April 14, 2012 – Josh Brolin / Gotye (S37 E19)

Segments are rated on a scale of 1-5 stars

BAR
in a bar, Mitt Romney (JAS) says “Good Riddance” to vanquished GOP foes

— Bill’s Rick Perry, regarding once being the frontrunner in the republican primaries: “I might’ve won the darn thing if I didn’t take a deuce every time I opened my mouth.”
— Kristen’s entrance as Michele Bachmann actually gets pretty big applause from the audience. Another thing that reminds me we’re in the homestretch of Kristen’s SNL tenure, and that her popularity among the audience is getting a little too big for the show, which tends to happen to some beloved SNL veterans towards the end of their tenure.
— Okay, I’m seeing that some of the other cast members’ walk-ons as republican presidential candidates are also getting some audience applause, though not as much as Kristen’s entrance, so I still maintain that the big applause she received has partly to do with her popularity as a cast member.
— A fun and out-of-the-ordinary setting for a cold opening centered around the republican presidential candidates, and I like how this is summing up all the things each losing candidate infamously did wrong during their campaign. In hindsight, something about the mock-melancholy, reminiscent, end-of-an-era atmosphere of this cold opening involving key members of this SNL cast also feels fitting for what ends up being near the end of the Kristen Wiig/Andy Samberg era.
— A nice group LFNY at the end, back in the days when group LFNYs were actually rare, and thus, were more meaningful when they occurred. From what I hear, group LFNYs have become a weekly thing in SNL’s most recent seasons, which is something I’m not looking forward to when I reach those seasons in this SNL project of mine. It annoyed me enough when group LFNYs became a regular thing for one year in season 39.
STARS: ****


MONOLOGUE
host presents live clip from Men In Black III with JAP as Will Smith

— Believe it or not, this is Jay’s first live speaking role in FOUR EPISODES. Unfortunately, it’s just him doing his overplayed Will Smith impression. Still, at least they threw Jay a bone after how horrible his airtime had gotten lately.
— Nothing much to say about this overall monologue at all. It wasn’t awful, but it pretty much just came and went for me.
STARS: **


HBO FIRST LOOK
13 year-old boy (ANS) makes sure there’s enough sex in Game Of Thrones

— I’m not 100% sure, but I think I heard that this was written by Kumail Nanjiani, during a guest writing stint he had at SNL this week.
— Pretty funny concept with Game Of Thrones’ creative consultant being a typical immature 13-year-old boy. Andy can play roles like this to perfection in his sleep by this late stage of his SNL tenure.
— Another example of how odd it feels hearing the audience be hesitant to laugh at the then-new Kate McKinnon, when you’re aware in hindsight of what a huge audience favorite she’d later go on to be. In this Game Of Thrones piece, the brief bit with Kate saying “Adam says this is my good side” while having her arms above and below her breasts barely got a single laugh from the audience, when it would’ve gotten an easy laugh from them had Kate done that in her subsequent seasons.
STARS: ***


THE CALIFORNIANS
Angeleno soap opera drama centers on driving directions

   

— Hoooooooooooooooooo, boy. The debut of not only one of my absolute least favorite recurring sketches of this SNL era, but one of my absolute least favorite recurring sketches of SNL history. As if this SNL era needed yet another bad recurring sketch that’s going to regularly make me state “(*groan*)” at the beginning of my review of each installment. (I’ve long ago lost count of how many of this era’s recurring sketches make me do that, though I get the feeling a huge majority of them are recurring sketches that happen to star Fred and/or Kristen, or are recurring sketches written by James Anderson and/or Kent Sublette. And yes, I realize there’s plenty of overlap between the list of this era’s bad Armisen/Wiig-starring recurring sketches and the list of this era’s bad Anderson/Sublette-written recurring sketches.)
— Given how Kristen is one of the performers heavily associated with the Californians sketches (at least to me), it’s easy to forget that it actually debuted in the homestretch of her SNL tenure. After the two Californians sketches this season, Kristen’s only appearances in any subsequent Californians installments are when she hosts in season 38 and when a Californians sketch is performed in SNL’s 40th Anniversary Special.
— After Fred’s first comically-unintelligible delivery of “What are you doing here?”, the performers lose their composure and start breaking for the remainder of the first scene within this sketch. I have mixed reactions to that. The breaking is kinda making me chuckle, but at the same time, I feel too left-out, as something about this particular instance of breaking feels way too inside joke-y and self-indulgent for my likes, which is certainly nothing new for Fred’s later seasons.
— Ugh at the running gag with each character giving elaborate California-specific driving directions. Not remotely funny to me.
— Also not funny to me is the other running gag of this sketch, where we get various mock-dramatic sequences of the camera showing a close-up of each character mugging into the camera while a music sting plays. That’s also starting to give me vibes of another recurring sketch that spoofed soap operas, Besos Y Lagrimas, which makes sense, as one of the co-writers of these Californians sketches, James Anderson, also wrote Besos Y Lagrimas. At least Besos Y Lagrimas worked for me in its debut (and only in its debut). I can’t say the same for this Californians debut so far.
— And YET ANOTHER thing not funny to me is yet another running gag of this sketch, with how each scene within this sketch ends with the characters crowding around a mirror to admire their own looks. Yep, it’s safe to say this Californians debut is a big ol’ bust for me. And, from what I remember of subsequent installments of this sketch, it only gets even worse from here.
— A few minutes after the aforementioned bit with the performers starting to break, and Kristen’s still fighting her case of the giggles.
— At least I’m finding Kenan’s characterization somewhat funny and likable.
STARS: *½


