Monday, May 27, 2013

Howard Cosell/Greg Kihn (4.13.1985)

Willie and Frankie VI – In this cold open, the pair is operating cameras on SNL. They imagine the girls on the show lusting after them as usual until the ledge of the platform digs into Crystal’s legs and they start their usual routine. They complain about how SNL opens its show at the end. I did like Guest talking about hanging by his nostril on a bathroom hook and twisting his Adam’s apple until it crunched. I guess this was a pretty clever way to work them into the show, but overall, I’m glad this was their last appearance ever. C+

Monologue – The late ABC sportscaster comes out and using a lot of SAT words laments his short lived similarly titled variety show on ABC. He says the show was crafted by geniuses and has been “reviewed by licensed idiots.” He then takes credit for this show and discovering its performers. I didn’t quite know what to expect from this monologue, but this turned out to be pretty funny. I’ve also noticed that Crystal’s impression of Cosell is pretty dead on and that he really got the voice down perfectly. C+

Hospital – Mafia boss Mr. Faraccio (Belushi) complains to his son about how is family got into a turf war while he is sick. He particularly bemoans his roommate Ed Grimley (Short) whose tonsils are inflamed, but he is excited for his birthday tomorrow. Faraccio goes out for a walk and a hitman (Guest) enters the room mistaking Grimley for the mob boss and attempts to give him some sort of lethal injection until his Uncle Bazzle (Cosell) walks in with a present and distracts the hitman while Grimley shoves the needle into his leg. He reacts like an animated wolf in a Warner Bros. cartoon and jumps out the window. This wasn’t the funniest Ed Grimley sketch ever, but it was pretty well written (even if it seemed to revolve around a tired sitcom cliché) and this was certainly a clever use of the character. Cosell as a Grimley relative must’ve seemed like a better idea on paper because he didn’t really have Shorts rapid fire pace and speech patterns down. That was really the only thing that took me out of the sketch. B-

Inside Out – This is a generic talk show where host Bonnie Caruso (Dreyfus) interviews first time authors Michelle Roth (Gross) and Virginia Donaldson (Stephenson) who have written books on the roles of women in the old west and Hollywood. Bonnie would do a spit take all over Michelle when they said something the slightest bit interesting. Virginia insists Bonnie put down her coffee and that she look inside her mouth. When she mentions Ann Margaret, Bonnie splashes coffee everywhere from out of her cups. Obviously, there wasn’t a lot to this sketch either but the writing and performances really saved it. Gross and Stephenson played it off particularly well. C+

Run, Throw and Catch like a Girl Olympics – This appeared to be the first taped segment of the night. It supposedly took place in Brentwood field. Larry David is one of the judges. Short and Belushi makes spastic, flailing throws while Kroeger just lets the ball slip out of his hand. Cosell commenting on Kroeger’s performance was funny. Stephenson wins the running competition, but is disqualified when it is revealed that she is actually a woman. Promoter Daniel Gregory (Hall) is asked about sexist allegations to which he responds that strangely no one has protested the event. He says this as the field as two female pilots (Gross, Dreyfus) drop bombs on the field from above. This was another simple, unambitious premise that I felt like I’d seen before somewhere but they did a few creative things with it that I liked such as Belushi getting more points scored for making up excuses about his catch and Short revealing that Whining About How Cold It Is to be an actual event. C+

Bar Mitzvah – This sketch takes place in Brooklyn in 1930 at the bar mitzvah of tonight’s host played by child extra Frederich Koheler where he tells his father Morris (played by Howard) and his mother Rose (Crystal) that he would rather be a sports announcer than a lawyer. They are at first disappointed argue with each other, but decide to support his son whatever his career path he chooses as long as it makes him happy. Koheler really had the Cosell voice down well for someone his age and even though I was a little creeped out seeing Crystal in drag (and kissing Cosell at that) the argument was fun to watch and the kiss was worth the ad-lib “That’s more tounge than on some of the plates.” This was definitely the funniest sketch of the night so far. A-

Spots Beat – Cosell expresses his distaste for boxing as a “sport” as he announces the comeback of boxing champ Tony Minetti (Crystal). This leads to another taped sketch where Cosell interviews Minetti and his trainer Angie Quidaciolu (Guest). I didn’t like this character the first time and I’m still not impressed by it. I did like Crystal attempting to talk with his mouthpiece in and hitting his head against the speed bag, but other than that nothing stood out. C-

Fernando’s Hideaway V – This would turn out to be the last “Hideaway” sketch ever. We would not see Crystal as Fernando again for fourteen more years until he made an appearance at the 25th anniversary special. In this installment, Fernando briefly reminisces on the great guests he’s had on this year before interviewing Cosell. The two discuss vomiting on Don Meredith’s shoes, being on the most liked and most disliked lists simultaneously and The Battle of the Network Stars. I would have to say this was the second best “Hideaway” sketch all year only behind Mr. T and the Hulkster. There was some interesting discussion here and you could tell Cosell genuinely enjoyed this. B-

Saturday Night News – Nathan Thurm (Short) is interviewed as a representative of Living Unicorn Inc. and is here to answer to animal cruelty charges for surgically altering animals to create mythical creatures. This was pretty much the same thing, but Short got Guest to say “I know that!” which made me chuckle. Guest confronts Dwight McNamara (Kroeger) on a dirty, faulty photo on the Update screen. Nothing different about this bit either, but I still enjoyed it. Robert Latta (Hall) wanders onto the Update desk and talks about how he wandered onto spring training and shows us how he ended up on the first set of baseball cards of the 1985 season. This was funny. I did like Hall getting cheese from his crackers on the Update desk and using a dust buster to clean it up. Guest had a real off night with the jokes, but this was still a good way for Update to end the season. B-

Good Sex – Dr. Ruth Westhiemer (Gross) hosts this talk show where her guests are Dr. Seuss (Hall) depicted as a Cat In The Hat like figure and Howard Cosell. He comes on to ask Ruth for advice on how to avoid temptation on the road. Ruth tells him to just think about moments in his sports career while Seuss tells Cosell that he has been bitten by a “yink bird” and the only prevention is to wear a hat with a “thwack” device. Cosell implies Seuss is a fraud and Seuss walks off. Suddenly, an actual “yink bird” puppet shows up and bites Cosell on the neck causing him to hit on Dr. Ruth. This was a rather silly absurd sketch and I thought it was pretty funny and well executed. B+

A Couple Of Red Guys – This was pretty much the same premise as Belushi’s “white guy” rap except this time he was joined by Kroeger and they were both playing Soviet Russians. They are enamored with America ever since they defected here. It wasn’t great, but at least it was a little funnier and more entertaining than the “white guy” raps. I particularly liked them smashing bottle on each others’ heads and the line “vodka morning noon and night/makes Russian women look all right”. They also did the Cossack dancing well. B-


Well, this was a decent way to end the season…and that’s it. I now have four full seasons of SNL reviews under my belt and this is my first retro season. Next time, I will be reviewing the Jerry Lewis/Loverboy episode from 1983 and next month I will start reviewing the new season starting with the Alec Baldwin premiere. I hope everyone had a great summer and I’ll see you soon.

Christopher Reeve/Santana (4.6.1985)

A.D. 13 Part V: A New Beginning – This appears to be parody of epic Roman biblical TV miniseries of the ‘80s. I can’t tell if this is based on any specific movie or miniseries. This saga stars James Mason (Guest) as an evil emporer, Alan Alda (Kroeger) and Joan Collins (Stephenson) as gladiators who fell in love, Jo Ann Worely (Dreyfus) as an evil empress, Dr. Haing S. Noir (Crystal) as an Egyptian, Doug Henning (Hall) as Jesus, Pee Wee Herman (Gross) as doubting Thomas and Robin Williams (Short) as Emporer Nero. At the end, Pope John Paul II (Belushi) plugs the miniseries by telling the audience to “be there” and opens SNL. This was a decent way to open the show, even if some references may be lost on today’s audience. Everyone did good impressions here and I liked the line about how they sensationalized this for TV with tales of “scorching passions” and “burning lusts” along with “stuff we just made up because who knows what went on then anyway.” I didn’t really get the reference to Haing S. Noir until I saw part of “The Killing Fields” on cable two months ago (which I have to assume came out around this time). I’m willing to bet Crystal had a hand in writing this. To me, it smacks of his style. He probably came up with this as an updated-for-the-‘80s version of his “actors who don’t belong in biblical movies” routine. B-

Monologue – Christopher Reeve comes out in an Easter bunny/Passover rabbit costume and jokes to the audience he’s had to wear sillier things in his career. He then states how he looked forward to hosting the show facetiously calling it a sharp, hip and literate as well as a show that intelligently presents its guest hosts with style just before taking off the head to his costume. He sincerely says the show is the closest thing television has to live theater which is his background. He shows us some pictures of his college theater days as well as some photos from the Superman shoots. He then announces that he’s going to tell us the story of how he got the part of the man of steel on tonight’s show. The monologue sort of ends here as Reeve casually walks to the set of the nest sketch (which the SNL archives lists as a separate segment). I thought this was pretty good for a first time host. Reeve was good at poking some fun at himself here. Even if he came off just a little stiff, there couldn’t have been a better way for him to get the audience on his side and show that he was ready to have fun with the cast. B+

