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History ofSaturday Night Live

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The current logo forSaturday Night Live.

The long-running Americanlate-nightsketch comedy showSaturday Night Live (SNL) first premiered onNBC on October 11, 1975, and itsfifty-first and most recent season premiered on October 4, 2025. Created byLorne Michaels, who is the original and current showrunner, its history has been shaped by its large and constantly-changingcast of performers, as well as changes in itswriting staff from year to year. It has played a prominent role in American popular culture and television since its inception, and changing attitudes towardscultural diversity have been evident particularly in its recent history.

Initially calledNBC's Saturday Night and envisioned as something closer to a traditionalvariety show, the program was developed as a replacement for reruns ofThe Tonight Show and quickly became a staple of late-night television. The early years ofSNL were dominated by its initial cast of performers, which became known as the "Not Ready for Prime Time Players", and included such performers asChevy Chase,John Belushi,Dan Aykroyd, andGilda Radner. The cast members soon became famous during thefirst season, and the show became immediately known for its mix of satirical humor, political commentary, and celebrity impersonations, quickly developing acult following.

Michaels left the program in 1980; the program was executive produced by associate producerJean Doumanian for a year, thenDick Ebersol for several years, before Michaels returned in 1985. After an unstable1985–1986 season, he introduced a new cast featuring performers likePhil Hartman andDana Carvey, stabilising the show's production and helping to restore its popularity. He also reintroduced political satire of figures such asGeorge H.W. Bush, an element of the series that had been deprioritised during the Ebersol era. Subsequent decades saw the rise of cast members likeWill Ferrell,Tina Fey, andKate McKinnon, helping to keep the show relevant to new generations of viewers.

Throughout its history,SNL has experienced fluctuations in critical reception and ratings. The show has launched the careers of numerous comedians and actors, with many cast members going on to successful careers in film and television. As of its fiftieth season in 2024,Saturday Night Live is one of the longest-running programs in television history, and has produced over 970 episodes. It has won numerous awards, including multiplePrimetime Emmy Awards, and is often cited for its influence on popular culture and its impact on political satire.

Development: 1974–1975

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A black-and-white image of Johnny Carson sitting at a desk.
Johnny Carson askedNBC executives for more time off, which led to the creation ofSNL.

Beginning in 1965,NBCnetwork affiliates broadcast reruns ofThe Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson on Saturday or Sunday nights. In 1974,Johnny Carson petitioned to NBC executives for the weekend shows to be pulled and saved so they could be aired during weeknights, allowing him to take time off.[1][2] In response, NBC presidentHerbert Schlosser approached the vice president of late-night programming,Dick Ebersol, and asked him to create a show to fill the Saturday night time slot.[3] The network had a weak Saturday night lineup at the time that garnered poor ratings,[4] and networks had little interest in late-night Saturday shows until the mid-1970s.[2]

At the suggestion ofParamount Pictures executiveBarry Diller, Schlosser and Ebersol then approachedLorne Michaels. Over the next three weeks, Ebersol and Michaels developed the latter's idea for a variety show featuringhigh-concept comedy sketches, political satire, and music performances that would attract 18- to 34-year-old viewers.[5][6] NBC decided to base the new show at their studios in30 Rockefeller Center. Michaels was givenStudio 8H, a converted radio studio that was home to NBC's election andApollo moon landing coverage. It was revamped for the premiere at a cost of $250,000.[7] By 1975, Michaels had assembled the show's initial cast, includingDan Aykroyd,John Belushi,Chevy Chase,Jane Curtin,Garrett Morris,Laraine Newman,Gilda Radner, andGeorge Coe.[8] The cast was nicknamed the "Not Ready For Prime-Time Players",[9][10] a term coined by show writerHerb Sargent.[11] Much of the talent pool involved in theinaugural season was recruited fromThe National Lampoon Radio Hour,[12][13] including the original head writer,Michael O'Donoghue.[14]

Radner was the first person hired after Michaels himself.[15] Chase was initially hired as a writer but then became a performer.[16] Newman was brought aboard after having already worked with Michaels on aLily Tomlin special in 1974.[15] Morris was initially brought in as a writer, but attempts to have him fired by another writer led Michaels to have Morris audition for the cast, where he turned in a successful performance.[15] Curtin and Belushi were the last two cast members hired.[15] Belushi had a disdain for television and had repeatedly turned down offers to appear on other shows, but decided to work with the show because of the involvement of Radner and writersAnne Beatts and O'Donoghue.[15] Michaels was still reluctant to hire Belushi, believing he would be a source of trouble for the show, but Beatts, O'Donoghue, and Ebersol successfully argued for his inclusion.[15] NBC executives insisted that Coe join the cast to balance out Michaels's younger selections.[17]

The original theme music was written byHoward Shore, who was the original bandleader.[18] The show was originally conceived with three rotating permanent hosts:Lily Tomlin,Richard Pryor, andGeorge Carlin. According to Ebersol, consideration was given toSteve Martin and singerLinda Ronstadt also being included as a duo.[19] When Pryor dropped out because his brand of comedy was not censor-friendly, the concept was dropped.[20]

Debut and early years: 1975–1980

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First seasons and cult success

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NBC's Saturday Night[note 1] debuted on October 11, 1975,[6] with an episode featuring Carlin as host.[23] The cast was initially paid $750 per episode, and essentially lived at the offices, according to Michaels.[24][21] Chase was the first performer to say the show's introduction line in the first episode,[21] and would say it in all but two episodes for the rest of the season.[25] Michaels said it would take a few weeks for the show to find itself on-air.[26] Early episodes were more experimental with the show's format; segments fromThe Muppets were frequently featured in thefirst season, and the second episode featured eleven musical performances from hostPaul Simon.[21][failed verification] The fourth episode, hosted byCandice Bergen, was seen as a turning point, with the cast featuring in most segments. The cast and crew were particularly happy with a "Jaws II" sketch, which was longer than was typical and featured multiple sets. Each cast member handed Bergen a red rose during the goodnights, and the show's format became more established following this episode.[27]

Richard Pryor's 1975 episode was reportedly run on atape delay.

