October 4, 1997 ā€“ Matthew Perry / Oasis (S23 E2)

Segments are rated on a scale of 1-5 stars

PRACTICE
hoping to become real Spartans, Craig & Arianna practice for tryouts

ā€” A bit of a change of pace by having the Cheerleaders star in a cold opening.
ā€” I got a laugh from the prostate exam part of a cheer that Craig and Arianna do.
ā€” Funny bit about Ariannaā€™s brotherā€™s blow-up doll.
ā€” This feels like a step backwards for this recurring sketch as a whole. Iā€™ve never been crazy about the Cheerleaders sketches that just have Craig and Arianna doing various cheers for four minutes and occasionally having a conversation with each other in between the cheers, which basically sums up the first few sketches they appeared in, as well as tonightā€™s installment. I prefer the more recent (at this point in the showā€™s history) Cheerleaders sketches that involve actual storylines and various characters.
STARS: **Ā½


OPENING MONTAGE
ā€” The theme music is still the same one that was introduced in the preceding weekā€™s season premiere, but the tempo is slowed WAY down tonight. This slower-tempo theme music doesnā€™t fit this opening montage at all. The faster-tempo theme was much more in line with this montageā€™s style.
ā€” I do like the long saxophone note thatā€™s played at the beginning of tonightā€™s theme music, though.


MONOLOGUE
host tries to get NYC residents to help re-create Friends fountain dance

ā€” I like the older woman responding ā€œF*** off!ā€ to Matthewā€™s question about dancing in a water fountain.
ā€” Adam McKay probably wrote this monologue, as we get an appearance from two of his Upright Citizens Brigade buddies, Matt Walsh and Ian Roberts, the latter of whom has probably the funniest part of this monologue, as a guy who all-too-eagerly takes his shirt off as soon as Matthew asks him the water fountain question.
ā€” Funny scene with Matthew and a fat guy jovially dancing with each other in a water fountain while the ā€œFriendsā€ theme song plays.
STARS: ***Ā½


COOKIE DOUGH SPORT
the drink replenishes sugar lost during exercise

ā€” Hilarious concept, replacing Gatorade with cookie dough, of all things.
ā€” I love the cookie dough-themed recreation of scenes from typical Gatorade commercials.
STARS: ****


CELEBRITY JEOPARDY
Michael Keaton (host) & others exasperate Alex Trebek (WIF)

Ā 

ā€” The audience finally gives Normā€™s Burt Reynolds impression the recognition applause it deserves when heā€™s shown during Will-as-Alex-Trebekā€™s introductions to each contestant.
ā€” I like Trebek immediately replacing the ā€œRenaissanceā€ category with the much simpler category ā€œShapesā€.
ā€” I donā€™t understand Darrellā€™s John Travolta impression at all. It sounds nothing like Travolta, and just seems like Darrellā€™s doing a bad variation of his Bill Clinton voice. Once you hear Clinton in his Travolta voice, you canā€™t unhear it.
ā€” Matthewā€™s Michael Keaton impression is cracking me up. I know a lot of SNL fans have found his Keaton impression baffling and nothing like the real thing (it doesnā€™t help that the wig and make-up do nothing to help Matthew resemble Keaton), but I definitely see what heā€™s going for, especially with the hesitant mannerisms and constant eyebrow raises. Itā€™s all making me laugh.
ā€” Michael Keaton: (dramatically) ā€œIā€™m Batman!ā€ Alex Trebek: ā€œNo, you are not.ā€
ā€” I absolutely love how the Audio Daily Double for the ā€œName this continentā€ question is just a man saying ā€œASIAā€ in a booming, monotone voice.
ā€” Wasnā€™t necessary to have Normā€™s Burt Reynolds do the ā€œKick meā€ sign prank a second time.
ā€” A big laugh from Travoltaā€™s ā€œMiso Hornyā€ Final Jeopardy answer.
ā€” Overall, another great Celebrity Jeopardy, though for me, these sketches havenā€™t quite reached five-star status yet. (And Darrellā€™s bad Travolta impression didnā€™t help.) IIRC, these sketches finally become five-star worthy with the next installment of this sketch later this season, even though Norm and his Burt Reynolds impression are unfortunately gone by that point.
STARS: ****Ā½