Superman Auditions – Director Richard Donner (Belushi) and his assistant Rachel (Dreyfus) is holding auditions for his first Superman movie. They’ve narrowed the part down to unknown actor Peter Blake (Hall) and hammy kiss ass Cory Meredith (Kroeger). The audition includes reading lines, catching a bullet in his teeth, and pressing a piece of coal into a diamond with your hand and the use of heat vision. The bullet ricochets off of Reeve’s teeth and chin breaking two windows in the process. He also squeezes the coal to hard and liquefies it. Kroeger dies from the shot, but Hall manages to do everything perfectly. Reeve is supposed to melt a payphone in the room, but ends up setting the curtains on fire. Hall uses his breath to put them out and gets the part. He cannot start on production next week because he got a callback on a Dial Soap commercial that he can’t get out of, so they are forced to hire Reeve. This was a rather silly sketch, but it was funny and well acted. I particularly liked Dreyfus telling Hall and Reeve “we’ve narrowed it down to you two” after Kroeger is shot. B+

Jackie Roger’s Jr. $100,000 Jackpot Wad – This is a semi famous sketch from the Ebersol era. Short’s albino singer hosts this game show with celebrity guests Captain Kangaroo (Belushi) and Sammy Davis Jr. (Crystal). Roger’s wife Angelique (Stephenson) has a cameo. Guest reprises his gay Indian character Rajeev Vindaloo. The game borrows heavily from “Password”, “Wheel of Fortune”, “$50,000 Pyramid” and “Let’s Make A Deal.” Neither of the contestants can guess the celebrities’ clues. Belushi’s building impatient rage with Gross’s ignorance was pretty funny and the bizarre back and forth between Crystal and Guest was great to watch. Guest is strapped to a giant spinning wheel at the end, kudos to him for getting through that. This sketch deserves its reputation and was definitely the highlight of this show.

Guest Performance - Steven Wright does more of his stand up act. This was one of his best performances. My favorite bits were tarot poker, deli scalping, Spanish record, air bizarre, hardware store and baby diary. A-

Escaping the Germans – A WWII unit is surrounded by Germans, but the sergeant (Belushi) refuses to surrender. Private Snyder (Kroeger) has found a suitcase full of nun habits somewhere and suggests they use them to sneak past the German infantry. The Sergeant thinks “it’s so crazy it has to work”. Private Saunders (Crystal) sarcastically suggests they wear them with French bread loaves in their mouths and pose as penguins. He also suggests that they go out and tell the Germans that Sarge’s brain is so small that the Smithsonian wants to display it. The Sarge sincerely thinks these are great ideas. After seeing Snyder get shot to death, Private Perkins (Reeve) questions whether the plan will work which leads Sarge to believe he is a German spy. To test him, he asks who played Rhett Butler in “Gone With The Wind”. After naming every single other person who worked on the film, he answers Clark Gable. Sarge shoots him after confusing him with Cary Grant. Sarge then forces Private Campbell (Hall) to jump on a bayonet. At this point, Saunders decides to just leave but Sarge insists on dressing up like a penguin and taking the first shot. After he is killed, Saunders actually tries his Smithsonian idea from earlier which actually works. This seemed like one of many war time sketches from the Ebersol era, but it was still pretty funny and well performed. Belushi and Crystal played well off of each other and the Gone With The Wind/bayonet bits really stood out. C+

Palisades Nursing Home – Retirement home resident Izzy Tishamn (Crystal) makes passes at his nurse (Dreyfus) meets an elderly Clark Kent (Reeve) for the first time, but has a hard time believing he was really Superman. Crystal would always make some snappy comeback whenever Reeve would describe one of his incredible feats from the film. Crystal comes around when the nurse brings him a birthday cake which he blows clear off the table trying to extinguish the candle. This premise must have sounded better on paper. The only thing that really stood out to me was the cake gag. C-

Saturday Night News – Best Jokes: artificial heart, Gorbachev, Circus, Billy Joel, Francis the Talking Bible. Belushi delivers a commentary on AT&T breaking up. He rails against calling information and getting a recording, call waiting, confusing bills, 25 cent checks and having to get your own replacement phone. This wasn’t really as good as his previous “airhorn” commentaries, but it had its moments. I particularly liked his bit about how call waiting is usually more interesting than his call. Paul Harvey (Hall) delivers a commentary on the “We Are The World” charity effort and proposes sending the single to starving nations on edible records made of pita bread, tortillas and pizza that don’t quite play that well. Guest cuts him off early making this one the shortest Paul Harvey sketch of the season. I personally liked this as it didn’t run the joke into the ground. Aging insult comic Buddy Young Jr. (Crystal) tells jokes about movie theaters, film rentals and music videos. He goes into the crowd and to interact with regular audience members and Calvert DeForest (aka Larry “Bud” Melman) who gets a warm response from the audience. This was one of the better updates from this season, although not a whole lot really stood out. Guest had a good night with his jokes, though. B-

Talk Back – Larry Woods (Guest) hosts this talk show where the subject is the Amish response to the Harrison Ford film “Witness”. Kroeger plays an Amish spokesperson discusses how the film misrepresented the Amish community and casually mentions how prostitution is a huge part of their culture. Guest reveals him to be a fraud just before real Amish representative Hall joins the show. When he implies that the Amish sell their babies, Guest also reveals him to be a fake. This was pretty funny and Kroeger really stood out here. I particularly liked when he said Amish women “have hooters out to here.” B-


Well, this was a rather middle of the road show for this season. Nothing really stood out as being too horrible. Strangely enough, this was also one of the shortest episodes of the season. Next I will review the finale of this season with Howard Cosell and Greg Kihn.

Mr. T, Hulk Hogan/The Commodores (3.30.1985)

I Am Also The World – After showing a clip of the “Polka For Africa” music video, MTV VJ Mark Goodman (Hall) explains that Prince didn’t appear in the “We Are The World” video because he was too busy bailing his body guards out of jail for beating up some of his fans. He also states that Prince organized his own video to benefit world hunger. This video just shows Prince (Crystal) on a soundstage singing of his own greatness to the tune of “We Are The World” accompanied by his back up singers (Gross, Dreyfus), his bodyguards fresh out of jail (Mr. T, Hulk Hogan) and a few of the same musicians that were a part of USA For Africa who also get beat up by his bodyguards whenever they try to sing over Prince. Crystal really doesn’t do a good vocal impression of Prince at all, but like last time he had the looks and mannerisms down well. Kroeger did a pretty funny Bruce Springsteen and Short did a pretty impressive Paul Simon. I also liked the back up singers beating up Cyndi Lauper (Stephenson). This was a decent open and I liked how they tried to work LFNY into the end of the song. I would put this up there with SNL’s subsequent “We Are The World” pastiches from the early 90s. B+

Monologue – This was basically just T and Hogan promoting their wrestling match that took place the following night at Madison Square Garden. They talk briefly about their training for the past eight weeks and apologize for being douche bags to some to their fans because of it. They mention that they did this show because they’d need a laugh after all this training. They also say that SNL is “the best darn show in the whole wide world” and if they don’t get a laugh, they’ll beat up the whole cast and crew. Suddenly, a guy in the audience heckles them and Mr. T recognizes him as the same guy who did this to them on Letterman last week. Mr. T goes out into the audience and beats this guy up despite Hogan’s objections. Mr. T says he just wants to prove that “wrestling isn’t a joke” but the Hulkster says that to him, it isn’t worth all the lawsuits and damages. This monologue wasn’t all that funny, but at the same time it just seemed entertaining for all the wrong reasons. The audience bit seemed staged and I’m starting to think the only reason they were booked is because Ebersol panicked at the last minute and called them knowing they would be in town for this match. Either somebody must have cancelled or the writer’s strike probably screwed up some previous plans for the show. Well, at least they provided the show with some energy tonight. C-

Affair – This sketch takes place in the office of Nathan Thurm (Short). He belittles his secretary Ms. Kirk (Dreyfus) as she brings in Misty Cooper (Gross) who Thrum is having an affair with. She thinks her husband, David (Belushi) is catching on to them. Her suspicions are confirmed when Ms. Kirk announces that David Cooper is on his way. David states that he has been having Thrum followed by a private investigator and presents overwhelming evidence to support his case which Thrum characteristically denies to the point where David threatens Nathan and Nathan inadvertently calls Misty unattractive. This angers her to the point where she barges out of the closet and admits that David wasn’t there for her and they reconcile and Thurm sends them a bill for $450. This was pretty funny and it was good to see them put Short’s lawyer character into a more natural setting. It looked like he almost jumped ahead of the script at the beginning of the sketch where he was on the phone. I also liked Short claiming not to know Gross despite Belushi pointing out he was best man at their wedding. Hell, I’m shocked this character could even get anyone to sleep with him. B+

Camp – Mr. and Mrs. Caruthers (Belushi, Stephenson) are sending their reluctant son Andy (Kroeger) to camp. Frank Lubar (Guest) from the camp is coming to their house to give them brochures and pictures. They just find out that the camp is the infamous “Crystal Lake” from the Friday the 13th series which Mr. Lubar has been downplaying this whole time. When they decide not to send their son to Crystal Lake, Mr. Lubar telepathically summons Jason Vorhees (who may have been played by Hulk Hogan judging from the hair under the mask. This was a well written and acted sketch, if not a hilarious one. It does sort of drag once you get the premise. I did like Guests’ line about the only parents who send their kids to Crystal Lake are the ones who don’t get out to the movies much and ones who only care about the price. I also liked the effect with their wigs standing on end. C+