The seventh episode hosted byRichard Pryor was an important one for Michaels, who had insisted on booking Pryor as host, feeling that he could aid in making the show more modern.[28] However, network officials were concerned about Pryor's content and the possibility of profanity,[29] and ordered Michaels to run the episode on a five-secondtape delay.[30] He was initially disallowed as host entirely, until Michaels threatened to walk off the show in protest.[31] Pryor, as the firstperson of color to host the show, found the delay to be an insult when informed after the broadcast, and objected to being treated differently from other comedians.[31][note 2] The Pryor episode was considered one of the show's best episodes, according to authors Doug Hill and Josh Weingrad.[33] The episode's"Word Association" sketch, featuring Pryor and Chase, is considered one of the greatestSNL sketches of all time, according toRolling Stone.[34][35]

SNL's humor soon began to be seen as refreshing and daring, in comparison to previous sketch and variety shows that would rarely deal with controversial topics and issues,[36] and the show soon developed acult following.[37][6] Michaels resisted the network censors on many occasions, and learned to effectively exploit the network's appeals process in order to maintain creative control and keep controversial sketches in production.[38] The cast'simprovisational backgrounds allowed them to experiment with different forms of comedy.[10] Iconic characters during this period of the show included Belushi'ssamurai, theConeheads (Aykroyd, Curtin, Newman), and Radner'sRoseanne Roseannadanna.[39]

Some NBC executives were not satisfied with the show's Nielsen ratings.[37] Michaels and Ebersol successfully argued thatbaby boomers constituted a majority of the show's viewers according to Nielsen metrics, and many of them watched little else on television.[40] Young adults were the most desirable demographic for advertisers,[41] and executives eventually decided to keep the show on the air despite angry letters and phone calls from viewers who were offended by certain sketches.[42]

The original cast ofSaturday Night Live withPresident Gerald Ford in 1976

Chase was the first anchor of the show's recurring "Weekend Update" segment, and therefore received more screen time than the rest of the cast. Physical comedy and exaggerated pratfalls became his trademarks, and he became the show's first breakout star. His impression ofGerald Ford during the1976 presidential campaign was later cited as a factor in Ford losing the November 2, 1976 election.[25][43] Chase's success led to tensions with the rest of the cast, particularly Belushi. Network executives also wanted him for a potentialprime-time show, and he soon left the show during the1976–1977 season.[44][note 3] He was replaced byBill Murray, whom Michaels had intended to hire for the initial cast but was unable to because of budget restrictions.[45] Murray had a shaky start, but by the end of the second season, had begun to develop a following, with a sleazy know-it-all persona and characters such asNick the Lounge Singer that became popular with viewers.[46] The show became a mainstream hit by 1978, and spawned "Best ofSaturday Night Live" compilations that also reached viewers who could not stay awake for the live broadcasts.[47]

Cast tensions

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Chase returned to host in 1978; during the live telecast, Murray, goaded by Belushi, got into a physical altercation with Chase while musical guest Billy Joel was performing, according to Newman and Michaels in 2002.[48] Chase later said the incident actually happened right before he delivered the opening monologue.[49] Chase's departure to work in movies had made Michaels possessive of his talent; he threatened to fire Aykroyd if he accepted the role of D-Day in the 1978 comedyAnimal House (which Belushi starred in), and later refused to allowSNL musician/performerPaul Shaffer to participate inThe Blues Brothers with Aykroyd and Belushi.[50][51]Animal House was a major box office success in 1978, which led to a further spike inSNL's popularity.[12] Belushi's independent success began to cause jealousy and discontent in the other cast members,[52] and Michaels became concerned that some cast members considered the show primarily a launching pad for movies and popular music.[53]

"It was embarrassing. We were the TV literati, very hip, the darlings of some intellectual culture. Then it sort of degenerated into people who thought the more shrill the better. Fan mail started to be from fourteen-year-olds who couldn't spell."

Rosie Shuster,SNL writer[54]

Radner starred in a successful one-womanBroadway show titledGilda Live in the fall of 1979, produced by Michaels.[55] Tensions developed between Radner and someSNL writers because she and Michaels had spent much of the year working on the project.[56] She had also recently broken off a relationship with Murray, and the two could barely speak to one another.[57] Her Broadway show was filmed by directorMike Nichols for release to cinemas, but the project was a critical and financial disappointment upon its release in March 1980, despite the success of the Broadway show itself.[58] The stress of these projects caused "exhaustion" for Radner duringSNL's1979–1980 season, according toSNL historians Doug Hill and Jeff Weingrad.[59]

Murray's visibility increased during this period, as cinemas screened the popular comedyMeatballs, which launched his movie career. Its PG rating allowed popularity with a broader audience, and this resulted in newSNL viewers who were not familiar with what writerRosie Shuster considered to be the unorthodox style of the first two seasons.[60] The rapidly changing viewer demographics caused further concern for Michaels about the possible departures of cast members and writers.[61]

Drugs were a major problem during the show's first five years. Cocaine had become an "integral part of the working progress" onSNL by the 1978–1979 season, according to Hill and Weingrad.[62] Newman had developed serious eating disorders as well as drug problems, and spent so much time in her dressing room playing solitaire that for Christmas 1979, castmate Radner gave her a deck of playing cards with a picture of Laraine on the face of each card.[63] Radner was also suffering frombulimia.[62][64] Morris felt underutilized by the writers, and was often assigned sketches that involvedracial stereotypes. One of these was a planned "Tarbrush" sketch that would dull African-Americans' supposedly shiny teeth, which was pulled at the last minute by Michaels.[65] He began tofreebase cocaine, and during rehearsals for an episode hosted byKirk Douglas, ran screaming onto the set, saying that someone had put an "invisible hypnotist robot" on his shoulder who watched him everywhere he went.[66] During the 1979–1980 season, Michaels had a guard posted outside the elevators on the seventeenth floor. Officially, he was there to keep away fans, but most on the show believed it was to protect against potential sweeps by law enforcement.[62]

Michaels and cast departures

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Aykroyd and Belushi left the show after the 1978–1979 season to makeThe Blues Brothers.[67] Murray felt that Aykroyd and Belushi had left him stranded, and essentially forced him and Morris to play too many of the male parts in sketches.[57] The following season saw the hiring of many writers as featured players, such asAl Franken,Tom Davis, andHarry Shearer.[68] (Shearer was promoted to Repertory Status midway through the season) Another prominent contributor was writerDon Novello, whose "Father Guido Sarducci" character was especially popular and appeared on Weekend Update repeatedly during the season.[69]

As the fifth season ended in 1980, Michaels, emotionally and physically exhausted, asked executives to place the show on hiatus for a year in order to allow him time to pursue other projects.[70] Concerned that the show would be cancelled without him, Michaels suggested Franken, Davis, andJim Downey as his replacements. NBC presidentFred Silverman disliked Franken and was infuriated by his Update routine on May 10, 1980, called "A Limo for a Lame-O", a critique of Silverman's job performance and his insistence on traveling by limousine at the network's expense. Silverman blamed Michaels for approving this Weekend Update segment.[71] Unable to secure the deal that he wanted, Michaels chose to leave NBC forParamount Pictures, intending to bring associate producerJean Doumanian along with him. Michaels later learned that Doumanian had been given his position atSNL after being recommended by her friend, NBC Vice President Barbara Gallagher.[72]