AMERICA’S NEXT TOP EMPIRE STATE OF MIND PARODY ARTIST
Jay-Z (JAP) selects the show’s winner

— ls SNL aware that Weird Al Yankovic dropped the mustache and glasses many years before this point? Who knows, maybe SNL just felt that Andy portraying Weird Al with the mustache and glasses would be more comical-looking and more recognizable to viewers.
— Yikes, Kenan’s impression of the Chocolate Rain guy, Tay Zonday, is fucking wretched. He’s not putting any effort into imitating Zonday’s trademark deep voice.
— Speaking of bad impressions, I never liked Abby’s Ke$ha impression either. It’s surprisingly off for a performer who’s skilled at impressions.
— Okay, we at least get Jay’s always-dead-on Jay-Z impression, but, much like Jay’s Will Smith, SNL has done this impression of Jay’s to death by this point.
— I like Bobby’s dancing in the background during Vanessa’s singing of the chorus.
— I got a mild laugh from the bit with Fred’s redundant song getting impatiently cut off by Andy’s Weird Al.
— Meh, the concept of this sketch is starting to get a little old, despite the somewhat fun atmosphere. And there’s nothing I’m finding all that funny about how Jay’s Jay-Z gives each performance a perfect score.
STARS: **


LASER CATS 7
feline sci-fi mines Steven Spielberg’s [real] filmography

— Our seventh and final Laser Cats short, given the fact that this is Andy’s seventh and final season, and it’s been a tradition to do one Laser Cats short per year ever since Andy and Bill’s first season.
— A great evil villain accent from Josh.
— I love how this Laser Cats short is a comedic homage to Steven Spielberg’s filmography. And they way they’re executing it is fun.
— Bill, to an about-to-depart-from-Earth Andy: “What about your wife and kids?!?” Andy, after a long, pensive, dramatic pause: “F(*bleep*)k ’em.”
— The way this Laser Cats film ends with Andy’s character parting ways with Bill’s character by taking off in a spaceship is a fitting conclusion to this whole Laser Cats series. I wonder if this shows that Andy must’ve known at the time that he was leaving SNL.
STARS: ****


MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest & Kimbra [real] perform “Somebody That I Used To Know”


WEEKEND UPDATE
SEM asks North Korea “What Are You Doing?” regarding failed rocket launch

Garth & Kat throw together some echoic songs celebrating spring

— We get another variation of “Really?!?”, with Seth introducing a new segment titled “What Are You Doing?”
— Meh, Seth’s overall “What Are You Doing?” segment completely washed right over me. I didn’t get a single laugh. Very bland humor there.
— I always like Seth breaking out a comical German accent during a joke about Germany. You can tell he always has fun doing that accent.
— (*Garth & Kat appear, Stooge grabs the laptop he’s watching this episode on and chucks it straight through his closed bedroom window while the Garth & Kat commentary is still playing on the laptop screen*)
— Also, didn’t we already get enough self-indulgent Armisen/Wiig breaking during that Californians mess earlier tonight? Oh, geez, and now I just realized this episode contains TWO of my least favorite recurring pieces of both this era and SNL history: The Californians and Garth & Kat. (*Stooge regathers his now-smashed laptop from outside, brings it back into his bedroom, and re-chucks it out of the already-smashed bedroom window*) All we need next is a Vogelchecks sketch to make the Trifecta Of Suck complete. (My reaction to that would be me throwing myself out of my already-smashed bedroom window.)
— 40 minutes later, this Garth & Kat commentary is STILL going on. Fucking hell.
— This is the second consecutive episode with a short Update that only contained one guest commentary. Well, a relatively short Update in this particular case. I can never call a Weekend Update with Garth & Kat all that short, because of the insane amount of airtime Garth & Kat’s commentaries freely eat up.
STARS: **