SARCASM 101
students in (host)ā€™s Sarcasm 101 class get first-hand irony experience

ā€” After the opening sarcastic conversation between Matthew and the students, I like the eventual reveal that the class is named Sarcasm 101. This sarcasm premise seems perfect for Matthew, given his character on ā€œFriendsā€.
ā€” A laugh from Tim telling Ana ā€œWhenever you talk, it makes me wanna have sex with you less.ā€
ā€” Normā€™s off-beat, idiotic one-liners are priceless.
ā€” Interesting twist with Ana turning out to be a plant.
ā€” When Norm is told that he cannot take a bath with Ana, I absolutely love the brief close-up of him just looking at the camera with a hilarious teeth-gritting facial expression
(screencap below). That is an all-time classic Norm Macdonald image to me.

ā€” Yet another hilarious bit from Norm (whoā€™s providing my only real big laughs here, though I am enjoying the sketch), with him going ā€œHeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeey!ā€ You can tell thatā€™s not part of the script, as Tim and some of the background extras are seen being genuinely amused by it. Also, pay attention to Will during that part: while Norm is going ā€œHeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeey!ā€, Will still stays in character and just stares towards the camera in a comically dumbfounded manner.
ā€” Speaking of Normā€™s ā€œHeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeey!ā€, he would later repeat it in his epic monologue when he hosts in season 25.
STARS: ***


THE LADIESā€™ MAN
old-fashioned player Leon Phelps (TIM) takes some calls

Ā 

ā€” Ladies and gentlemen, we have a major recurring character debut!
ā€” The lisp on Timā€™s Leon Phelps is a nice touch.
ā€” When a caller asks how he can spice up his love life, I love Leonā€™s response being a blunt ā€œMay I suggest you consider the butt?ā€, which is followed by the caller immediately hanging up the phone.
ā€” Leon not knowing what self-esteem means is funny.
ā€” Some laughs from Leonā€™s bad, insensitive advice to the overweight female caller.
ā€” Tracyā€™s role as Leonā€™s stage manager ends up becoming a recurring character in these Ladiesā€™ Man sketches, but gets dropped after a few installments and is now forgotten by SNL fans. I myself didnā€™t even remember Tracyā€™s recurring role in these early Ladiesā€™ Man sketches until seeing it just now.
ā€” An overall good debut for this sketch, and Tim already seems to have a good handle on this soon-to-be-big character of his.
STARS: ***Ā½


SPACE, THE INFINITE FRONTIER WITH HARRY CARAY
Harry Caray (WIF) drifts into sci-fi

ā€” I have mixed feelings about seeing this sketch officially become recurring. On one hand, Willā€™s Caray is always a hoot and the first installment of this sketch with Jeff Goldblum was a bonafide classic, but on the other hand, I already know theyā€™ll never top that first installment and Iā€™m worried the follow-ups will just come off as inferior imitations.
ā€” I got a good laugh from Carayā€™s ā€œDonā€™t jerk me around, Ronald, itā€™s a simple question!ā€ line.
ā€” Overall, this was very funny, but yeah, doesnā€™t measure up to the first installment. While Harry Carey had lots of funny absurd statements and questions tonight as usual, none of them really stood out as classic and some of them just felt like thinly-altered versions of some of the memorable lines from the first installment.
STARS: ****


WEEKEND UPDATE

ā€” Norm surprisingly does a Janet Reno joke that, for once, doesnā€™t end with a punchline about her being a man.
ā€” Normā€™s ā€œforgetting to go to an evangelical group meetingā€ joke was so bad in itself, but he made it so damn funny with his delivery. Itā€™s that weird Norm magic.
ā€” No guest commentaries tonight.
STARS: ***Ā½


MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs ā€œDonā€™t Go Awayā€


MTV NEWS
Goat Boy sings with Willie Nelson (WIF) & Julio Iglesias (host)

ā€” I think this is the only time Kincaid appears outside of season 22, but Iā€™m not sure.
ā€” Kincaid AND Goat Boy sketch in the same sketch? A rare occurrence of two unrelated recurring sketches colliding.
ā€” Kincaidā€™s typical routine of reminiscing about pop culture is receiving dead silence from tonightā€™s audience. I still find it somewhat funny, though her routine feels more forced than usual in this sketch. If this indeed ends up being her final appearance, no big loss there. Iā€™m surprised by how tolerant Iā€™ve been of her in my reviews, though, considering I used to find her pretty insufferable when I was younger. Goat Boy, on the other hand, is the exact opposite. I used to find him pretty funny when I was younger, but he now does nothing for me.
ā€” Hmm, the audience gives Kincaid nothing in this sketch, yet a minute later, they laugh heartily at the weak, one-note Goat Boy shtick that ran its course long ago. Go figure.
ā€” Matthewā€™s Julio Iglesias impression is pretty funny. In fact, heā€™s been providing my ONLY laughs here.
ā€” This feels like a jumbled, messy, unfunny mishmash of a sketch.
STARS: *Ā½


THE KEVIN FRANKLIN SHOW
The Kevin Franklin Show will be different from the other black talk shows

ā€” Interestingly, the title of this sketch, The Kevin Franklin Show, was actually used on SNL before, in another Tim Meadows-hosted talk show sketch back in the Danny Aiello episode from season 21. (Even the ā€œThe Kevin Franklin Showā€ logo is the exact same) However, the Kevin Franklin character that Tim played in that season 21 sketch appears to be different from the Kevin Franklin heā€™s playing in tonightā€™s sketch. He has a completely different look and personality. Makes me wonder why they bothered reusing the ā€œThe Kevin Franklin Showā€ title.
ā€” A good parody of interchangeable urban talk shows from this era.
ā€” Timā€™s always able to get laughs with silly-but-likable characterizations like this.
STARS: ***


FRIENDS
host doesnā€™t care for COQā€™s fey Chandler characterization in Friends skit

ā€” Iā€™m surprised tonightā€™s obligatory ā€œFriendsā€ parody is being buried so late in the episode. I feel like in more recent years, this would be the first sketch right after the monologue.
ā€” Iā€™ve seen much better Jennifer Aniston impressions in more recent years (including on SNL itself), but I can see what Cheri is going for with the Rachel mannerisms, especially the head-bobbing, which is pretty funny.
ā€” Facially, Ana could not look any less like Phoebe, but her vocal imitation is pretty solid.
ā€” Chrisā€™ Ross impression is dead-on and hilarious.
ā€” Speaking of Chris, heā€™s surprisingly been having a quiet season so far. Heā€™s barely appeared in any sketches in these two episodes. Maybe I should be happy about that, considering the very next episode has him debuting a certain dreaded recurring character that would go on to define his SNL tenure (you can probably guess which character Iā€™m speaking of).
ā€” Speaking of underused cast members, the recently-promoted-to-repertory-player Colin Quinn is just now making his first live appearance of the whole season, after practically being shut out of the season premiere.
ā€” Colinā€™s inaccurate foppish imitation of Chandler is very funny.
ā€” I like Matthew visibly being thrown off by Colinā€™s baffling take on Chandler, but trying to stay in character as Joey.
ā€” Yikes, Matthew screws up what was supposed to be a big laugh line. He tells Chris ā€œDo yourself a favor and stick to characters that TALK!ā€, when the latter part of that line was obviously supposed to be ā€œcharacters that DONā€™T TALKā€. As you can imagine, this botched line results in confused silence from the audience. Oof. You can tell Matthew realized he screwed up the line, as he delivers his next line in an awkward, halting manner, as if he was distracted while probably thinking in his head ā€œWait, did I just fuck up that last line?ā€ SNL would later show the dress rehearsal version of the second half of this sketch in reruns, where Matthew delivers his ā€œcharacters that donā€™t talkā€ line correctly and the sketch in general flows better.
ā€” The ending is also a bit different in reruns. In the live version Iā€™m currently watching, the sketch ends with Matthew entering the set of ā€œFriendsā€ while saying in Colinā€™s foppish Chandler voice ā€œOoh-hoo, Chandlerā€™s home!ā€, before the screen does a freeze-frame as the ā€œFriendsā€ ending music sting plays. The rerun version has Matthewā€™s ā€œOoh-hoo, Chandlerā€™s home!ā€ line being followed by a few more foppish lines from him before the freeze-frame and music sting occur.
STARS: *** for the live version, ***Ā½ for the dress rehearsal version shown in reruns


