younger appreciate that because in a way, our eyeballs and YouTube clicks and what not seemed to be the main thing pushing it past 31.
  • I especially liked how it was “sketch heavy” enough that it genuinely felt like two regular episodes of SNL smashed together rather than just a collection of famous celebrities just introducing a series of clip packages in tuxes and evening gowns.
  • I also liked how it captured the exact same vibe that the homecoming concert did (in that it properly honored the shows’ history without feeling too self indulgent or up it's own…y'know)
  • It's also fitting and appropriate that the 50th anniversary honor what SNL gradually became after the 40th (or mostly just from years 41-47) where most of the current cast are basically treated as glorified extras who are only there to support the big, flashy celebrity cameos and two to three “standouts” of the current cast that Lorne Michaels THINKS all of America is waiting with baited breath to see on our screens! I say this with love of course since they have briefly backed off of this for a bit one or two seasons ago where the cameos were mostly fun and unexpected and not JUST there to fill big political roles but most of season 50 (including tonight) felt like we were headed back in that direction anyway.
  • Speaking of…

Special Thanks

  • I'd like to congratulate our dear friends Jon Schneider and James Stevens of the Saturday Night Network on securing their gig doing red carpet interviews for this event! Good job, guys! It's truly rewarding to all of us who follow you to see all the hard work you guys are doing paying off!
  • I'd also like to thank Jon specifically for creating SNN and not only giving me a space to start getting into podcasting myself but also for connecting me with someone who also wanted to start their own SNL related podcast and put out an open call live on air for a new co host.
  • Of course, I'd also like to thank Deej Barens for creating the We Heart Hader Podcast, inviting me into her podcasting space and allowing me to be her cohost. It feels incredibly gratifying to be able to help create and launch something that I consider to be a spin off to the SNN Patron Feedback Shows (at least in spirit).

Closing Thoughts

  • Well, for the most part, that lived up to all the hype for me. 
  • You may have also noticed that I eschewed my usual letter grades for each segment and avoided using any harsh profanity. I also went a bit lighter than usual on plugging my podcast. I chose to do those things out of reverence and respect for the occasion and the shows’ massive history.
  • My next blog post is going to be a ranking of all of Bill Hader’s Vincent Price sketches from best to worst. That should be out next Thursday to coincide with the release of the next episode of the “We Heart Hader” podcast.
  • After that, I am most likely just going to write up full length reviews of whatever the next planned episode of SNL is that will be airing March 1st so, I hope to have that ready to be published by the evening of March 2nd (as is my standard procedure!)
  • Have a good lower half of February and stay warm and safe out there, everyone.