PIERS MORGAN TONIGHT
Ice-T (FRA), Ozzie Guillen (host) & others speak out

— Jason has been fairly invisible in tonight’s episode. I remember, when this episode originally aired, I felt Jason came off like he was so ready to leave SNL. There were rumors heavily circulating at the time that he, Andy, and Kristen were going to be leaving at the end of this season. As we know now, out of those three, only Kristen and Andy leave at the end of this season. Jason returns for one more season, and we had to wait until literally just three or four days before that season’s premiere to find that out (I kid you not). He must’ve reeeeaaaaaalllly been on the fence regarding whether he wanted to stay at SNL or not.
— I love Jason’s reaction to finding out that Casey Anthony has not gotten thrown in jail for the rest of her life like he incorrectly assumed.
— The return of Fred’s Ice-T impression. I liked it the first time, but his impression has really slipped tonight. I keep hearing too much of Fred’s natural voice in there.
— Jay’s thankfully getting a lot of airtime tonight, and for once in this episode, we’re getting an impression of his that SNL hasn’t run into the ground yet.
— I got a really good laugh from Nasim-as-Kim-Kardashian’s upbeat delivery of “I’m a zero threat!”
— Why are we seeing the return of Andy as the Super Bowl Wire Dancer guy? It made sense to have him in the previous Piers Morgan Tonight sketch, as that was just a week after that year’s Super Bowl, but by tonight’s episode, two months after that Super Bowl, wasn’t the Wire Dancer’s 15 minutes of fame already over?
— Did Andy unintentionally cut off Taran’s line just now? Sure seemed like it, as Taran was in the middle of doing his usual “Wha…wha…wha…” stammering routine that he often does as Piers Morgan, before Andy suddenly started speaking over him.
— Kind of a meh sketch overall, especially compared to the first Piers Morgan Tonight installment from earlier this season.
STARS: **


WOODRIDGE HIGH
in one hallway of a high school, everything happens in slow motion

— Some good and convincing slow motion acting and effects during Taran and Nasim’s entrance, and I like the concept of this sketch.
— When this originally aired, I remember that song that kept playing throughout this sketch got stuck in my head for the longest time.
— Fantastic execution from Bill when demonstrating where the hallway’s slow motion zone begins and ends.
STARS: ***½


GOTYE BACKSTAGE
ANS & TAK reenact “Somebody That I Used To Know” music video for musical guest

 

— Not only do we get a second billed Digital Short in the same episode, which is a rarity, but the usual opening “An SNL Digital Short” title screen is modified this time to state “Another SNL Digital Short”, with the word “Another” being displayed via special effect and in a special font.
— I’m really enjoying Andy and Taran’s “Somebody That I Used To Know” spoof/homage. Andy and Taran are a blast here. I also like how this feels kinda like a passing of the torch between the about-to-leave-the-show Andy and up-and-comer Taran. I remember that, back in these days when this originally aired, stuff like this made me so excited for Taran’s future on SNL. There were even some points during these days where I was 100% convinced Taran was going to be SNL’s next Will Ferrell.
— Gotye’s a good sport here.
— I laughed so much at Taran, in that wig and painted face, suddenly interrupting Gotye’s reading of a newspaper by popping into the shot and lip-syncing the “Used to knoooooowww!” lyric into Gotye’s face.
— Speaking of Taran in that wig and painted face, it’s making him look VERY Mark McKinney (screencap below).