Fernando’s Hideaway IV – Fernando (Crystal) schmoozes with (who else) Mr. T and Hulk Hogan. This was just more talk of their upcoming match after Crystal tells them how “mah-velous” they look. This sketch is famous because Crystal got Hogan to break character and crack up at his “Hollywood party” joke and made fun of his jiggling pecs. That clip was featured heavily in some recent compilations such as the last “Sports Extra” and “Lost and Found”. I have to say that this turned out to be the funniest “Hideaway” sketch out of all of them. I liked how T and the Hulk would just roll their eyes at Crystal’s vapid questions (hell, he even made fun of T’s haircut) and the Hulk threatened to put the sleeper hold on him. B-

Houses of Shame – Stephenson hosts this retrospective of America’s prison system. This installment takes place in 1899 and focuses on homosexuality. Percival Dickerson (Short) is a first time prisoner who seems to be wrongly convicted. His cellmate (Belushi) doesn’t take advantage of him because “the bull” (Guest) has first choice of fresh meat. Bull is very proper and refined and merely romances Percy. He even offers him blossoms and takes him on an actual date to a bench located conveniently just outside his cell. There wasn’t much to this sketch, but the idea of brutal prison rape juxtaposed with dainty 19th century sensibilities was a decent idea on its own. Guest played his part well. The only truly funny part of this sketch was when Guest asked “Would you wear my pin…and be my bitch?” C+

Ohio Savings and Loan – Hall stars as a pitchman in this brief fake ad. He basically touts Ohio S&L’s “great savings” compared to other banks (namely because they’re never open and you can’t get any of your own money from them). Gross, Kroeger and Stephenson are among an angry mob waiting for the place to open. This was pretty funny. It seemed to be referencing some specific incident of the time, but I’d say you wouldn’t have to know that to get this. I did like Hall’s line “and you know we must be good, out customers are line dup around the block” and “substantial penalty for any withdrawal” made me laugh. C+

Joe Franklin IV – This would be the last Joe Franklin sketch of the season. This time, Joe’s guests are ventriloquist act Senor Cosa and Ricardo (Guest), famed Tin Pan Alley songwriter Irving Cohen (Short) and Liberace (himself). I have to say a Liberace cameo seems wildly out of place in this episode…and yet anachronistically appropriate at the same time. Watching him, I’m starting to realize Fred Armisen’s impression was way off and I’m noticing more similarities to Dave Thomas’s impression form SCTV. Anyway, this was one of the better Joe Franklin sketches. I liked Guest and his puppet lip syncing to their recording. Also, “Raymond Burr’s Nipple Rouge” struck me as quite funny. Irving Cohen was one of Short’s better characters and he really added a lot to this sketch with it. I particularly liked how he went off on a rant and walked off the set and then decided to come back on in the middle of his speech at the end. B+

Substitute Teacher – Crystal introduces this short film. He says that during the writers’ strike he remembered that his mother always told him “have something to fall back on” so he dug up his old diploma and got a substitute teaching gig at PS 45 (‘used to be PS 50, but they took off five for good behavior”). This is pretty much your typical run down ghetto school and from here, this film becomes a parody of “Blackboard Jungle” except with third graders. One of the kids, Miller, pulls the fire alarm as a joke. Crystal explains that there are “good jokes and bad jokes” and Miller challenges him to come up with a better one. He just rattles off some one liners until he makes the kids laugh. He had finally reached one kid and he realizes that the key to survival in this school is to “just talk about what you know.” The next day, he teaches the class how to handle hecklers and assigns albums like “The Button Down Mind of Bob Newhart” for homework and the class discusses them. The kids briefly talk about how Eddie Murphy is too dirty. He has to leave once the strike is over and Miller tells him “you look mah-velous.” Even though some of the inner city school jokes seemed a little played out, this had a decent concept and was another one of the good filmed pieces to come out of this season. Crystal just being himself and not doing characters is easier to sit through than what we’ve come to expect of him form just this season. B+

Toxic Waste – This was a brief ad where Fisherman Bob (Belushi) hawks toxic waste as a better way to catch fish than traditional bait and tackle. This was clever, but it seemed a little contrived. I did like when Belushi took a bite out of the big fish he’d caught with toxic waste. B-

Guest Performance – Hogan announces that they’re going to introduce a special guest like “a host does”. T brings out Steve Landesberg (mispronouncing his name) saying “he was supposed to host this week, but he got sick. So, we’re glad he’s better.” Landesberg comes out and just does some stand up about his recent travels. He jokes about the differences between British and American politicians. He mentions that this is the same building where he did his first four Tonight Shows and talks about how he got letters regarding his “redneck sheriff” bit and how the censors were unhappy with it. He says he didn’t mean all southerners are bigoted and he does the same bit in character about how some redneck mistook “three nigra girls” for The Supremes. This was pretty funny. It was sort of a different kind of low key, laid back stand up that I found enjoyable. I believe that NBC.com put up this sketch earlier this year after Landesberg passed away. Now we know why T and the Hulkster weren’t in as many sketches. They were definitely last minute replacement hosts (and oddly chosen ones at that). B+

Trash Talk – This was a taped segment with the hosts’ opponents for the following night (Paul Orton and “Rowdy” Roddy Piper) talking smack as “professional” wrestlers are wont to do. Orton stays mum while Piper just cracks wise on Mr. T and makes fun of the rough childhood he had growing up in the projects. They cut back to T and Hogan in the studio who just remind the audience that tickets are sold out and if anyone else wants to see their bout, they best get to the nearest “close circuit” television set. I can’t really rate this or critique it, but at this point I’m wondering why Ebersol decided to get SNL involved in a marketing gimmick for the WWF.


Well, this was one of the more consistent episodes of the season in terms of quality. I just realized this is the second episode in a row with no "News" segment. Maybe that improved it. Next episode is Christoper Reeve/Santana.

SNL Film Festival (3.2.1985)

As I’m sure some of you know, this was a special that consisted mostly of filmed pieces from the Ebersol era with some new live sketches by Crystal and some special guests thrown in. It was somewhat similar to the “Just Shorts” special with Andy Samberg that aired back in the spring of 2009. This can't be seen on Peacock and is no longer available on Netflix, but when they did have this as part of their former SNL collection, their version is only twenty minutes long so I couldn't imagine it must've been worth watching. Fortunately, a tape of the original airing was included on the myspleen/ioffer set that has been out there on the web for about a decade now. For the benefit of those who still haven’t seen this, I will mostly be reviewing the live bits and maybe some short films from episodes that nobody reviewed previously (at the time of this writing). For shorts from episodes I have already reviewed previously, I will provide links to my blog entry for said episodes. For the shorts from the ones I haven't, I will provide links to reviews from fellow SNL bloggers Stooge and Bronwyn Douwsma as their currently two of the best SNL review bloggers out there. 

This is another show with no cold open. Crystal is billed as the host and performs in his own sketches without the rest of the cast. Siskel and Ebert are billed as “special guests” and also announced are “cameo appearances by Eddie Murphy, Robin Williams, Stevie Wonder and more.”

Monologue – Crystal walks out onto a set redecorated to look like the outside of a movie theater what with the various posters up and all. He announces that this is the first time SNL has had a “film festival” and that we will be seeing films from “the past four years or so” featuring “some people you miss and some people you’re seeing this year.” He also states that Siskel and Ebert will be reviewing the movies live as they are shown and they have no idea what will be said about them. The rest was just his stand up. I did like how he counted the pause for a joke that got no laughs during the drive in bit. He shows us ways to do imitations of actors if you have no talent…by sticking your lips through cut out pictures of said actors. He does this with photos of Humphrey Bogart, Matt Dillon (during his “teen heartthrob” phase) and Rin Tin Tin. The only one I liked was the Rin Tin Tin one with Crystal wagging his tongue through the photo. He then does his “Ten Commandments” bit about how that movie has actors who don’t belong in biblical films such as Edward G. Robinson and Yule Brynner whom he does impressions of. The Brynner imitation was good and I particularly liked how he closed his monologue with “now my SNL citizens, let’s go to the movies!” C+

Synchronized Swimming 


Audience – Ricky (Crystal) badmouths that film he just saw while wearing 3-D glasses for some reason and annoys a woman sitting next to him. He also sarcastically insults the guy behind him who shushes him. I liked him making fun of Short’s forehead size, but this character is usually better when he can play off Guest. C-

Kannon AE-1 – This is from the May 7, 1983 episode where Stevie Wonder pulled double duty as host and musical guest. In it, Wonder advertises a camera so simple that even HE can use it. To demonstrate this, they have him take a bunch of out of focus pictures of tennis star John Newcombe (Piscopo, who also does the voiceover). Newcombe also takes pictures of Wonder swinging his racket all over the place as well. This wasn’t much to this sketch in terms of jokes, but the crowd went wild for it. Wonder must have had and incredible sense of humor to go along with this and I liked how he pulled Piscopo’s lens cap off at the end. C+

