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SNL's original cast |
Saturday Night Live and I go way back. To the beginning it's, not mine). I started watching in the first season. I was in college and SNL soon became a big talking point in many young people’s lives. Truth be told the show — originally featuring such comedy legends as Gilda Radner, John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd — really screwed with Saturday nights. Prime partying time was (I imagine this still to be the case) from ten through one. That meant that right smack in the middle of the time you should be going nuts on the dance floor, or chatting up a lovely young woman or doing lines (of coke, silly) there was an irresistible comedy show on television. There were no recording devices, no DVRs, no You Tube or streaming service to allow you to catch up later. It was then or waiting for a re-run which would likewise be on when you were at a club or kegger. I remember parties coming to virtual halt as many partiers huddled around a TV set (they were generally small in those day, HDTV was years away). And it was the brightest of us who really appreciated SNL and its irreverence.
SNL was — sorry to trot out the cliche — groundbreaking. The closest we’d seen to it was the Smothers Brothers and it’s short-lived run on prime time in the late sixties. SNL was unfettered, original, sometimes political and replete with great comic actors.
The first five years or so was the first golden age of SNL. By the eighties the show had began to fade in my consciousness. Monty Python had come across the pond to demonstrate comedy that was beyond groundbreaking, more like earth-shattering. Sitcoms were starting to have a bite to them and comedy films were enjoying a revival. I only occasionally watched SNL, the big stars had left for other ventures. But then a second golden age came to the show beginning in the late nineties and extending about ten years into the 21st century. The cast had always included a superstar or two such as Eddie Murphy, Dana Carvey, Mike Myers, Martin Short and Phil Hartman. But as the 2000s got rolling there was an embarrassment of riches. Will Ferrell, Fred Armisen, Kristen Wiig, Bill Hader, Will Forte, Chris Parnell, Kenan Thompson (remarkably, he’s still there), Andy Samberg, Kate McKinnon, Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, Cecily Strong, Seth Meyer, Jason Sudekis, Tracy Morgan and Maya Rudolph. Those are comedy all stars.
SNL again became must-see television. I had a particular interest because Samberg and two writers (Jorma Taccone and Akiva Schaffer) who joined the show when he did in 2005 were former students of mine. I came to honor their efforts, I stayed because they made me laugh, particularly with digital shorts always a highlight of the show.
Along with original cast members Radner and Belushi, I consider Wiig and Hader to be in the Mount Rushmore of SNL cast members and they were two of the shining stars of that era.
In the last five or so years the show has badly regressed. I’ve tried watching a couple of times a year and found the show to be unoriginal and tedious. At it’s best eighty percent of an episode is top quality. At it’s worst, which is where it’s at today, maybe ten per cent is worth a look. Good writing is the key to scripted material whether it is a dramatic film or a sketch comedy show. SNL does not have good writers these days, nor has it had for much of its run. But even more importantly, like great sports team, you need your superstars. When the show was flagging in the eighties, Eddie Murphy kept it propped up. Later the likes of Meyers and Carvey did the trick. When there’ve been an abundance of comedy greats the show has flourished. Easier said than done. SNL has been good for maybe twenty of it’s fifty seasons. Truly excellent for half of that.
One of the problems is that they’ll have a funny bit but will keep it going too long. Perhaps sketches need to fill a certain block of time, say seven minutes. The first three minutes are funny but we’ve got the joke and there’s nothing more to be done with it, but the sketch goes on trying our patience rather than making us laugh. This was what was so good about Monty Python. Skits lasted as long as they needed to and not a second more. Get the laugh and get out. SNL can be like a comic who has killed with a joke then keeps repeating it.
The show has also long since lost it’s originality. The political bite is long gone. That’s what made the Digital Shorts so damn good, no one had done anything quite like them before. Whether it was Lazy Sunday, Laser Cats or Dick in a Box it was audacious and original.
One of SNL’s greatest contributions to our culture is the mega stars it has produced. Bill Murray, Murphy, Carvey, Samberg, Fey, Morgan, Murphy, Rudolph et al who have graced films, other TV shows and concert venues. Making the giant leap from obscurity to SNL can make it a much smaller leap to stardom in other places.
Sunday night NBC aired a three-hour long 50th anniversary schedule. While I was disappointed that there weren’t more of the “best of” clips that many of us love, it was a solid show. There were three notable absences: Hader, Aykroyd and Carvey. It seemed the show decided to punish Hader for his absence by including barely a glimpse of him in any retrospective footage.
I wondered about some of the celebrities prominently shown in the audience. It was great to get a quick look at Jack Nicholson, but one hardly associates him with the show. Not sure what Kevin Costner and his young trophy wife were doing there and I guess Steven Speilberg was in attendance based on his friendship with SNL’s long-time show runner, Lorne Michaels. Herein is a problem with the SNL of today, it is more about the glitz than the political satire. We get an endless run of celebrity cameos but very little controversy. A lot is self referential. It's a safe, establishment show, the opposite of what it started as.
Frankly I’m SNL’d out after watching the special and seeing all the articles about the show’s birthday, many in the New York Times.
SNL has a complicated legacy. It seems a large part of it’s import today stems from the show’s age. It’s been around from the Ford administration through Trumpy II. People are forever referencing it as if what it has to say is any more relevant or interesting or funny than what you get watching The Daily Show, Letterman, Seth Meyers, or Last Week Tonight With John Oliver. News outlets refer to what or who was on SNL seemingly out of habit. CNN will often have stories on who or what SNL has poked fun at as if there were newsworthy. Sometimes it seems SNL is still on not because we want it, but it would see weird without it. There’s little interesting or provocative anymore.
But as Sunday's night special demonstrated there are plenty of memories. Some are pretty damn funny.