— Overall, given the greatly diminished general quality of this season’s Digital Shorts, it’s nice to see that this episode was able to produce TWO strong shorts. This Gotye short can also be considered the final “normal” Digital Short during Andy’s tenure as a cast member. The only two remaining Digital Shorts before Andy leaves are special shorts, as one is a retrospective and the other is a special sequel to the first breakout Digital Short.
STARS: ****


MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Eyes Wide Open”


PROM
Principal Frye & student-loving teacher (host) address prom attendees

— Jay’s surprisingly big night continues, with this being his FOURTH major live role tonight. A huge leap from him going three consecutive episodes without uttering a single word in any of his live appearances.
— This sketch has become recurring an entire year-and-a-half after its debut in the season 36 Paul Rudd episode.
— A laugh from Vanessa’s cheesy disclosure of how her high school prom consisted of her parents taking her to Arby’s.
— I’m glad Jay ditched this character’s trait of making a sharp inhale sound between each sentence, which got on my last nerves in the first installment of this sketch. This character comes off funnier without that trait.
— Much like his first time hosting, Josh, despite giving performances that are just fine, hasn’t been standing out much in tonight’s sketches, but that’s an exception in this sketch. He’s really solid and funny here.
— Jay starts helplessly cracking up during his report about the iguana.
— The audience is really into this sketch. Actually, they’ve been lively all night, come to think of it, but especially so in this sketch.
STARS: ***


GOODNIGHTS


IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— A very up-and-down first half, which also contained a few wretched recurring or soon-to-be-recurring things, but the show mostly improved in the second half.


MY PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


RATED SEGMENTS RANKED FROM BEST TO WORST
Laser Cats 7
Gotye Backstage
Bar
Woodridge High
HBO First Look
Prom
Weekend Update
Piers Morgan Tonight
Monologue
America’s Next Top Empire State Of Mind Parody Artist
The Californians


HOW THIS EPISODE STACKS UP AGAINST THE PRECEDING ONE (Sofia Vergara)
a very slight step down


My full set of screencaps for this episode is here


TOMORROW
Eli Manning

October 18, 2008 – Josh Brolin / Adele (S34 E5)

Segments are rated on a scale of 1-5 stars

PALIN PRESS CONFERENCE
TIF yields press conference bit to Sarah Palin [real]; Alec Baldwin cameo

— Some good lines from Tina Fey’s Sarah Palin here, though, unlike her previous appearances, there aren’t any classic one-liners here.
— Funny bit with Tina’s Palin taking the time to entertain the press with “some fancy pageant walkin’”.
— And here we have the heavily-hyped Sarah Palin cameo, which I remember dreading back when it was originally announced before this episode aired.
— A pretty funny Mark Wahlberg walk-on, looking for Andy Samberg after the famous sketch Andy did about him in the preceding episode.
— The cameos continue, as we now we get a surprise Alec Baldwin cameo (back in the days when you could still say “a surprise Alec Baldwin cameo”).
— Good bit with Alec mistaking the real Sarah Palin for Tina while badmouthing Palin.
— I love Tina’s panicked delivery of “Byeeee!” when hearing the real Palin is there.
— A blink-and-miss-it visual of Tina and Palin both being onscreen together as they pass by each other, which I’m guessing disappointed some viewers who were expecting more interaction between the two. I personally say it’s probably for the best that this is the closest to an onscreen interaction we got between them. Plus, SNL has a very hit-and-miss track record with their “celebrity meets their impersonator” pieces.
STARS: ***½


MONOLOGUE
host tells how he prepared to portray George W. Bush; Oliver Stone cameo

— Very lame opening joke where the movie about a prominent political figure that Josh Brolin mentions he was recently in turns out to be No Country For Old Men based on John McCain.
— An okay though very basic bit with Josh breaking down how to do a Bush impression.
— A sudden Oliver Stone cameo, which unfortunately prevents this from being the third consecutive episode with a real monologue that only involves the host. The Oliver Stone cameo is brief enough, though, that this can still be mostly considered a host-only monologue.
STARS: ***


MACGRUBER
unexpected stock portfolio collapse becomes a distraction to MacGruber

— Good to see a MacGruber runner relating to the stock market crash.
— A big laugh from the obligatory end-of-sketch explosion cutting off MacGruber’s “What the f–” reaction to seeing the current state of his stocks.
STARS: ****


SURPRISE
at a restaurant, surprise-loving Sue spoils (host)’s marriage proposal

 