THE GOLORDS
puppet siblings Mike & Sissy Golord rescue kidnap victim Bill Clinton

Ā  Ā 

ā€” An out-of-the-ordinary segment for SNL, which eventually becomes a recurring segment this season.
ā€” The Asian whorehouse scene has some good laughs, especially the male Golord getting a ā€œquickieā€.
ā€” I love the differing reactions that Bill Clinton and his impostor have to being shown a picture of Paula Jones.
ā€” Some very funny gory visuals when the Golords are beating up the villains, such as one villainā€™s brains getting blown out all over the wall behind him when he gets shot (which receives groaning laughter from the audience) and another villain getting his heart pulled out through his stomach.
ā€” Overall, this was surprisingly hilarious. When I last saw these Golords segments ages ago, I remember kinda dismissing them as an unnecessary alternative to TV Funhouse, but I now have gained much more appreciation for them during tonightā€™s viewing. Iā€™m looking forward to seeing more installments of this.
STARS: ****


MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs ā€œAcquiesceā€


GOOD MORNING WITH LIZA!
unstable Liza Minnelli (MOS) & Woody Allen (host)

ā€” Meh, yet another example of SNLā€™s lazy habit of giving celebrity impressions their own talk show sketch. I can occasionally let it slide when itā€™s great stuff like Space The Infinite Frontier, but the idea of a talk show sketch hosted by Liza Minnelli doesnā€™t exactly excite me.
ā€” I am kinda liking Mollyā€™s unhinged, quivery take on Liza Minnelli. The sketch itself isnā€™t doing much for me, though.
ā€” Yet another funny celebrity impression from Matthew tonight, with him now doing a spot-on Woody Allen.
STARS: **


DISCOVERING FAITH
a sober Kevin Franklin announces his new show- Discovering Faith

ā€” I like how Tim-as-Kevin-Franklinā€™s hyped-up descriptions of ā€œunusual, innovativeā€ things his talk show will contain are actually just generic things that every talk show has.
ā€” Interesting twist with a now-solemn and rehabilitated Kevin Franklin condemning his former self and announcing a retooled version of his show. The incomplete feel of the first Kevin Franklin Show promo earlier tonight now makes sense, as it just turns out they were waiting until later in the night to give us the payoff. This is more clever than funny, but still fairly well-done.
ā€” Funny line from Kevin Franklin about not legally being allowed anywhere near a party anymore.
STARS: ***


GOODNIGHTS


IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
ā€” An average episode. Not much else I can think of to say, other than it was a satisfying-enough episode with a few strong highlights that were buried among a sea of averageness, and there were a few sketches I couldā€™ve done without.