Fernando’s Hideaway III – Fernando (Crystal) interviews Siskel and Ebert…and confuses them for each other a few times. He asks them about their basis for critiquing movies, Ebert’s screenplays Mariel Hemmingway’s breasts and what they say if they run into the star of a film they both panned. (They would tell them how they liked a previous movie of theirs and how they should make more like that.) I liked the discussion of Sting in “Dune”, but other than that this felt like another meandering sketch that went nowhere and an odd use of Gene and Roger in the show. C-

Walking After Midnight 


Buddwieser Light

Robin Wiliams/Adam Ant, 2/11/1984 

(my review of this episode is lost to the sands of time but here are the reviews from Stooge and Bronwyn Douwsma)

An 80s light rock type jingle about how Bud Light “brings out your best” set to a hockey fight between Williams and Piscopo among others. This actually turned out to be pretty damn funny. I liked Piscopo’s line about how his wife ran away with the top scorer in the hockey league. B+


Lifestyles of the Relatives of the Rich and Famous


Candy Stand – Willie (Crystal) is manning the concessions when John Canady and Eugene Levy stop by (whom he thinks are Siskel and Ebert at first). They say their in town to catch a couple movies and see Hall and Oates perform on the show next week. Willie offers them the chance to host as they have no host for next week (and he claims to be the producer of the show now) to which Candy and Levy agree. Crystal played better off John and Eugene here than he did Guest. This was a good way to use this character differently than they usually did. The popcorn gag at the end was pretty lame. Obviously, the John Candy & Eugene Levy/Hall and Oates didn’t happen because of a writer’s strike that took effect the following week. One might even think it had started this week since Crystal seemed to be the only cast member participating in the live bits and they all seemed unscripted. B-

Needleman
Billy Crystal, Ed Koch, Father Guido Sarducci, Betty Thomas, Edwin Newman/The Cars, 5/12/1984 (9. 19)

This was fantastic. I especially liked how Kroeger rhymed “oral surgeon” with “tired of being a virgin” as well as how he chose to incorporate his idea of a perfect date and his interests (including Barry Manilow, Star Trek, Radio Shack and shag carpeting.) I also loved how increasingly silly and ridiculous this video got with the constant “drill” references and the ending with the nurses rubbing huge tubes of toothpaste on his chest. I think the humor in this came from how this rock video refused to take itself seriously. A-


Miscellaneous – Crystal takes the stage to announce that after the commercial, a film starring Eddie Murphy will be shown and Siskel and Ebert will conduct their first of two review segments.

Prose and Cons
(I personally didn’t review this episode but Bronwyn Douwsma and Stooge did in their own reviews of the season 7 premiere which you can read for yourself here and here)

Review I 

Prose and Cons
Ebert – Could’ve use more Murphy, otherwise the premise is run into the ground
Siskel – pretty much agrees with Ebert, but says the premise is dumb to begin with and that prisoners should be allowed to write if they happen to be good writers
(TWO THUMBS DOWN)

Needleman
Siskel – says character is inconsistent and film relies too heavily on scantily clad girls
Ebert - says he couldn’t tell “whether they were satirizing MTV or dentistry” which gets a negative crowd response
(TWO THUMBS DOWN)

Walking After Midnight
Ebert – calls is a simple concise “masterpiece” that is very quick
Siskel – says it was very concise with no wasted shots and the first film of the night that doesn’t belabor the point
(TWO THUMBS UP)

Lifestyles of Relatives of the Rich and Famous
Siskel – says it’s hard to do a parody of a show that isn’t the dumbest thing on television, but they had a good premise and was impressed by Short doing Hepburn by just his voice and mannerisms without makeup, also says they should do this sketch every week with a different celebrity
Ebert – pretty much agrees, and points out a good TV in joke with the same shot of Shearer nodding to satirize shows that only have one camera
(As an aside, I personally think they should’ve used the second installment from the Murphy hosted episode as I feel it was much stronger.)
(TWO THUMBS UP)

Synchronized Swimmers
Ebert mentions he didn’t watch the ’84 Olympics, but he happened to catch some the Synchronized Swimming event and thought he was watching an SNL sketch. Both just agree that it is the silliest sport in recent history and think they did a spot on parody because they picked a dumb target.
(TWO THUMBS UP)

Don’t Hitchhike – see Lou Gosset Jr./George Thorogood and the Destroyers, 10/02/1982 (8. 2)

Since nobody seems to have reviewed this episode (at the time of this writing anyway but again Bronwyn Douwsma and Stooge have since covered these ones on their blogs), I guess I will have to comment on this sketch. In what turns out to be a rather long drawn out PSA, Tim Kazurinsky hitches a ride with a scantily clad beautiful woman. She entices him to the point where he strips down to his underwear as she is driving and she suddenly floors the gas pedal causing them to go off a very steep cliff. It just looked like there was a big build up to a pay off that was barely worth it to me. Still, it wasn’t a bad effort. C+

Video Junkies – see Chevy Chase/Queen, 9/25/1982 (8. 1) 

(once again, you can read Bronwyn Dowsmas' review of this episode here as well as Stooges' here but the paragraph directly below contains my own original thoughts)

I could’ve sworn this was shown during Season 7, but apparently it wasn’t. Anyway, this is sort of a mockumentary chronicling the road to recovery of children who are addicted to video arcade games juxtaposing it with a crack or heroin addiction. Kids are seen looking strung out and hanging out in seedy alleyways begging for quarters. Then, we are taken to Columbia House who tries to get kids to stop blowing money on videos games and start blowing money on records. We see a doctor subjecting a young girl to aversion therapy by giving her a quarter for a machine that electrocutes. The main subject, Alan, is hit by a garbage truck on his way to the arcade. He is falsely convinced he can beat his video addiction. No wonder I thought this was a 81-82 sketch. It seems to be going for dark shock humor. The most glaring example of this is the character “Phyllis” who is dressed like a prostitute and the narrator says she will “earn 6.75 the hard way…a quarter at a time.” I have to admit I thought that was worth the shock laughs that the audience gave it as was the window washing scene where Alan yells “Oh, come on…school supplies!” I genuinely laughed at Timmy, the alleged 14 year old who has a grey beard and has some vaguely ethnic accent. I loved how they used him to show that video games are stressful and his delivery of the line “Have you played Tron? It’s totally awesome!” This was one of the better films shown and it still holds up somewhat well today creepily enough. It had its moments for being in questionable taste. C+

Negro Baseball

Crystal introduces this from a phony projection room as his favorite character he got to play this year. (ugh) I admire his enthusiasm and commitment but seriously, fuck you Crystal.


Review II

Negro Baseball
Siskel – says it’s interesting to sports fans of the era, it parodies the documentary style well and the makeup is convincing but it ultimately had nothing to say
Ebert – disagrees with Siskel, liked the acting and cadence/mannerisms of clichéd speech but also says they satirized documentary style well.

Video Victims
Ebert – says he loved it (much to the audience’s distaste) but points out that they also showed this the last time they were on SNL three years ago and accused them of showing it again purposely to get a good review in advance (since they liked it last time).
Siskel – pretty much agrees and says he particularly liked the “quarter at a time” bit

In case anyone was wondering, last time they saw “Video Victims” Ebert called it a “brilliant satire” of “interchangeable alarmist TV documentaries” right down to the narrators’ “tightly controlled hysteria”. Siskel agrees and says he liked the visual quality and the actor who played the doctor. Strangely enough, their first appearance on the show seemed more scripted. Maybe they just weren’t as comfortable on live TV as they would be.

Don’t Hitchhike
Siskel – says it “goes nowhere absolutely fast” and if Tim pushed the gas pedal instead of the girl it would’ve been more consistent with his nervous character
Ebert – doesn’t add anything, but gives this a thumbs down

With their film reviews done, Gene and Roger move on to their “X Ray” segment where they focus on the career of Fernando. Ebert says he doesn’t like how far Fernando strays from the hard hitting probing TV interview format that Barbara Walters and Mike Wallace were known for. To prove his point, he shows us clips of Fernando’s alleged interviews with Ronald Reagan and Clint Eastwood (both conveniently off screen) where he just tells them how “mah-velous” they look. Siskel completely disagrees and says he’d rather watch Fernando conduct and interview than Walters or Wallace. He also wants SNL to “work him to death” and show us more about his life and family.

Black Like Me

  
Goodnights – Crystal (on stage with the rest of the cast in what must’ve been a taped appearance) reminds the audience to tune in for the John Candy & Eugene Levy/Hall and Oates show that never happens and says “the film festival will be back in a moment”. Crystal appears back on the theater set with Gene and Roger to say goodnight.


Next I will review Mr T. & Hulk Hogan/Commodores episode.

Pamela Sue Martin/Power Station (2.16.1985)

Apparently, this episode has no cold open whatsoever. Neither the SNL Archives or Frank Serpa’s guide list one. This may be the first instance I’ve seen of this.