The remaining cast appeared together for the last time on May 24, 1980, the final episode of the season, hosted by long-time hostBuck Henry, who never again returned to host. Almost every writer and cast member, including Michaels, left the show after this episode.[73]Brian Doyle-Murray was the only writer to stay on for the following season with Doumanian as producer.[74]

Jean Doumanian and Dick Ebersol years: 1980–1985

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Jean Doumanian season

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Main article:Saturday Night Live season 6

The reputation of the show as a springboard to fame meant that many aspiring stars were eager to join the new series. Doumanian was tasked with hiring a full cast and writing staff in less than three months, and NBC immediately cut the show's budget from the previous $1 million per episode down to just $350,000. Doumanian also faced resentment and sabotage from the remaining Michaels staff.[75] Cast member Harry Shearer, who disliked Michaels, informed Doumanian that he would stay as long as she let him completely overhaul the program. Doumanian refused, so Shearer also left.[76]

The Doumanian-era cast faced immediate comparisons to the beloved former cast and was not received favorably by critics. Ratings were significantly down for the new season, and audiences failed to connect to the original cast's replacements, such asCharles Rocket andAnn Risley.[77]The New York Times wrote that "only the shell remained" of the previous show, and that the new season lacked innovation.[78]Tom Shales wrote that the show was a "snide and sordid embarrassment".[79]

In a February 1981 episode hosted byCharlene Tilton, Rocket used the profanity "fuck" during a sketch.[80] DirectorDave Wilson, upon hearing the word, reportedly threw his script down and left the control room, and the incident was cut from the subsequentWest Coast broadcast. Rocket later said he was trying to kill time before the show's close and had not meant to utter the word.[81][82] Following this episode, Doumanian was dismissed after only ten months on the job.[83][84]

Dick Ebersol years

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Dick Ebersol, wearing a white shirt with a USA flag on it, smiling widely, sitting in a black chair.
Dick Ebersol served as the new executive producer forSNL from 1981 to 1985.

Although some executives suggestedSNL be cancelled,Brandon Tartikoff, who succeeded Silverman as network chief in mid-1981, believed the show's concept was more important than its financial performance and decided to keep it on the air. He turned toDick Ebersol to take over as producer, who sought Michaels' approval in order to avoid the same staff sabotage that had plagued Jean Doumanian's tenure.[85] To reconnect with the Michaels era, Ebersol re-hired Michael O'Donoghue as head writer[86] and fired most of Doumanian's hires, keeping onlyEddie Murphy andJoe Piscopo.[87] He initially pursuedJohn Candy andCatherine O'Hara fromSCTV for the new cast. While Candy declined, O'Hara accepted, before changing her mind after a heated production meeting where O'Donoghue berated the cast and writers.[88] O'Donoghue himself was soon fired after creating chaos on set and proposing radical changes, including attempting to fire announcerDon Pardo live on air.[89]

Ebersol's first episode aired on April 11, featuring Chevy Chase on Weekend Update and an Al Franken commentary that humorously suggested it was time to "put SNL to sleep". Seeking to remind viewers of the original era, Ebersol allowed Franken's mock-serious segment to air.[90] However, Ebersol's approach differed markedly from Michaels'. His sketches leaned towards more accessible, broad comedy, which alienated some long-time fans, writers, and cast members.Tim Kazurinsky described Ebersol's style as favoring "lowest common denominator" content.[91][92] Ebersol focused on appealing to younger viewers, and discouraged sketches longer than five minutes in order to maintain their attention.[92] His distaste for political humor led the show to largely avoid jokes about PresidentRonald Reagan during his time as showrunner.[93]

Eddie Murphy.
Eddie Murphy was one of the few breakout performers during this time period.

Coming from a management background, Ebersol was adept at maintaining network relationships and took on many business and production duties,[94] increasingly leaving producerBob Tischler in charge of creative decisions.[95] Under Ebersol's leadership, Eddie Murphy, who had been underused during Doumanian's tenure,[96][note 4] rose to prominence with popular characters likeMister Robinson's Neighborhood andGumby.[98] His success was a major factor in the show's resurgence,[99] though it created tensions within the cast, particularly after Ebersol allowed Murphy to host following the cancellation of Murphy's48 Hrs. co-star,Nick Nolte.[100][note 5]

After Murphy and much of the cast left following the1983–1984 season, the show appeared talent-deprived. In a break with tradition, the producers hired established comedians likeBilly Crystal andMartin Short for the1984–1985 season, bringing their well-known material to the show.[101] Crystal had nearly appeared inSNL's first episode in 1975 but left due to a dispute during rehearsals.[102] During this season, he introduced popular characters such asFernando.[103] However, the high salaries for Crystal and Short, $25,000 and $20,000 per episode respectively, drove up production costs.[101] Though this season was considered one of the series' funniest, it diverged significantly from Michaels' innovative approach in the eyes of audiences.[104][105]

By the end of the season, several cast members had grown weary of the demanding production schedule and were reluctant to return, leaving Crystal andGary Kroeger (who had been with the show since the season 8 premiere) as the sole established cast members willing to continue. Like Michaels before him, Ebersol informed NBC that he would only return if the show took a hiatus to recast and rebuild.[106] He also proposed significantly departing from the established live format.[107] NBC rejected these requests and instead decided to approach Michaels to return as producer.[106]

Michaels returns: 1985–1995

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1985–1986 season

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Main article:Saturday Night Live season 11

Following unsuccessful forays into film and television, in need of money, and eager not to see Tartikoff cancel the show, Michaels decided to return for the1985–1986 season. The show was again recast, with Michaels borrowing Ebersol's idea to seek out established actors such asRandy Quaid andAnthony Michael Hall, as well as younger stars likeRobert Downey Jr. andJoan Cusack.[70] Michaels also expressed a desire to let a new generation "create it in its own image", seeking to appeal to a younger target audience.[108]

Writers found it difficult to write sketches for the eclectic new cast, which was reportedly put together in just six weeks.[109] The season premiere, hosted byMadonna, received "scathing" reviews according toThe New York Times;[108] writer Downey later said the episode was one of the worst in the show's history.[110] Head writer Franken was later critical of Michaels' decision to seek a younger cast, observing that it was "impossible to write aSenate hearing", and Ebersol later called the year "very dark".[109] The season overall is considered one of the show's worst.[111] In April 1986, Tartikoff again made the decision to cancel the show, until he was convinced by producerBernie Brillstein to give it one more year.[112]

1986–1990 cast

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Dana Carvey in 1989.
Dana Carvey's characters during his time as a cast member were praised for helping to revive the show's popularity.