MY PERSONAL CHOICE OF ā€œBEST OFā€ MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


HOW THIS EPISODE STACKS UP AGAINST THE PRECEDING ONE (Sylvester Stallone)
a mild step down


My full set of screencaps for this episode is here


TOMORROW
Brendan Fraser

16 Replies to ā€œOctober 4, 1997 ā€“ Matthew Perry / Oasis (S23 E2)ā€

  1. I remember not really liking this one when I first saw it sinceā€”aside from the two Perry-centric bitsā€”it seemed to be another episode chockablock with repeat or soon to be repeated material. And pretty tepid installments of them too, aside from the first Ladies Man. I might like it more on rewatch. Itā€™s funny how David Schwimmer has still hosted the best episode out of all the Friends cast, imo.

    I think Sarcasm 101 is the birth of the persona Norm would adopt after he left SNL and aged more. The intentionally corny delivery, the weird gritted teeth expression, and the ā€œHeeeeeeeeey!ā€ are all there. I donā€™t remember him doing those as much before this.

  2. Iā€™ve never found Matthew Perry very funny and I canā€™t say this episode did anything to change my mind. Out-of-the-studio monologues are always an interesting departure, but this one was mostly cheesy and dragged down by dull ā€œlolgayā€ humor. I did not care for any of the sketches starring him ā€“ the most memorable part of Sarcasm 101 for me was that the version they put on Youtube this summer uses the dress cut until near the end:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ZW-AZ2mNeA

    Molly Shannon gives a strong performance in the Liza talk show sketch, enough to make me appreciate her trying new things beyond the usual one-note types, but the whole thing is sad, not funny. Iā€™m not surprised this didnā€™t take off.

    Aside from always entertaining Harry Caray, Timā€™s Kirk Franklin appearance is the highlight for me. I like that the joke stretched over two sketches, and he manages to sell the inane mugging and the shift to the more serious side. Ladiesā€™ Man is fun, but not really a showcase for all of Timā€™s talent.

    The Golords is certainly a curio piece ā€“ itā€™s one of those bits I had no memory of. This type of crassness and deadpan gore predates the Team America movie by almost a decade. I must say Ana and Will are perfect casting. I saw another one later in this season that I didnā€™t care as much for, but this one was worth the watch. Do we know who made Golords?

    1. Pretty sure Iā€™ve always heard one of the writers from that season Andrew Steele (who would become one of the head writers at one point in time) was the guy behind The Golords. He later went on to create some of the weirder projects Will Ferrell starred in like ā€œSpoils of Babylonā€ and ā€œCasa de mi Padreā€ and a bunch of FunnyorDie stuff.

    2. Thanks. I never would have known otherwise. That Spoils of Babylon looks interestingā€¦and explains why there were a lot of soap opera parodies during his time as headwriter.

  3. The Kattan Ross impression always cracks me up.

    I also have never understood the Travolta impression Darrell Hammond is trying to do in this episode. While I agree Matthew looks nothing like Michael Keaton, I understand what heā€™s trying to do in his impression.

  4. It seems like this era just sort of let Tim do his own thing once or twice in an episode, and those usually end up being a highlight. Also, I remember really liking another one of the S:TIF sketches from next season with Joan Allen.

    Oasis playing a song that was only available as a b-side at this particular time remains classic.

    1. I had mostly forgotten about the Space sketch with Joan Allen aside from the real Harry Carayā€™s death being addressed, but I rewatched it after seeing this comment. It was quite good

  5. Man, that Cookie Dough Gatorade commercial is fantastic.

    And we finally have The Ladies Man! Itā€™s incredible how Timā€™s most iconic SNL character came SO late in his tenure. Heā€™s around for 3 more seasons so weā€™ll get a lot more of him. Iā€™d have to say heā€™s my favorite Tim Meadows character, definitely.

    The Friends parody is also pretty darn funny. Colinā€™s take on Chandler just gets me every time. Cheriā€™s Rachel is OK, but yeah, itā€™s no Vanessa Bayer šŸ™‚

  6. How odd that Jennifer Aniston was chronologically last to host a SNL and was one of the best, and Matt LeBlanc never hosted. Makes me think of how only 3 of the 4 ā€œWill & Graceā€ principals would host.

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