Monologue – The former “Dynasty” star states that she left the show to seek more creative outlets (read: do commercials) and tells us she has bought “candid’ snapshots of former costar Joan Collins to show the audience how “beautiful” she is in real life. She decides not to show them at the last minute because Collins herself (Belushi in drag) is actually in the audience tonight. This was a pretty unremarkable monologue and it really didn’t seem to have much of a point to it. Still, I have to give the audience some credit for playing along. C+

Willie and Frankie V – The much maligned pair are glad to be messengers again and meeeting people (like a certain secretary from Shedleman Suits that Willie finally got lucky with). As they encounter each other in the building and wait for the elevator, they regale each other with more tales of pointless self inflicted pain. I did like Guest mentioning a kid taking the fish hook out of his lip and Crystal’s aversion to Johnny Carson’s beard (and the fact that he willingly climbed into a trash compacter and slammed his car trunk on his own tounge) but otherwise…meh. Did Johnny actually have a beard at one point? I don’t ever remember seeing him with one. D+

That White Guy and His Wife – Obviously, this was the same bit from the Alex Karras episode but instead Belushi’s character raps with his wife (Martin in a stuffy accent and tennis dress). I did like the drunk wife swapping bit and the line “I got my money the old fashion way/My grand daddy dropped dead one day” but otherwise, I didn’t really care for it. C+

Joe Franklin III – In this installment, Franklin’s (Crystal) guests are Alan Alda impressionist Phil Carpin, (Kroeger) astrologer to the stars Angelica Pern (Martin) Jackie Rogers Jr. (Short) and old comedian Red Skelton (Guest). Carpin promotes his one man show “Give ‘em Hell, Hawkeye” which just seems to be a random collection of Alda’s various lines from M*A*S*H. Much to Joe’s disappointement, Angelica Pern only does numerology. This was one of the better Joe Franklin sketches. Guest dida pretty good Red Skelton (as far as I could tell) and I liked how he would tell rambling, pointless jokes and limericks that he wouldn’t even finish, but Short still laughed anyway. I also liked the “chubby” bit when Martin was reading Short’s lifeline. B-

Night Of 100 Stars/Plexiglass – Fernando (Crystal) interviews various stars around Radio City Music Hall for the titular event in this taped remote segment including Teri Garr, Susan Lucci, Morgan Fairchild (yeah, that’s the ticket) Lynn Swan and Ann Margaret. The taped part was probably the most meandering segment of the night, but I did like when Crystal confused Garr for Dustin Hoffman and thought she dressed like a man in “Tootsie”. I also liked when he and Swan discussed Terry Bradshaw. Crystal wraps up the segmant in the studio as Fernando and introduced Rich Hall who did impressions using pieces of plexiglass. This bit was pretty funny and clever and a nice step up in quality from the last segment. The audience also really enjoyed this. I particularly liked the airplane and traffic bits. B+

Called Shot – Some old guy with a mustache introduces this stroll down memory lane pointing out spots in the studio where Chevy took his first fall and Dan first called Jane an “ignorant slut” which he would alter use on the show. The sketch flashes back to a time when Jim Belushi visited a girl in the hospital and encourages her to call him for a secretary position. A nurse (Stephenson) says a sick boy would like to see him before he goes. He tells the boy he plans to do a character named “Aunt Willoughby” on the show tonight and tells him that scene will get the biggest laugh of the night (even though the boy and everyone else insists that drag queens never get laughs.) These hospital scenes are taped, by the way. Unfortunately, the show was facing their toughest crowd ever that night. A nervous Belushi prepares to enter a funeral scene as the rest of the cast and crew gives him some last minute encouragement. His concern over his feminine appearance and whether his breasts were straight was funny. Belushi walks on and does the jitterbug for no apparent reason which breaks up the crowd and gets a big reaction. Leon, the sick boy, recovers. The moral of the story seems to be that if you don’t laugh at something on this show, you may have killed some dying kid. This was a decent conceptual piece. Belushi’s unexpected anticlimactic dancing made me laugh because it was somewhat unexpected and I liked how the kid aggravated Belushi by confusing him with Eddie Murphy. B-

Saturday Night News – Best jokes: Orson Wells, Stamps. Guest answers a letter (from David Letterman, oddly enough) asking how they get those pictures on the screen and explains how chromakey technology works even removing his screen to demonstrate where he finds film reel narrator Dwight McNamara (Kroeger) who tells Guest he is wrong and that he has been projecting the pictures behind the screen this entire time. McNamara explains how his reel works in his typical muffled fashion. This was a great bit and I always liked this character from Kroeger. It was a creative setting for him. This was probably the shortest News update of this season and it wasn’t exactly cluttered with commentaries. This was a refereshing change of pace for Update this season and a good chance for Guest to work on his delivery.

First Draft Theater III – This appeared to be a parody of The Ten Commandments with Crystal as Moses. Un fortunately, this was missing from both the ioffer/myspleen set and the netflix version. No big loss. It looked pretty bad anyway. It couldn’t have been as good as the first two if Shearer hadn’t written it. This lookslike Crystal probably wrote it. N/A.

Tom, Dick and Horny – This appeared to be a short mock spot for an ‘80s teen sexploitation flick with Tom Hanks and Tom Cruise. Unfortunately, this is also missing from both versions. It looked like a quick photo bit, so again no big loss. I just wished they hadn’t replaced these with that god awful Crystal/Guest “negro baseball” film and the much worse “Massacre on 34th Street”. N/A.

Dynasty’s Greatest Fights – Joan Collins (Stephenson) and Linda Evans (Martin) are recording a spot for a charity album they are recording . Collins keeps speaking over Evans to the point where they can’t stop bitching at each other and break out in a catfight. This was okay. I can’t say much about either impression except that something seemed different about Stephenson’s Joan Collins (probably because this was the first time she has done it live). B-

Shootout at the Zeppelin Corral – This was a short cartoon piece where we apparently we see a little party going on inside a cowboy’s bullet. I think this can be seen on the Netflix version. On the other set, it is replaced with the NORAD Contraceptive commercial. I didn’t really think that much of this, but it was pretty well animated. B-


Well, this was another average episode from what I could see. Martin proved to be a rather forgettable host, but then again she wasn’t in all that much. Next up, I will be reviewing the SNL Film Festival.

Harry Anderson/Bryan Adams (2.9.1985)

Some of you might know that Harry Anderson was previously a frequent guest performer on SNL. He made a couple of appearances a year during each of Ebersol’s previous seasons (except for 83-84 where he only appeared once) but this is the first time he would actually host (and his only appearance of the 84-85 season).

Congress – Robert Latta (Hall) wanders his way into what appears to be the Reagan’s 1985 State of the Union. This was just Hall superimposed into footage of the speech with a green screen. He waves at G.H.W. Bush, presents a birthday cake to Reagan, puts Alka Seltzer in Tip O’Neil’s’ water and opens the show with LFNY. This turned out to be pretty funny for what is was and was definitely better than the “Inauguration” clip from the Schieder episode. I liked how they muted the congressional applause for one of Reagan’s comments. B-

Monologue – The “Night Court” star comes out and mentions this as being his eighth appearance on this show. He also acknowledges that he is dropping his old hat/con/geek act now that he is an establishing himself as a “judge”. Harry then tells us of his new clean “family” act with his new guinea pig, Skippy. Harry leads us to believe that Skippy won’t do his “acrobatic tricks” because of a refusal to “work with a Caucasian drummer”, so Harry eats Skippy. This was a very funny monologue and I rather liked the dark tone of it. It does remind me of Weird Al Yankovic’s “Harvey The Wonder Hamster” sketches where Al would edit shots of a real hamster in with an obviously fake one as he casually tossed it across the room and launch him off a tiny ramp. I still wonder how Anderson might have pulled this trick off. B+

Kate and Ali Valentines’ Day Special – Short and Crystal reprise their impressions of the greatest actress and boxer of all time (respectively) for this fake promo for an alleged three hour special. Hepburn (Short) finds herself all alone on Valentine’s Day and Muhammad (Crystal) comes back from a bad date…so they decide to have casual sex. Well…that was deeply disturbing. I never really cared for the first installment of this sketch and I don’t see why they needed to recur it. D-

American Profiles – Linda Ellerbee (Dreyfus) hosts this second piece on famed novelty makers Herb (Guest) and Al (Crystal) Minkman who consider themselves the embodiment of the American Dream. They briefly discuss their ancestors Eli and Atticus Minkman, the latter being present at Independence Hall signing wearing a fake schnozz. This time, they decide to participate in the NY Mets “Dream Week” ’85 as the only dream they haven’t achieved yet is playing major league baseball. Plus, they claim to have invented the original two person wave. As they haven’t played in thirty years and are out of shape, they enlist the help of their own novelty products (like exploding bats, radio controlled slow flying balls and fake dog doo and vomit they would place about the diamond) to help them get their edge back against former Mets greats. At the end, they share a post game dribble glass champagne. This wasn’t as great as they original and they really should’ve left these characters in a one off sketch, but upon second viewing this wasn’t quite as bad as I had remembered. C+

Dueling Magi – Anderson with his slick con man act squares off against the glamorous illusions of Doug Henning (Hall). Henning makes his wife Debby Douillard (Stephenson) magically appear out of a dollhouse and Anderson just shoots him. This was brief and Anderson really made this sketch just by underplaying it. Hall’s Doug Henning is starting to wear a bit thin. If they were going to keep doing these sketches, why didn’t they just have Short play him? Pamela looked pretty hot. I wonder how they got her in that house that quick. B+

While You Were Gone – Cecil (Belushi) comes home from the post office to find that his wife Barbara (Gross) has married a stranger named Phillip and had the dog put to sleep. She is also pregnant. He was waiting in a long line for twenty minutes and he was assumed dead. Suddenly, her first husband Albert (Guest) comes back from work. This sketch felt a little derivative, but it was enjoyable. Belushi played a decent straight man to Gross and I did like her line “life is for the prompt.” C+