— This character of Kristen’s has officially become recurring.
— If you remember, I didn’t care for the first installment of this sketch when I reviewed it. And if my memory of how the subsequent installments of this sketch goes serves correct, I’m sure I’ll care even less for them.
— Yep. I’m now a few minutes into this sketch, and I haven’t been caring for it AT ALL. Just feels like a pale imitation of the already-overrated-to-me first installment of this sketch.
— (*groan*) Here we have yet another display of Fred’s classic Asian stereotype routine, this time complete with the ol’-fashioned “mispronouncing ‘r’s and ‘l’s” trait.
— The bit with Kristen’s Sue smashing a glass over her head to keep herself quiet, which actually made me laugh a lot in the first installment of this sketch, was pulled off too awkwardly tonight.
— We even get a repeat of the gag from the first installment where Sue jumps through a window multiple times, which, much like the glass-smashing-over-the-head bit, came off even less funnier in this second installment.
STARS: *


MACGRUBER
mugging takes priority over escape from unstable mafia hideout

   

— That theme song lyric about toilet paper being a luxury for the now-broke MacGruber hits a little too close to home during our current times in 2020.
— I love MacGruber smashing a beer bottle in half to threaten his two assistants to finally give him their watches.
STARS: ****


THE SUZE ORMAN SHOW
destitute (host) receives unhelpful advice from Suze Orman (KRW)

— SNL is gradually turning into The Kristen Wiig Show as we speak.
— Fitting to do this sketch during the financial crisis going on at the time.
— Odd coincidence: all three times a Suze Orman sketch has appeared by this point of SNL’s run, it was in an episode that also had a MacGruber runner (the Jonah Hill and Shia LaBeouf episodes from the preceding season, and now tonight’s episode).
— As usual, Kristen’s portrayal of Suze Orman is very fun, as are all of her line deliveries.
— Funny lines from Josh about how bad his life is now that he’s broke, though these lines feel like a variation of the lines Jason previously said as a barrel-wearing Richard Fuld about how bad his life is now that he’s broke, in an earlier Weekend Update from this season.
— A good laugh from the Master Pussies book that Kristen’s Orman shows.
STARS: ***½


WAHLBERG’S CONFRONTATION
in criticizing ANS’s impression of him, Mark Wahlberg [real] confirms it

— And here we have our obligatory confrontation between Mark Wahlberg and Andy.
— Not only is this the “celebrity meets their impersonator” piece that I basically thanked SNL for refraining from doing with Tina Fey and Sarah Palin earlier tonight, but this is also a “celebrity claims they’re nothing like their impersonator’s impression of them, then goes on to act exactly like their impersonator’s impression of them” piece. Meh.
— Even for a “celebrity claims they’re nothing like their impersonator’s impression of them, then goes on to act exactly like their impersonator’s impression of them” piece, this feels lazily executed.
— I do at least like the touch of how, after telling Josh “Say hi to your mutha for me, alright?”, Wahlberg adds in “…and to your stepmutha”, a reference to the fact that Josh’s stepmother is Barbra Streisand.
STARS: **


I’M NO ANGEL
pregnant barfly (AMP) embodies Gregg Allman’s (WLF) perfume

— Ah, a very memorable Amy Poehler sketch.
— A great way to get mileage out of Amy’s real-life pregnancy.
— I’m always interested in dialogue-less sketches (or mostly dialogue-less, in this case).
— The catchy “I’m No Angel” song playing is adding to the entertainment of all the very funny stuff happening onscreen.
— An odd minor thing I’ve always noticed Casey doing in the background of this sketch: after her jealous waitress character storms off, Casey seems kinda lost on where she’s supposed to go, then she strangely ducks behind the bar counter, where we can no longer see her, and then………she just stays under the bar counter? Why does she do that? And does she seriously stay hidden under that bar counter for the whole remainder of the sketch? I again ask, why?
— I like this exchange between Josh and Amy: “When’s your baby due?” Amy: “Yesterday.” Josh: (*looks into the camera with a sleazy smile*) “PERFECT.”
— I remember, back when this episode originally aired, some people in an online live discussion thread for this episode wondered if Josh’s chair breaking and him falling onto the floor after a pregnant Amy gets off of his lap was a real blooper. It seems obvious to me that that was an intentional part of this sketch. (Plus, why else would the camera hold on Josh just sitting there doing nothing for a few seconds before his chair breaks?)
— Very funny walk-on at the end from Will as Gregg Allman, capping this sketch off really well.
STARS: ****½