The show was renewed for the1986–1987 season, but, for the first time in its history, for only thirteen episodes instead of the usual twenty-two.[113] Michaels again fired most of the cast, and unlike the previous seasons, sought out unknown talent such asDana Carvey andPhil Hartman instead of known names.[114] Only a few cast members from the previous season were retained, such asJon Lovitz,Nora Dunn, andDennis Miller, whose hosting of Weekend Update had been a source of praise.[115] The October 11 premiere hosted bySigourney Weaver opened with Madonna reading a mock NBC statement that the previous season had been "a dream... a horrible, horrible dream".[116]

This new cast was successful at reviving the show's popularity in the eyes of critics and audiences.[117]The Washington Post observed that the show had "new life", crediting Carvey in particular.[118] It was considered a more disciplined, straight cast than previous eras, with less alcohol and drug use.[119] Lovitz was known for playing sleazy, obnoxious characters such as Tommy Flanagan, apathological liar, and Carvey's impressions of celebrities likeJohn Travolta quickly proved popular. He also created popular new characters such asChurch Lady and the Grumpy Old Man.[120] The Church Lady's mannerisms was inspired by NBC's increased censorship of the show compared to the initial years, which Carvey and Dunn criticised.[119] Michaels had also reintroduced political humor to the show, and Carvey's impression ofGeorge H.W. Bush is considered one of the best presidential impressions in the show's history.[121]

The new core group of eight would be unchanged for the next four years,[122] excluding the addition ofMike Myers in 1989.[123] A two-and-a-half-hourprime time special aired on September 24, 1989, to celebrate the series' fifteenth year on the air. Original cast members Chase, Aykroyd, Curtin, Morris, and Newman all returned along with other cast and crew, with tributes to the late Belushi and Radner. Michaels said he and Tartikoff wanted to bring the "old" and "new" casts together to celebrate.[124]

Controversial comedianAndrew Dice Clay hosted the show on May 12, 1990, which prompted cast member Dunn to boycott the episode that week. Her actions were perceived as a publicity stunt by some involved with the show's production. After the cast took a vote, Dunn was not invited back to the cast for the following season.[125]

"Bad Boys" era: 1990–1995

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Adam Sandler,David Spade andChris Rock, core members of the "Bad Boys ofSNL".

In the early 1990s, much of this core cast began to leave the show, and younger performers such asChris Farley andAdam Sandler began to be promoted to repertory status. Carvey later remarked that these cast members were "bursting with energy" and that it was a natural time to transition to a newer cast.[126] Nealon observed that the newer cast members were much younger than him, almost as if they were his "teenage sons".[127]

Of the new cast members, Farley often used his size and physicality in sketches, like in the "Chippendales Audition" sketch alongsidePatrick Swayze,[128] whileDavid Spade's dry attitude and comedy quickly caught on with audiences.[129] Some of these cast members, like Sandler, Farley,Rob Schneider, Spade, andChris Rock, would come to be known as the "Bad Boys ofSNL" for their outrageous comedy style.[128][130] Many of these performers remained fairly close in the years after they left the show, often appearing in each other's movies.[128] Many of the sketches written by this newer cast mocked authority; some critics described it as "frat boy" humor, filled with profane language and jokes about bodily functions.[126] Afraid of cast members leaving for film careers, Michaels had overcrowded the cast, causing a divide between the veteran members and the new, younger talent. This led to increased competition for the show's limited screen time, and an increasing reliance on "younger", less subtle humor.[131]

Sinéad O'Connor ripped a picture ofPope John Paul II into pieces live on-air in 1992.

Aneponymous film based on Carvey and Myers's "Wayne's World" sketch was released on February 14, 1992, and was a critical and commercial success.[132][133] It was the onlySNL film to gross over $100 million at the box office.[134] The film's success led to increased ratings for the show, which shed more light on what head writer Downey and many others thought were significant writing issues at the show.[135] The show also received much attention for ahighly publicised incident in October 1992 when musical guestSinéad O'Connorpresented a photo ofPope John Paul II while singing the word "evil", before tearing the image into pieces and saying "Fight the real enemy!"[136][137] NBC had no foreknowledge of O'Connor's plan; and she was banned for life from the network;[138] the show received thousands of calls in the aftermath of the incident, and protests against O'Connor occurred outside of30 Rockefeller Plaza.[136]

The show lost Carvey and Hartman, two of its biggest stars, between 1992 and 1994. Hartman later gave an interview toTV Guide criticising the show's writing during this period, saying he felt like he had gotten off theTitanic.[139]Chris Rock left the show in 1993 after three years as a cast member, later criticising the show for limiting him to stereotypically Black roles.[140] Wanting to increaseSNL's ratings and profitability, NBC West Coast presidentDon Ohlmeyer and other executives began to actively interfere in the show, recommending that new stars such asChris Farley andAdam Sandler be fired and critiquing the costly nature of performing the show live. The show faced increasing criticism from the press and cast, in part encouraged by the NBC executives hoping to weaken Michaels's position.[141]

These issues had reached their peak by the1994–1995 season, which is considered one of the series' worst. A widely publicised profile of the show inNew York during this period was highly critical of the show's humor, cast, and backstage dysfunction.[142][143] Nathan Rabin ofThe A.V. Club later called the season "brutally unfunny", criticising perceived homophobic sketches and the cast's lack of diversity.[144] Michaels received a lucrative offer to develop a Saturday night project forCBS during this time, but remained loyal toSNL.[145]

Cast overhaul: 1995–2005

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A new cast, primarily led byWill Ferrell andCheri Oteri, was introduced in 1995.

With the show being near cancellation, Michaels decided to overhaul the show for the1995–1996 season. The only holdovers from the previous season wereNorm Macdonald,Mark McKinney,Tim Meadows,Molly Shannon and Spade.[146] Michaels added a number of performers that would become important to the show, includingWill Ferrell,Cheri Oteri, andDarrell Hammond.[147] The smaller cast also allowed producers to reduce the show's budget, which had reached a reported $1.5 million a week in the previous season.[148]Lenny Pickett also took over forG.E. Smith as leader of theSaturday Night Live Band,[149] and Jim Downey was removed as head writer.[150]

Of the cast members held over from the previous season, only Meadows and Spade were actual veterans. The other three were still newcomers to the show. Macdonald had a few bit parts in his first year (the1993–1994 season) and had taken over from Nealon as the anchor ofWeekend Update during the 1994–1995 season, his performance considered a high point that year.[151][152] Al Franken andBill Maher also auditioned for the role.[153] Macdonald quickly became known for making frequent jokes about the criminal trial ofO.J. Simpson, who was accused of murdering his ex-wife,Nicole Brown. After Simpson's controversial acquittal in October 1995, Macdonald opened the segment with the joke, "Well, it is finally official. Murder is legal in the state of California."[153]

Don Ohlmeyer, a network executive that oversaw Michaels andSNL, was a longtime friend of Simpson's, and at one point even left a meeting early atSNL in order to visit Simpson in jail.[153] He was unhappy with the continuing Simpson jokes; though he did not communicate with Macdonald directly, he made his displeasure regarding Macdonald and Update writerJim Downey known to Michaels regularly. During the1997–1998 season, Ohlmeyer had Downey removed from the segment, and told Macdonald he could stay, but only under a new writing staff. Macdonald refused to perform the segment without Downey, and was then removed from Update.[153]Colin Quinn was made the new Update anchor.[154] Ohlmeyer later argued that ratings had been declining for the segment under Macdonald, which had not occurred previously during the segment.[155] Macdonald returned to host two years later in 1999, making fun of the firing in his monologue.[156]

Maya Rudolph.
The show began to highlight more female performers and writers over time, such asMaya Rudolph.