Ronald Reagan Jeans – This was short footage of Reagan on his ranch and preparing to sign huge budget and tax plans wearing a denim jacket. Hall narrates with the tagline “Ronald Reagan Jeans – Guaranteed to voluntarily shrink by 5% but still as baggy as ever.” I didn’t quite get the point to this and it didn’t feel like it still held up. D+

Oscar Talk – Crystal and Guest reprise their roles as Ricky and Phil. They are playing Trivial Pursuit, but Ricky can only answer questions about film. Phil asks Ricky to justify the Oscar picks for best picture and discuss their personal picks. They even discuss taking a bus out to Hollywood, kdnapping Price and Waterhouse and rigging the show. This wasn’t as good as the Super Bowl sketch, btu it still ahd its funny moments. I liked the Pinocchio discussion and Guest referring to Amadaeus as “a-may-dee-us”. B+

Saturday Night News – Best jokes: Weather Update, Goetz settlement. Guest does a very long commentary on love and affection in the White House for Valentines Day which we could’ve done without.Also, his hair looked really sewaty and disheveled. It seemed to only be relevant to a joke where he mentions the banning of beer commercials that glamorize alcohol abuse. He burps and says he disagrees. That didn’t make a whole lot of sense. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger (Hall) appears live via satelite from Washington to addresss allegations of wasteful spending and fraud. He announces that he will hold his breath until he gets $285 billion and Guest checks on him periodically two more times later. He holds his breath until his eyes bulge and his head inflates and pops like a giant baloon. This was pretty funny. Crystal reprises his aging comic Buddy Young Jr. to give a restaurant review. He just did his Hawaiian food routine from the “Mahvelous” album and went into the audience to interact with Waylon Jennings, Johnny Cash and Christopher Reeve. Crystal didn’t add much, but that was a good way to work in some random unexpected cameos. This was one of the better Updates of this season. B-

Salem Witch Trials – Edward Abbey Manning is accused of witchcraft (Kroeger) is on trial and his sleazy lawyer Larry Grobner (Short) shows up right under the wire. Manning tries to tell his lawyer he is innocent. Brother Lowell is the prosecuting attorney whose opening statement just consists of his pointing at Manning and yelling “WIIIIIIIIIITCH!” at the top of his lungs. That was pretty funny. His witness is Mistress Cartwright (Stephenson) who is pregnant and bears a huge letter “A” on her chest. She claims Manning bequiled her taking the form of a goat and the crowd sides with her. She reminded me of Denny Dillon with the voice she used. Grobner calls Manning to the stand and it soon becomes evident that he is a witch as his hand burns through the bible while he speaks in tounges. Grobern moves for dismissal which the judge (Anderson) grants. This was a pretty well written and well acted sketch. Short was good as a modern lawyer in medeval times and Kroeger played his part well. B+

Hats – In this solo performance piece, “Harry the Hat” professes his love for hats. He tells the audience of how an old street hobo in Chicago taught him the ancient European clown art of chapography (hat making) when he was a boy. He was eager to learn this as he really wanted a baseball cap, but cash was tihgt and he only had but a dime for a piece of felt. He showed Harry how he can cut a piece of felt into a donut shape and twist it every way to get any kind of hat he wanted. He shows off his skills to the audience much to their delight. This was a great type of avant garde solo performance piece that was one of the highlights of Ebersol era SNL. A-

Small Time Agency – Howie Rosegarden (Kroeger) runs a talent agency. His aunt and niece act Helen (Gross) and Giorgiana (Dreyfus) show him their new number and asks for gigs. Howie tells them that most acts are only interested in one of them and the only act that wanted them both was the Bellevue cafeteria. Howie asks why they are a team and Giorgiana explains that Helen saved her life twice and she felt like she owed her. Giorgiana and Howie are about to convince Helen to leave the act when a rattlesnake appears out of nowhere. Helen wrestles the snake and ties it in a knot. This was another sort of strange sketch that turned out pretty funny. I liked how the flashback to Gross saving Dreyfus’s life was Gross shooing away stock footage of a tiger and dukcing from 20’s gangster gunshots even though they were both safely indoors. B-

Goodnights – Anderson brings Skippy back out saying “we were just kiddin’” and hands him to Crystal. He then points out Carol Burnett in the audience and invites her up on stage. Hall “wanders” on stage as Robert Latta.


This was one of the better shows of the season because they were willing to try some more bizarre experimental things. Next episode is Pamela Sue Martin/Power Station.

Alex Karras/Tina Turner (2.2.1985)

Prince at SNL – Kroeger complains to Dreyfus that his only line in the show has been cut when all of a sudden, Prince (Crystal) enters the studio accompanied by bodyguard Hulk Hogan (Belushi) and demands to see Tina Turner speaking through Hogan te entire time. Dryefus tells him that Tina isn’t here yet and Prince wonders why she wouldn’t be here if she was the host. Dreyfus explains that Alex Karras is the host and Tina is only the musical guest. Prince doesn’t know who Karras is and Dreyfus explains that he was in “Blazing Saddles” and “Victor/Victoria” and currently stars on “Webster.” Prince still wants to know why Tina isn’t hosting so Julia directs them to the control room where Dave Wilson plays an old film of Karras’s NFL days narrated by Howard Cosell (Crystal’s voice). Hogan announces that Prince approves of Karras hosting on the condition that Prince open the show with LFNY. There wasn’t a lot in terms of jokes to this cold open, but at least it was entertaining what with Belushi randomly beating up everyone in his path (including Hall, Kroeger and Larry David). Belushi did a horrible impression of the Hulkster. His voice wasn’t nearly low or guttural enough, but at least he looked the part really well. I do have to give Crystal credit for doing an accurate enough mostly non verbal Prince impression just going by his looks and mannerisms (even if he was wearing some bronzer). B+

Monologue – Karras addresses some of the calls he got from friends back in California (including his wife who affectionately calls him “dirigible”) asking why he is going to do SNL because they don’t find him all that funny. This had to be the shortest monologue they’ve done all season. It was only a couple of minutes long. Thankfully, they kept it short because it was light on material. At the very least, one could say Karras proved he had the right attitude for the show here. C+

Grimley and Malone – Ed Grimley makes his fifth apperance this season (in about twelve episodes). Say what you will about this character, but at least they knew how to space his appearances out. In this installment, Ed is cleaning his apartment with a feather duster, but decides to move on to practicing for tomorrow’s triangle lesson. Suddenly, he gets a phone call from his neighbor Miss Malone (Turner) who he seems to have a huge crush on. She wants to stop by his apartment to borrow a few oranges. Sadly, he has a tona of onions, but no oranges apparently so she just goes to the store after telling him that she also liked her music loud. As she walks down the street, she is blown into Ed’s apartment by a strong gust of wind. They decide to share a turkey pot pie. This was an odd use of Tina Turner in a sketch, but it was fun. I liked when she joined in his little dance at the end and I liked that they added some dimension to this character. B-

Time – This is a fake ad for Time magazine narrated by Guest. It’s accompanied by a jingle that accuses Time of a lack of fact checking and saying their “news” is based on hearsay and unsupported evidence. It turs out to actually be an ad for Newsweek who is suing Time (or at least reporting on someone who did at the time). This was a pretty harsh slam on Time magazine, but it was still pretty funny. I’d have to say Guest must have written this since it has some teeth to it and Shearer had left the show by this point. B+

A Couple of White Guys – Stephenson introcudes the Television debut of this act from New Haven, CT. This was essentially Karras and Belushi dressed as golfers rapping about their WASPish privilaged “country club” lifestyle. For the most part, this was just as lame as it sounds. There were a few funny lines about secretly dressing in drag and trying not act like nerds. The martini shakers made me chuckle. C+

Kelly Cola – Company executives (Kroeger and Gross) are trying to keep co worker Dale Butterworth (Crystal) from getting too nervous before their big meeting with owner Mr. Kelly (Karras). Kelly wants to figure out why their sales figures are falling. Gross states the obvious and Kroeger picthes two lame slogans. Kelly wants to berate Butterworth as he is in charge of Research and Development. Suddenly, he begins sweating very heavliy. He panics and starts to drink his own sweat beacust “it’s kinda tangy”. Everyone else tries some and agrees. Dale is suddenly congratulated for finding the missing ingredient needed to make people want to buy Kelly Cola. To keep Dale nervous, Kroeger says he’ll have an afair with his wife, Gross will sleep with him and tell him she’s pregnant and Kelly will cut his salary in half. Well, this was different. It was certainly a more creativ sketch that got a disgusted reaction form the audience. I personally liked it. Crystal may have been trying too hard, but other wise this was a decent sketch. C+

Power From Giving – Deputy Undersecretaty of the Interior Thomas Barracks (Belushi) states that the most important thing in his life is his personal relationship with Ed Meese. He tells you about this book which will help your own life by telling you how to give Ed Meese $83,000 for crooked Real Estate Deals and such. This must have been a parody of “Powerful Living” which stressed one’s personal relationship with God. This was decent political stire then, but it doesn’t hold up as well now. C-

New York on Five Dollars a Day – Bernhard Goetz (Hall) gives tips on inexpensive sight seeing in New York. He just points out famous landmarks from violent scenes in films such as “Taxi Driver” and “Lady Hawk”. This was funny and brief, but you’d have go get that Goetz was a murderer to understand some of these references. B-