MACGRUBER
MacGruber’s anal ping-pong ball launch is a desperate money-raising act

— I love the haggard, destitute state MacGruber is now in.
— The whole bit with the ping-pong ball trick MacGruber does is absolutely HILARIOUS. One of the funniest things I’ve ever seen in a MacGruber short, which is saying something.
— Kristen’s disturbed facial expression after MacGruber’s ping-pong ball trick is absolutely perfect (the last above screencap for this short).
STARS: *****


MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Chasing Pavements”


WEEKEND UPDATE
presidential candidate Tim Calhoun extends his harebrained hustings

Jean K. Jean offers his perspective on European issues of the day

after Sarah Palin [real] demurs, AMP performs the prospective veep’s rap

— TIM CALHOUN! Sadly, this ends up being his final appearance, despite Will still remaining on SNL for over a season-and-a-half after this episode.
— Will-as-Calhoun’s delivery of “Boo!” when revealing that’s his middle name had me howling.
— I love Calhoun’s “blind Pole” bit, especially his line about how it helps that she, the “blind Pole”, has no sense of smell.
— Calhoun’s overall commentary killed as always. I’m gonna miss the hell out of this character. For me, he knocked it out of the park in every single appearance. One of the consistently funniest recurring characters in SNL history.
— I continue to find Jean K. Jean’s Update commentaries to be pretty good, and carried by Kenan’s charm. I particularly like his comments about Carla Bruni.
— A second Sarah Palin appearance tonight.
— Yes! Here we have Amy’s legendary Sarah Palin rap, one of my absolute favorite things that both Amy and SNL in general have ever done.
— Not only are we getting fantastic comical rapping and lyrics from Amy, but they’re being accompanied by some awesome visuals, such as Fred and Andy as the Eskimos, Jason as a dancing, snowmachine outfit-wearing Todd Palin, and a “mother-humpin’” moose (that’s Bobby inside that costume, by the way…and if you look closely through the eyes of the costume, you can even see Bobby’s distinctive eyes and eyebrows) getting shot by Amy.
— Overall, an absolutely classic Palin rap from Amy. And the fact that she did all of this while THIS far into her pregnancy (she gives birth the following Saturday), AND in the same episode she did that I’m No Angel sketch, is incredible, and speaks volumes of her commitment as a performer and what a trouper she is.
STARS: ****


FART FACE
businessmen Carl (WLF), Jerry (BIH), Jim (host) fling “fart face” epithet

— Oh, here comes a sketch that was fairly notorious back in these days. This sketch was infamous for both focusing on such a dumb, immature subject matter AND bombing horribly with both the audience and general SNL fans. Bill would appear on a talk show a month or so after this episode’s original airing (I can’t remember which talk show it was, but I want to say Letterman), and he talked about how awkward and self-conscious he felt performing this sketch to a dead audience, especially since he was aware that this episode was being watched by a higher number of people than usual, due to Sarah Palin’s heavily-hyped guest appearance (this was one of the highest-rated SNL episodes ever at the time). All that being said about this sketch, I fully disclose that I’ve always LOVED this sketch, and will defend it to the grave. This sketch has always been one of my biggest SNL guilty pleasures, so much so, that I can recite pretty much the entire sketch by heart.
— As I always say, the rare pairing of Will and Bill is always a treat, and is a pairing SNL should’ve done more often.
— The ridiculousness of Josh’s mature businessman character plugging his ears like a child so he can’t hear Will and Bill’s secret conversation is funny.
— I love the following exchange, regarding Josh’s continued use of the nickname “Fart Face” for Will’s Carl character: Bill: “If you’ve spent any time with Carl, you’d know his face does not smell of farts…but rather a face.” Josh: “Odor-wise, I’d agree, but I’m talking about appearance. See, I believe that if a fart did have a face, it would look EXACTLY like Fart Face.” Will: “How dare you!”
— The way such a ridiculously immature concept is being performed so dead-seriously by Will, Bill, and Josh is making this sketch work so well.
— Yet another great exchange: Josh: “You served me the Kool-Aid, Jerry, I just drank it.” Bill: “Well, spit it out!” Josh: “No way. I don’t wanna stain Fart Face’s rug.” Will: “Jim, you know full well that the Kool-Aid we’re referring to is metaphorical! And spitting it out will not damage anything in this office!”
— Hilarious turn with Will and Bill suddenly pulling a “fart face turnaround” on Josh.
— I am absolutely loving how insanely intense this is now getting, especially Will’s over-the-top screaming during his and Bill’s taunting of Josh. An unleashed Will Forte ranting and raving like a madman NEVER fails.
— Hmm, the audience isn’t quite as dead during this sketch as I had remembered, though their laughter is very tepid, especially compared to how much I’m busting a gut during this sketch.
— Love the ending.
— Overall, this sketch continues to be one of my favorite SNL guilty pleasures. (I feel a little less guilty about it nowadays, after the sketch’s notoriety seems to have gradually been forgotten over the years, but I still feel guilty for the rating I’m about to give this sketch, a rating that I’m sure will raise some eyebrows). I love this sketch SO much.
STARS: *****