The new cast members quickly made an impression and revitalised the show, particularly with sketches like theSpartan Cheerleaders,Mary Katherine Gallagher, and theRoxbury Guys.[157][158] Hammond in particular built up an array of popular impersonations, includingBill Clinton andChris Matthews.[158] The show focused on performers in this period, and writers were forced to supply material for the cast's existing characters before they could write original sketches.[159] Newer cast members were restricted from filming movies during the season.[148] Shannon, Oteri, andAna Gasteyer became cast standouts as their characters and impressions gained popularity.[160][161] Journalists said the women's prominence, backed by writers likePaula Pell and laterTina Fey, signaled a shift to a more female-friendlySNL where women had greater visibility.[162] The "rise of women" inSNL would continue with the addition of cast membersRachel Dratch,Maya Rudolph, andAmy Poehler in the next few years (particularly with Fey and Poehler as the first two women-anchor team onWeekend Update), toKristen Wiig,Kate McKinnon,Cecily Strong, and others in later seasons.[163]Tina Fey would become the show's first female head writer in 1999.[21]

SNL faced new competition during this period in the form ofFox's sketch comedy showMad TV, which aired a half hour earlier thanSNL[164] and featured a more diverse cast.[165] ThoughMad TV never posed a serious ratings threat toSNL, it did at times beat the NBC show in some younger demographics.[166][167] Athree-hour prime time special aired in September 1999 to celebrate 25 years of the show's airing.[168]

Jimmy Fallon and Fey began hosting Weekend Update as a team in the2000–2001 season.[169] Fey initially auditioned alone before pairing with Fallon; other auditions included cast members Gasteyer andChris Parnell.[170] The pairing was an attempt at a more "playful" style compared to previous Update hosts, according to Michaels.[170] This season also contained many sketches focusing on that year'spresidential campaign betweenAl Gore andGeorge W. Bush. The two candidates even appeared (separately) on a special with the cast in fall 2000.[171] Writer Jim Downey coined the term "strategery" via Ferrell's Bush impression, in a sketch mocking Bush's propensity for mispronunciations, while Darrell Hammond's Gore was characterized by his slow, deliberate drawl and use of the term "lockbox".[172] In 2015, Ferrell stated that he thought his impression "humanized" Bush to the country and may have won him the election, and that Hammond's "rigid, robotic-like" take on Gore may have affected Gore's perception also.[173]

September 11 attacks and anthrax scare

[edit]

The show'sNew York City cast and crew were highly impacted by theSeptember 11 attacks in 2001. Many entertainment programs were halted or postponed following the attacks, but late-night programs such asSNL began planning to return to the airwaves.[174]SNL's scheduledReese Witherspoon episode, the September 29 season premiere for the2001–2002 season, aired as planned. ProducerSteve Higgins later said that he wanted to do something to "bring normalcy back" following the show's return, which occurred twelve days after talk show hostDavid Letterman had returned to the air.[175]

New York mayorRudy Giuliani spoke at the top of the show standing with NYC firefighters and police officers, including Police CommissionerBernard Kerik and Fire CommissionerThomas Von Essen, followed by a performance of "The Boxer" fromPaul Simon. Giuliani called the emergency workers heroes, which was applauded by the studio audience.[176] He also made mention of the victims of the attacks, hailing them as heroes also.[177] After Michaels asked, "Can we be funny?" Giuliani replied, "Why start now?" to laughter from the audience.[176] The joke was Michaels's idea. Michaels and Giuliani wanted to convey that the city was "open for business" with the episode.[178][175] Giuliani also delivered the show's signature opening line.[179] The episode is considered one of the most memorable in the show's history.[180]

The show took on a more serious tone for the rest of the season, with less political humor.[181] Planned second episode hostBen Stiller dropped out due to the attacks, forcing producers to find a replacement.[175]SNL's30 Rockefeller Plaza production location was also the subject of ananthrax scare, during the production ofDrew Barrymore's episode in October 2001, when anNBC News employee on a lower floor was diagnosed with anthrax after opening a letter in the NBC newsroom. Barrymore considered dropping out of the episode, but decided to continue hosting, citing Giuliani as an inspiration to continue.[181] Head writerTina Fey later said she had a "panic attack, basically" and left the building, only returning later that night at the urging of Michaels.[175]

New set and 2004 presidential election

[edit]

The show received a new set modelled afterGrand Central Terminal in 2003.[182] A widely publicised incident involving singerAshlee Simpson also occurred during the2004–2005 season, where she appeared tolip sync during her second performance, appearing flustered when the wrong song was played.[183] Simpson was the only musical performer in the show's history to unexpectedly leave the stage mid-performance, later apologising for the incident and explaining that she had lost her voice earlier in the week.[184]

The2004–2005 season contained many sketches that focused on the2004 presidential election betweenJohn Kerry andGeorge W. Bush.[185]Innovation & Tech Today called this election "difficult" for the show, due to its relatively safe and restrained rhetorical nature compared to previous elections.[186]

Digital expansion: 2005–2015

[edit]

The show switched tohigh-definition broadcasting for the2005–2006 season, which required Studio 8H to be fitted with the necessary equipment.[187] Four new featured players were added during this period:Andy Samberg,Bill Hader,Kristen Wiig,[188] andJason Sudeikis, the latter having been added at the end of the previous season.[189] Hader quickly became popular for his impersonations, such asVincent Price andAl Pacino, and characters such as New York City correspondentStefon.[190] Wiig gained popularity with impersonations ofDrew Barrymore,Felicity Huffman andMegan Mullally, also creating memorable characters such as theTwo A-Holes (with Sudeikis) andTarget Lady.[191]

Before the start of the2006–2007 season, the show suffered budget cuts that resulted in longtime cast members like Chris Parnell andHoratio Sanz being let go.[note 6] In addition, longtime cast members Dratch and Fey left the show to work on theNBC sitcom30 Rock.[193] Thefollowing season was cut short by the2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike, which led to several cancelled episodes.[194] During the strike, the show's cast (along withMichael Cera, who acted as host, and musical guestYo La Tengo) performed an "episode" of the show entitled,Saturday Night Live – On Strike! at theUpright Citizens Brigade Theatre, co-founded by cast memberAmy Poehler in New York City.[194][195] The strike ended in February, and production continued that month for an episode hosted by Fey.[196] To make up for lost time and wages, four episodes were produced back-to-back during this period; this schedule had not been done since the first season in 1976.[197]

SNL Digital Shorts

[edit]
Main article:The Lonely Island
Three men (The Lonely Island) sitting on chairs in front of posters for their movie, "Popstar: Never Stop Never Popping".
The Lonely Island were hired for the show in 2005.