Fritz’s Bait and Tackle – After losing the election, Walter Mondale (Kroeger) moves back to Minnesota to open up a hunting goods shop with his wife Joan (Dreyfus). He is accosted by a group of goofy backwoods hunters (Crystal, Guest, Karras) who just mock him. He advises the hunters to go hunting for moose because they started showing up. Mondale doesn’t realize that his pathetic sobs sound almost identical to their mating call. This ended up being pretty funny. I liked the slams at Ferraro and Joan apologizing for not voting for her husband. B-

Saturday Night News – This is “sponsored” by Kelly Cola’s “Brow Brew”. Nice rare callback to a sketch. This was sort of reminiscent of 77-78 Weekend Updates. Anyway, Guest’s best joke was the Donahue hoax. White House Inauguration wanderer Robert Latta (Hall) shows up claiming he sneaked in with the band. He brags of the other places he snuck into where he wasn’t supposed ot be which he does as a hobby. He shows (superimposed) pictures of himself on the space shuttle, at the arms talks and in the movie “Zelig”. A security gurad escorts him out and Guest claims he will show Latta how to get to Radio City Music hall. This didn’t hold up, but Hall’s acting was funny. Those that don’t get the reference can just think of him as the Tareq Salahi of the ‘80s. Those who don’t get THAT reference should just look up SNL’s Blake Lively/Rhianna episode. Guest reports on the the EPA’s findings of the dangers of sceond hand smoke. Lawyer Nathan Thurm (Short) is interviewed via satelite in poor defense of the tobacco industry and makes empty claims that smoking could be beneficial to you. This was better than his last appearance because it had some substance to it. I liked Short making fun of Guest’s jacket saying it was dangerous to the health of others. Belushi is supposed to be delivering a review of a new restaurant he went to on a date, but quickly rants about being seated between an amorous gay couple and two yuppie couples. One are arguing over who gave herpes to whom and one who can’t control their child. Of course, Belushi whips out his airhorn. It turns out his girlfriend wanted to break up with him because he is too tense, so he left and went to his favorite rib joint. This was possibly his funniest airhorn commentary yet. B+

Tuesday Night Titans – Vince MacMahon (Hall) hosts this wrestling themed talk show. His guests include Captain Lou Albano (Karras) who just complains about the federal deficit and midget wrestler Little Ceaser (Crystal) who just talks smack about Albano and starts a talk about toxic waste. Ceaser smacks Albano’s facial piercing causing him to bleed. They basically mock fight chasing each other around the studio knocking a couple of people down. Cyndi Lauper (Stephenson)shows up to heckle Albano. Christ, Crystal got on my nerves here. He played the least convincing midget ever and used the most nasal high pitched voice ever. Stephenson added nothing and Karras really didn’t blow me away.I did like how Karras stomped on the table unenthusiastically and Hall said the fight was “totally unplanned.” Hall did a decent MacMahon. He had the right voice for it. I guess the idea of political discussion on a wrestling show was funny on paper, but they should’ve done more with it. D+

New Auctioneer – Guest is a new Sotheby’s auctioneer casually destroys items such as ancient Ming fingerbowls if nobody bids on them fast enough. Mr. Sotheby (Kroeger) questions his competency while Gross want to give him a chance as he said he can bring in a price. He eventually opens bidding on a hermetically sealed aquarium with three kittens and one minute of air. Then, he puts a gun to his head in order to sell a silver bullet used in the Lone Ranger and ends up shooting himself. This was probably the best sketch of the night. Seeing Guest play insane characters is a refereshing change of pace for him and Dreyfus calling him the antichrist cracked me up. A-


Well, this wa sone of the more middle of the road episodes for this season. Karras proved a capable (if not unmemorable) host. Next episode is Harry Anderson/Bryan Adams.

Roy Schieder/Billy Ocean (1.19.1985)

Inaugural Preview – This was merely actual footage of Ronald Reagan’s first inauguration edited to make it look like Nancy (possibly Stephenson’s voice) was whispering the oath to Ron after the Chief Justice recited it to him. The clip is dated January 21, 1985. This seemed kind of cheap and lame, but I’m sure it was funnier then. C+

Monatge – Harry Shearer is still credited as a cast member and would be for the remainder of the season even though last week was his last episode. He claims he left due to “creative differences” with NBC…meaning he was “creative” and NBC was “different”.

Monologue – Schieder talks about how New York is his hometown as he was currently living there between shooting films in LA. He tells a brief anecdote about going to see a Knick game that didn’t seem to go anywhere, but I like his line about people “knowing” they’re crazy in New York. You could tell he had the right amount of energy to host the show and that he seemed comfortable and enjoyed being there. C+

Super Sunday – Ricky (Crystal) and Phil (Guest) are preparing for the big game. They each go through the snacks Phil got and just playfully insult each other until one of them goes too far. Crystal was playing the character he debuted in the Ed Asner/Kinks episode. Guest actually calls Crystal a “douchebag” and “smegma” which I’m surprised they could say on NBC in 1984. I always thought the latter was one of those goofy made up words from MAD magazine, but…it’s not…google at your own risk. This was actually pretty funny because Guest and Crystal were playing off each other differently. This was obviously more of a character study type piece and it was miles better than Willie and Frankie. Toward the end, it seemed like they were trying to get each other to break character. B+

Good Cop/Bad Cop – Short reprises his Lawrence Orbach character as a police officer interrogating DeBoney (Belushi) who spends the whole sketch implying that all the women in the Lieutenant’s family are sluts. Lieutenant (Scheider) tries to get Orbach to play the part of the “bad cop”, but keeps confusing it with “sad cop” and incompetent cop. He even goes as far as playing the bad cop himself as an example just before giving up and going to the squad car. Somehow, this gets a confession out of DeBoney. I was expecting to hate this, but it was actually pretty funny. I liked seeing this character a s a bumbling cop and I liked that they put him in a different setting each time with no repetitive phrases or anything. Short was great at making this character completely his own and not relying on any gimmicks. B+

Stand up – Special Guest Stephen Wright performs his routine. This was great. My favorite jokes were broken mirror, submarine, rabbit shadows, instant coffee microwave, seashell collection, and rare photographs. I also liked his bowling imitation. A-

Foldgers Crystals – This was your standard coffee commercial fare, except this time the spokesman goes into an intensive care unit and replaces the blood supply hooked into the veins of the patients. Gross reacts well to this. This was a repeat from 83-84. This was pretty dark, yet funny and it seemed like they knew just how long the joke would last. B-

In Praise of Women – Julio Iglesias (Kroeger) hosts this talk show “honoring women of distinction and achievement.” His guests include French novelist Simone De Beauvoir (Gross) Dr. Helen Caldicott (Dreyfus) and actress Dame Peggy Ashcroft (Stephenson…under so much old age makeup she was almost unrecognizable). Julio would repeatedly state how much he “loves women” to the point where he just sleazily hits on his guests until they all get disgusted and walk out. This was essentially a one joke sketch, but Kroeger’s electrifying performance really saved it. I especially liked him telling Dreyfus to “sit on his knee” and tell him all about her book as well as all of his interactions with Stephenson…especially toward the end when he started carrying her around. This was another sketch that knew exactly where it should end. A-

Saturday Night News – Best Jokes: Koch/Hayes marriage, Goetz shootings/muggers poll, inauguration, KKK/dunces precision. Guest actually had decent jokes and his delivery seemed to be improving. Syndicated columnist Ann Landers (Gross) discusses poll results of her own. She was investigating the misconception that most women in regards to sex would rather “forget about the act” and be held closely based on a letter she received. Her poll results of women favored this heavily, but they unfortunately thought “the act” referred to an old Liza Minelli production. On the other hand, her poll results of men indicated that they all preferred the “act” itself. Specifically, these were the likes of mailmen, milkmen, meter men, criminally insane men and members of Van Halen. I didn’t much care for this. I wasn’t quite sure about the impression and the commentary seemed a little light on jokes. Rich Hall reprises his Paul Harvey impression. This time, he comments on US/Soviet missile reduction. He works in a reference to a “roach proof” product and “free enterprise” before Guest tries to stop him from using public airtime for commercials again. Harvey then decides to give the rest of his commentary in Russian. I liked this, even thought Paul Harvey was kind of played out by now. I did like his references to “Pravda value hardware” and “pepski boys”. Still, I have to appreciate Hall doing something different with his Harvey impression. BBC commentator Angelah Bradliegh (Stephenson) delivers a Super Bowl pre game commentary on how she is “fascinated with quarter back buttocks” she also calls it “barbaric” and says Joe Montana has the “massive organs of a prize bull”. This was funny and better than her last appearance. Belushi comments on going to the movie theater and how certain people don’t know how to behave. He essentially tells people not to talk unless the theater is on fire or you are being attacked or if you happen to be a black guy at a kung fu movie. He also suggests new parents leave their babies at home and that those with bladder issue sit in the isle. He also talks about blowing his airhorn in people’s faces and screaming at them as they’re trying to talk during “Pinocchio”. I know there wasn’t much to this either, but it actually made me laugh for some reason. This was one of the better Updates this season. B+

Ticket Scalpers – Schieder is scalping tickets and he has a pair of tickets right on the 50 yard line that he refuses to sell for less than five million dollars. Belushi tries to haggle with him continuously. He even brings a friend with a 19th century British painting worth two million. Scheider has to go back to his family that he “let down” because no one was willing to pay five million. His wife (Gross) insists that he never let his family down. She also states that he is the “finest, most wonderful man in the world…and If the world doesn’t know it, god does.” Suddenly, he is mysteriously struck by lightning. Gross says he was “too good for this world.” This sketch was very well written and performed even if it was a little slow in parts. It was really funny. Belushi and Scheider were the best performers. B+

Flaming Parrot – Penny Lane (Crystal in drag) is an old bar hag singing and playing piano for a group of guys. She manages to charm bar patron Lester (Scheider). This had the feel of another one of Crystal’s “character pieces”. It was just as drawn out and maudlin, but performed as a duo with Schieder. The audience was barely responsive through this and the idea of Crystal playing a woman is pretty unappealing on its own. I really disliked this, even though there was a certain sweetness to it. D+

Mental Hospital – Dreyfus and Gross reprise their roles as Chi Chi and Consuela. Chi Chi (Gross) committed herself to a mental institution voluntarily. She discusses her bizarre dreams about Richard Dawson and they encounter a manic dancer who thinks he is John Oates. Chi Chi confesses that the real reason she committed herself was because Francis Ford Coppola spent $47 million to make “Cotton Club.” This was another great sketch. It wasn’t laugh out loud funny, but it was interesting enough on its own and well written. Kroeger was funny in his small part as well. I always liked these characters by Gross and Dreyfus and I liked how they were in new settings and situations each time. B+


Well, this was certainly one of the better shows of the season. I would definitely place it somewhere in the top three. Schieder proved to be a capable host whenever he was on and the writing was great. Next episode is Alex Karras/Tina Turner.

Kathleen Turner/John Waite (1.12.1985)

Donahue Green Room – Fernando (Crystal) announces that Phil has begun filming his show in New York this week and decides to step into his green room for bit. His guests include two midget transvestites, a Nazi and subway vigilante shooter Bernard Goetz. As expected, Fernando merely tells them how “mah-velous” they all look. Fernando talks to Goetz to get him on his show to which he agrees without hesitation. Fernando makes the mistake of asking Goetz for a quarter to use the phone and call his producer. He threateningly gives Fernando change and Fernando tells us how he is glad to be alive from NY. This open doesn’t hold up well at all. Even when it was fresh, it doesn’t look like it was all that funny. I didn’t really get all the Goetz references so that joke was lost on me. Still, I have to give them credit for bringing Fernando out of his “hideaway” setting. C+

Monologue – Turner comes out and talks about how some movie stars look different in person and then points out her friend Jack Nicholson (who is shown as some regular guy with a jew fro) and talks about how different she looks in all of her increasingly racy movies, but the censors wouldn’t let them show the photo from “Crimes of Passion.” This wasn’t really much of a monologue. C-

MacDouglass-Drummond – Shearer advertises a wrench in a Popeil style infomercial. This wrench is made to work on Air Force jets as it is the only “Pentagon approved” wrench on the market. It goes for $50,000 and if you call now, you can get a $24,000 coffee pot. This seemed to be another horribly dated heavy political piece that didn’t hold up well. I have no idea what sort of scandal this was referring to. I did like lines such as “but wait, there’s less” and “our prices are indictable” and the joke about how this wrench “can withstand the heat of a congressional investigation.” C-

Waterskiing – Willie and Frankie are back, except this time they are on a waterskiing team. Willie complains that about how hard it is to meet people in this job, but at least there’s girls standing on their shoulders. I did like the bit where Crystal talked about how he Krazy glued his eyes shut to get some sleep, but other than that this was just the most tired thing ever. I did like how they pulled off the illusion of two girls holding on to ceiling restraints while their feet are placed on Crystal and Guests shoulders. C+

Nose Hair Trimmer – People come to Walter’s (Kroeger) stand expecting to get their shoes shined, but he offers to trim people’s nose hairs. This is the same character he did in the Flip Wilson/Stevie Nicks episode who offered to tie peoples shoes. Guest is the building manager (doing the same voice he did as Mort Schmegman) on the last show who is trying to get in the Guinness book of world records while trying to get Walter kicked out of the building. Turner is a customer and Crystal is his friend Winslow to whom he gave his Stevie Wonder nose hair braid which he says gets girls notice him. Turner even asks him out on a date. The building manager agrees not to kick out Walter if he braids his nose hair, but he soon finds out he just has one long one at 15ft. He could get in the Guinness book with that, but Hall comes in and trips over it. This wasn’t the funniest sketch ever, but it was a different premise. Crystal’s character made me chuckle. C+

SafeCo – Pitchman Don Mowser (Kroeger) illustrates the sturdiness of Duraguard glass by using a helmeted Joan Collins (Stephenson) as a battering ram. Duraguard glass doesn’t break. This was funny. It was kind of a silly premise for a commercial, but they had fun with it. B+

Hypnotism By Fire – Bald, middle aged Brad (Short) is making his own slightly anti Semitic golf instructional video when his daughter Sharon (Dreyfus) announces she is going out on a date with Larry Pacon (Crystal) who isn’t the son of Brad’s associate) Sam Pacon (Guest). Gross plays a mom who is upstairs (and offscreen) fighting with her whole family and is barely acknowledged throughout. Brad and Larry bond over the fire while Sharon finishes getting ready. Brad uses the fire to hypnotize Larry into admitting that he plans to have sex with Sharon later that night and change his plans. Sam Pacon drops by and Brad attempts the same premise. This was another sketch with an interesting and different premise. It was pretty funny on its own. Short was the center of it and he was playing a more subdued character we haven’t seen him play before. Also, it’s sort of semi famous because Short kept smacking Crystal upside his head which knocked his wig completely askew. Crystal didn’t even notice this until Dreyfus and Short actually adjusted his wig in the middle of the sketch. This caused everyone to break character so bad that Crystal couldn’t even deliver his last line. They even talked about it on the “Lost and Found” 80s special. Short said he appreciated that experience because you couldn’t have moments like that on a taped show like SCTV. B+

Predictions – Jeanne Dixon (Gross) hawks her own bizarre predictions in this months’ “Star” magazine. These include Elizabeth Taylor changing her name to Florence Schnurr, a celebrity mispronouncing “holocaust”, Bob’s Big Boy coming out on the top of the Burger King/McDonalds’ price wars and the commercial ending with a close up of her face curing the nations’ hiccups. This was a little strange. The only funny part was an audience member pointing out that Elvis’s 50th birthday celebration already happened. B-

Joe Franklin II – Franklin (Crystal) interviews famed magician Doug Henning (Short), actor Alan Arkin (Guest) and rising actress Daphne Clayton (Turner) who is appearing in a production of “Wake Me When I’m Nude”. This was actually better than the first Joe Franklin sketch. I liked Short as Doug Henning and Guest as a bewildered, succinct Arkin made me chuckle. Turner didn’t really add that much, but I her purposely bad lip syncing during her big musical number was pretty funny as well her song ending with “it’s 1983”. Crystal asking about Ben Turpin was also a nice touch. B-

Boxer – This was another one of Crystal’s “character” pieces that was essentially him doing a monologue. Here, he played old senile corner man Tony Minetti catching up with one of his old boxers and making fun of the AMA from trying to ban boxing. I didn’t much care for this. I much prefer him as Ricky. I did like the line about bleeding at the weigh in, though. C-

Fast Love – At what appears to be the most aggressively 80s party ever, Adam Sherman (Short) meets the seemingly insane and sexually intimidating Victoria Kingsley (Turner) who comes on quite strong to Adam in the midst of his relationship problems with another girl. Adam desperately tries to get away from her, but not without a passionate kiss which completely changes his mind. This was very funny and well acted. Short was great here. This seems to surreal to be a Marylin Suzanne Miller piece though. B+

Saturday Night News – Guest delivers a mostly jokeless commentary on “job shuffling” within Reagan’s cabinet. Some random TV personalities and Johnny cash are mentioned to be replacing each other. Kroeger plugs his own “Kroeger-a-Month” calendar (which he is selling for less than a dollar) under the guise of a consumer report. His goofy scantily clad pictorials made me chuckle. I also liked Guest’s line “that’s very sad” after Kroeger’s commentary. Doug Henning (Hall) delivers a commentary on the deficit as Guest states the Henning is Reagan’s new economic advisor. I don’t know why Hall had to play Henning this time. I liked Short’s impression much better. Hall even comments on this saying that two Doug Hennings on SNL is the greatest illusion of all. Anyway, Hall basically forces Guest to “cough up” some money to make the “deficit” disappear and “barf up” some military spending. That was alright by itself, but the funniest part was when Hall’s fake teeth fell out and he tried to pass them off as another “illusion” when Guest handed them to him. This Update was actually pretty good considering it was kept short and most of it was commentary. B-

Strictly From Blackwell II – In this installment, Blackwell (Shearer) chats with guest Bobby Bouchet (Short) who is involved in musical dinner theater. This made the previous Blackwell sketch look much better by comparison as Guest had a more developed character than Short did. He did claim however, that his biological parents were JFK and Marylin Monroe and his adopted parents didn’t even know this. This was okay, but it had little to do with the sketch. C+


Well, this was pretty much and average, run of the mill show outside of a few good moments. Next episode is Roy Schieder/Billy Ocean.