The Lonely Island, a comedy trio composed ofAndy Samberg,Akiva Schaffer, andJorma Taccone, were hired bySNL for the 2005–2006 season, following a writing gig for the2005 MTV Movie Awards that was hosted by Jimmy Fallon.[198] Fallon's praise, and positive word of mouth to others like Fey and Michaels, had led the trio to audition in mid-2005. Samberg was hired as a cast member, while Schaffer and Taccone joined the writing staff.[199]

Schaffer and Taccone struggled initially, with only two of their sketches making it to air in the first three months.[200] They soon saw success incorporating more video work, deciding to bypass the pitching process, as they were so new to the show that it would have been dismissed as too expensive.[201][202] Their breakthrough was the short "Lazy Sunday" in December 2005, which had spread nationwide[200] and became one of the first viralYouTube videos.[201] It increased the trio's recognisability, particularly Samberg's, nearly overnight.[200] Their success, according toNew York, "forced NBC into theiPod age".[203] This newfound popularity led to a record deal for the trio and the creation of theSNL Digital Shorts division, which allowed the group creative freedom to continue producing videos.[202] Michaels was often confused by the trio's pitches, and decided to stop taking their pitches and allow them to self-produce their efforts.[198][204]

The group's rise to fame was highlighted by a combination of "new" and "old" media, as described by Schaffer.[201] Many songs recorded for their 2009 album,Incredibad, and following albumsTurtleneck & Chain andThe Wack Album, would premiere as Digital Shorts onSNL.[205][206] Schaffer and Taccone leftSNL in 2010, but stayed on for following seasons to produce Digital Shorts related to their musical work.[204] Samberg left the show in 2012, later calling the decision difficult, but saying he was stressed and "falling apart" due to the workload.[207]

2008 presidential election

[edit]
Main article:Saturday Night Live parodies of Sarah Palin
Tina Fey at ComicCon in 2010.
Sarah Palin smiling.
Tina Fey portrayedSarah Palin on the show during the2008 presidential election.

Fey later returned to the show during the2008 presidential election for several critically acclaimed guest appearances as vice presidential candidateSarah Palin.[208] Michaels called Fey in August 2008 about reprising the role, and the first sketch in which she performed alongsideAmy Poehler asHillary Clinton aired on September 13. During this sketch, writer Mike Shoemaker coined the phrase, "I can see Russia from my house", a line frequently misattributed to Palin herself.[209][210]

Fey won thePrimetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series in 2009 for her impersonation of Palin.[211] WriterRobert Smigel later said it was the show's "biggest moment since the 70s", and Michaels observed that it made Fey a "huge star" and that "you could see perception changing completely".[212] The show's ratings saw a significant increase during this period.[213]

Palin herself appeared on the show on October 18, 2008, watching and critiquing a sketch from a previous episode in which Fey had played her.[214] She did not appear directly alongside Fey, as Fey was "terrified" of anything resembling apolitical endorsement, according to Michaels.[215]

Fred Armisen played the role ofBarack Obama using darkening makeup in the primary season leading up to the election, which was controversial. Michaels defended the decision to cast Armisen, saying that he hired the performer with the "cleanest" take on Obama.[216]

Obama presidency

[edit]

Armisen continued to play Obama from 2008 to 2012, following which cast memberJay Pharoah assumed the impression. Pharaoh and Killam were let go in 2016.[217] Darrell Hammond left the show in 2009 after fourteen years on the cast, holding the record at the time for the longest-running cast member (later beaten byKenan Thompson). He holds a record for the most times saying the show's opening line, saying it over seventy times during his tenure.[21][218]

AFacebook campaign was started in early 2010 called "Betty White to Host SNL (please?)!" that garnered the attention of producers at the show. The campaign wound up successful, and White became theoldest person ever to host the show in 2010. For White's episode, Michaels brought back former cast membersRachel Dratch,Tina Fey,Ana Gasteyer,Amy Poehler,Maya Rudolph andMolly Shannon. The episode garnered the show's highest ratings in over a year. with a rating of 5.8 in the 18–49 rating, demographic and with 12.1 million viewers overall.[219]

From 2008,Seth Meyers was the solo host of Weekend Update,[220] before being partnered withCecily Strong in 2013. After Meyers left forLate Night with Seth Meyers in February 2014, Strong was paired with head writerColin Jost. However, later that year, she was replaced by writerMichael Che.[221][222] Jost was criticised initially for what some critics saw as a wooden performance,[223] but later received more praise after being paired withMichael Che later in 2014.[224]

Sasheer Zamata was hired as a cast member in early 2014 after criticisms of a lack of diversity in the show's casting process.

Long-time performersBill Hader,Jason Sudeikis andFred Armisen all left the show after the2012–2013 season, which prompted the show to add eight performers over the course of thefollowing season, includingBeck Bennett andKyle Mooney.[147][225]Darrell Hammond succeededDon Pardo as announcer after his death in August 2014, starting with the2014–2015 season.[226] The show came under criticism during this period (including from its own cast) for not including at least one black female cast member in the cast.[227] As a result, Michaels announced that the show would be holding auditions for a black female cast member.[228] On January 6, 2014, it was announced thatUCB-NY performerSasheer Zamata would be joining the cast as a featured player. She made her first appearance on January 18, 2014.[229]

The show began to rely more on pre-recorded material and videos more than it ever had before during this period,[230] to the extent that some commentators said it had sometimes outshined live material on the show.[231][232][233]

Athree-hour prime time special aired in February 2015 to celebrate 40 years of the show's airing.[234] The special generated 23.1 million viewers, becoming NBC's most-watched prime-time, non-sports, entertainment telecast (excludingSuper Bowl lead-outs) since theFriends series finale in 2004.[234][235] It was preceded by an hour-long red carpet special entitledSNL 40th Red Carpet Live, hosted byMatt Lauer,Savannah Guthrie,Carson Daly andAl Roker, who interviewed past hosts, current and previous cast members, and musical guests.[236]

New relevance: 2015–present

[edit]

2016 presidential election

[edit]

The2015–2016 season coincided with the lead-up to the2016 presidential election, which brought renewed attention to the show's political sketches.[237]Kate McKinnon portrayedHillary Clinton during this period, theDemocratic nominee, and Clinton herself made a cameo on the show alongside McKinnon in 2015.[238]Larry David also made recurring appearances with a portrayal ofBernie Sanders.[239] Prior to the start of the season,SNL announced that cast memberTaran Killam would portrayDonald Trump, theRepublican nominee, on a recurring basis.[240] Some sketches required Killam to play other primary candidates, necessitating a secondary Trump impressionist. Jimmy Fallon was initially offered the role of Trump on a recurring cameo basis, but a last-minute change resulted in announcer Darrell Hammond portraying Trump, as he had done for fourteen seasons in the cast.[241] Hammond ultimately continued to play Trump on the show for the rest of the season.[242]

Trump himself hosted the show on November 7, 2015, while he was still a candidate for theRepublican nomination.[243] His appearance led to protests and letters from Hispanic organizations and other groups, who asked NBC to rescind his hosting invitation.[244] Trump had previously hosted in 2004.[245] The episode garnered an overnight rating of 6.6, the show's largest since 2012.[246] Television criticBill Carter called the episode "surprisingly mild", given the controversy.[246] Killam later called the appearance "embarrassing and shameful" for the cast in 2017, after he had left the show.[243]

Trump won the election over Clinton in a surprise victory on November 8, 2016.[247] The show's writing staff, initially expecting Clinton to win the election, were taken by surprise and forced to change course on their planned sketches.[248]Dave Chappelle hosted the show's first post-election episode on November 12 with musical guestA Tribe Called Quest.[249] During the cold open, a somber McKinnon (as Clinton) coveredLeonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" at a grand piano, closing by saying, "I'm not giving up and neither should you."[249] The segment was intended both as a tribute to Cohen and as an acknowledgement of the country's divided state following the election.[248] The performance received divided responses; Alan Light ofEsquire said it captured the "shock and horror" that much of the audience was feeling from the election,[248] while former cast memberRob Schneider said the show was "over" for good after the performance, accusing the show of "comedic indoctrination".[250] The Chappelle episode earned the show's highest ratings in four years.[248]

First Trump presidency

[edit]
See also:Saturday Night Live parodies of Donald Trump
ActorAlec Baldwin served as the show's main impersonator of U.S. PresidentDonald Trump during the latter's first term.

The show received positive attention for a recurring impression of Trump by actorAlec Baldwin. Baldwin's impression debuted during the 2016 campaign season and quickly became a recurring feature on the show. His exaggerated depiction of Trump, often highlighting the president's speech patterns, gestures, and persona, drew considerable attention.[251] McKinnon also played a number of political figures and Trump administration officials during the first Trump presidency, includingJeff Sessions,Kellyanne Conway, andBetsy DeVos.[252] The show's ratings significantly increased during this period, andSNL received a "shot of relevance", according toVanity Fair's Joanna Robinson.[253] Baldwin won an Emmy for his performance.[254] The show began to air live coast-to-coast on April 15, 2017, as a trial run for the final four episodes of the2016–2017 season;[255] NBC Entertainment ChairmanRobert Greenblatt said that the show's significantly increased viewership and engagement had led to the decision.[256] This change was made permanent in September 2017.[257]

Trump wouldtweet about the show several times throughout his first presidency, criticising it for what he saw as one-sided coverage and questioning if theFCC should investigate the show.[258] Some outlets, likePaste andVox, criticised the show's perceived over-reliance on Trump humor during this period, and what they saw as hypocrisy after allowing Trump to host the show as a presidential candidate.[259][260] Baldwin called his appearances as Trump "agony" in March 2018.[261] He retired the impression after the 2020 election,[262] and cast memberJames Austin Johnson assumed the impression in November 2021.[263]

COVID-19 pandemic

[edit]
See also:Saturday Night Live at Home

Due to theCOVID-19 pandemic,SNL's2019–2020 season was indefinitely halted on March 16, 2020. The move came hours afterNew York City MayorBill de Blasio ordered all theaters in the city to close by the following morning.[264] The season resumed on April 11, 2020, with three remotely produced episodes labelledSaturday Night Live at Home, containingWeekend Update and other contributions from the cast in their homes.[265] The first remote episode was hosted byTom Hanks, who was diagnosed withCOVID-19 the month prior.[266] The third of these episodes, airing on May 9, 2020, and hosted by longtime former cast memberKristen Wiig, served as the season's finale.[267]

A December 2021 episode planned to feature hostPaul Rudd and musical guestCharli XCX was forced to air without a live audience and musical guest, with limited cast and crew, due to a significant rise in cases of theSARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in New York at the time.[268]

Joe Biden was played byJim Carrey through the2020 presidential election.[269]Alex Moffat succeeded Carrey as Biden in November, after the election.[270]Dave Chappelle hosted the first episode following the election, in which Biden was elected president, on November 7, 2020.[271]

Post-pandemic and fiftieth anniversary

[edit]

The comedy troupePlease Don't Destroy, consisting of Ben Marshall, John Higgins, and Martin Herlihy, were hired as writers in 2021 and began contributing their short films to the show.[272] Their prerecorded sketches featured on the show usually include celebrity performers, such asTaylor Swift in a "Three Sad Virgins" sketch in November 2021.Billboard said the group had "capably picked up the digital short mantle" left on the show by The Lonely Island.[273]

The show has experimented with different avenues of broadcasting and digital content in recent years. Episodes were streamed live on thePeacock streaming service simultaneously with the TV airings beginning in the2021–2022 season.[274] The show also experimented with live broadcasts onYouTube, beginning with a 2021Elon Musk-hosted episode.[275]

The Hollywood Reporter said that the cast overhaul prior to the2022–2023 season, in which eight cast members left including long-time cast members such asKate McKinnon,Aidy Bryant, andPete Davidson, had been the "biggest [...] in a generation". Michaels referred to ongoing disruption caused by theCOVID-19 pandemic as the reason for the large exodus, saying cast members had lacked access to work that they would usually be able to find after leavingSNL.[147][276] For the 2022–2023 season, the show hired 4 stand-up comedians, includingMarcello Hernández,Michael Longfellow, andDevon Walker (hiring so many stand-ups around this time is something that Michaelsalso attributed to the pandemic).[277] Midway through the season, longtime cast memberCecily Strong exited the show, becoming the longest-tenured female cast member in the show's history.[278] However, that season ended a month early in April 2023, due to the2023 Writers Guild of America strike.[279] Due to the strike, the2023–2024 season was delayed until October 14, 2023.[280]

The show's coverage from 2023 onwards has incorporated sketches about the upcoming2024 presidential election. On July 31, it was announced thatMaya Rudolph would return to portray Presidential nomineeKamala Harris through the 2024 election season.[281]

In January 2024,Variety said that "speculation [had] been rampant for years" that Michaels would retire from the series after itsfiftieth season, premiering in 2024.[282] Michaels toldEntertainment Tonight that month that former head writer and cast memberTina Fey could "easily" be his successor, were he to step down, but said he had not made a decision yet at that point. Michaels has worked with Fey several times since herSNL tenure ended, including on30 Rock.[283] Michaels earlier said in 2021 that the show's fiftieth anniversary would be "a really good time to leave".[284]Kenan Thompson, the show's longest-serving cast member, speculated in 2022 thatSNL may come to an end altogether after its fiftieth season, saying that it could make financial sense for NBC.[285] However, in an interview withThe Hollywood Reporter in September 2024, Michaels denied that he was retiring at the end of the season.[277]

Athree-hour prime-time live broadcast to celebrate the series' history aired on February 16, 2025.[286]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^The original title was used because theSaturday Night Live title was in use bySaturday Night Live with Howard Cosell on rival networkABC. After the cancellation of Cosell's show in 1976, NBC purchased the rights to the name and officially changed the show's name toSaturday Night Live at the start of the1977–1978 season.[2][21][22]
  2. ^Dave Wilson,SNL's long-time director, later said that the show was in fact broadcast live, as his crew did not know how to work the delay.[32] However, the first edition ofThe Book of Lists, describing the broadcast, indicated that two words were deleted from the broadcast during Pryor's opening monologue, although what was censored is not specified.[29]
  3. ^Chase had been hired on a one-year writer contract, and had refused to sign the performer contract that was repeatedly offered to him. This had allowed him to leave the show for other ventures after just one year as a performer.[16]
  4. ^Talent coordinator Neil Levy claimed Murphy contacted and pleaded with him for a role on the show and, after seeing him audition, Levy fought with Doumanian to cast him instead ofRobert Townsend. Doumanian also claimed credit for discovering Murphy and fighting with NBC executives to bring him onto the show.[97]
  5. ^Nolte was booked to host the show, but had cancelled just four days before showtime. Ebersol offered Murphy the chance to host, a move that Piscopo would perceive as a major slight. Piscopo would later claim that Ebersol used Murphy's success to divide the two erstwhile friends and play them against one another.[100]
  6. ^This was the second time Parnell had been fired from the show due to budget cuts, the first being after the 2000–2001 season ended.[192]

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, p. 7.
  2. ^abcHenry & Henry 2013, p. 167.
  3. ^Shales & Miller 2015, pp. 19–20.
  4. ^Kaplan 2014, p. 6.
  5. ^Wilson Hunt, Stacy (April 22, 2011)."A Rare Glimpse Inside the Empire of 'SNL's' Lorne Michaels".The Hollywood Reporter.Archived from the original on January 24, 2022. RetrievedJune 20, 2022.
  6. ^abcHammill 2004, p. 2008.
  7. ^Greenfield, Jeff (February 11, 2015)."New York Magazine's Original 1975 Review ofSaturday Night Live".Vulture.Archived from the original on February 23, 2024. RetrievedAugust 23, 2024.
  8. ^Shaw, Gabbi; Olito, Frank (December 20, 2022)."WHERE ARE THEY NOW: All 162 cast members in 'Saturday Night Live' history".Business Insider. RetrievedAugust 21, 2024.
  9. ^Marx, Sienkiewicz & Becker 2013, p. 6.
  10. ^abAtwater, Carleton (December 7, 2010)."Looking Back at the First Five Years of SNL".Vulture. RetrievedAugust 21, 2024.
  11. ^Shales & Miller 2015, p. 59.
  12. ^abWayne, Teddy (October 29, 2013)."The Lowest Form of Humor: How the National Lampoon Shaped the Way We Laugh Now".The Millions. RetrievedAugust 21, 2024.
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  29. ^abWallechinsky, Wallace & Wallace 1977, p. 217.
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  38. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, pp. 158–159.
  39. ^Kaplan 2014, p. 10.
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  42. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, pp. 162–163.
  43. ^Tinnin, Drew (January 10, 2023)."One Of Chevy Chase's Most Famous Saturday Night Live Bits Sent Him Straight To The Hospital". /Film. RetrievedAugust 23, 2024.
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  48. ^Shales & Miller 2002, pp. 121–122.
  49. ^Peters, Fletcher (June 18, 2021)."Bill Murray and Chevy Chase's Infamous Fight Was "Awful," Say 'SNL' Co-stars".Decider. RetrievedAugust 23, 2024.
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  51. ^Keller, Richard (April 17, 2008)."The Not Ready for Prime-Time Players who made it to the big time: 1975–1985".AOL.Archived from the original on August 3, 2012. RetrievedJanuary 7, 2012.
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  53. ^Shales & Miller 2002, pp. 336–337.
  54. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, p. 313.
  55. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, p. 341.
  56. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, pp. 338–339.
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  58. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, p. 343.
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  61. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, pp. 344–346.
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  64. ^Shales & Miller 2015, p. 153.
  65. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, p. 238.
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  67. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, pp. 342–343.
  68. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, pp. 344–347.
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  71. ^Shales & Miller 2015, pp. 178–182.
  72. ^Shales & Miller 2015, pp. 183–184.
  73. ^Shales & Miller 2015, pp. 185–186.
  74. ^Wright, Megh (February 6, 2013)."Saturday Night's Children: Brian Doyle-Murray (1979-1980; 1981-1982)".Vulture.Archived from the original on October 28, 2020. RetrievedAugust 23, 2024.
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  77. ^Shales & Miller 2015, pp. 192–193.
  78. ^Schwartz, Tony (January 11, 1981)."Whatever happened to TV's 'Saturday Night Live'?".The New York Times. RetrievedAugust 25, 2024.
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  80. ^Shales & Miller 2015, p. 175.
  81. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, pp. 431–433.
  82. ^DeSantis, Rachel (February 6, 2017)."Saturday Night Live: A history of F-bombs".Entertainment Weekly. RetrievedJuly 31, 2024.
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  84. ^Rabin, Nathan (September 5, 2012)."How Bad Can It Be? Case File #23:Saturday Night Live's aborted 1980-81 season".The A.V. Club. RetrievedAugust 23, 2024.
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  89. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, pp. 449, 457.
  90. ^Hill & Weingrad 1986, pp. 445–446.
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  93. ^Shales & Miller 2015, p. 270.
  94. ^Shales & Miller 2015, p. 219.
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  96. ^Shales & Miller 2015, p. 229.
  97. ^Shales & Miller 2015, pp. 200–202.
  98. ^Kaplan 2014, p. 12.
  99. ^Meaney, Jake (October 14, 2010)."'Saturday Night Live: The Best of Eddie Murphy' Brings on Bursts of Genius".PopMatters.Archived from the original on November 5, 2013. RetrievedJanuary 8, 2022.{{cite magazine}}:Cite magazine requires|magazine= (help)
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  106. ^abSaturday Night Live in the '80s: Lost and Found (Documentary). November 13, 2005. RetrievedAugust 25, 2024.
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Works cited

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