NARC SCHOOL
(host), (KRW), (WLF), every other student is actually a cop

— I remember that, back when this originally aired, I felt the melody of this sketch’s theme song sounded awfully similar to the melody of the MacGruber theme songs, but I don’t hear it quite as much now, 12 years later.
— I love Will’s delivery of “Are you guuyys talking druuuuuuuugs?”
— The narcs’ bad attempts to pass themselves off as teen students are pretty funny.
— Darrell (who I’m starting to forget is still on the show this season) makes his ONLY appearance of the night in a very brief, non-impression, almost-pointless role. He’s coming off SO awkward in this role that there’s almost a “So bad, it’s good” quality to his performance.
STARS: ***


READITRADE.COM
ReadiTrade.com is the online financial tool of choice for panic sellers

— Tonight’s episode continues to get TONS of topical mileage out of the financial crisis going on. That makes this episode an interesting time capsule in hindsight.
— When Jason’s spokesman character is listing off things you can sell at ReadiTrade.com, I got a laugh from him saying “sell drugs” in a discreet, whispery voice.
— A funny bit where, when we’re being shown how easy it is to use the ReadiTrade.com website, the ReadiTrade website page on Kenan’s laptop is just a simplistic page that has the word “SELL” written in big letters.
— Even though it wasn’t that funny in itself, something about Fred’s freeze-framed yell of “WHYYYYYYYYY?!?” cracked me up.
— Overall, despite the above highlights, I found this commercial as a whole to be a tad forgettable.
STARS: **½


NEW YORK UNDERGROUND
Trevor Dix (BIH) overhypes a ho-hum musician (FRA)

— Well…THIS is certainly different for this SNL era.
— I absolutely love Bill’s delivery and voice in this.
— Great photos of various fictional bands (the one in the third above screencap for this sketch includes yet another sighting of a bearded then-writer Colin Jost, and I believe our very first onscreen John Mulaney SNL sighting).
— Even though Fred’s portions of this short almost feel like an early preview of the annoying, hard-to-figure, self-indulgent shtick that would dominate the later years of his SNL tenure, it’s working for me in the unique, pre-taped format of this particular short. Also, this short, especially with the involvement of both Bill and Fred, feels kinda like a precursor to “Documentary Now”. Fred would later have an even better “Documentary Now” precursor on SNL, with the Ian Rubbish pre-tape he does in his final season.
— Bill, when making pretentious analogies in regards to how much Fred’s singing moves us: “We’re an obese 15-year-old seeing ourselves naked for the first time.”
— I found this overall piece to be fairly solid, and a fun change of pace for this SNL era. I wonder if they originally intended this to become a recurring segment. We end up never seeing this return.
STARS: ***½


MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Cold Shoulder”


FALL FOLIAGE
(host) can’t interest former co-workers in a tour of the fall foliage

— Another office sketch tonight. I almost wonder if this is the same set from the Fart Face sketch.
— Speaking of the Fart Face sketch, this Fall Foliage sketch is something else that I remember kinda bombing with the audience (though this never gained the notoriety of Fart Face), at least the first half of the sketch.
— A big night for Will. He’s appeared in almost EVERY SINGLE SEGMENT tonight, even including a photo in the New York Underground piece. This just may be the busiest night he’s ever had during his entire SNL tenure.
— I’m liking the subtly-creepy-but-jovial nature of Josh’s character, and Josh is performing this well.
— Hmm, a fairly interesting recurring bit throughout this sketch, with the employees at the table each answering “No” one by one.
— Good turn after Josh leaves, where it’s revealed that he’s just some random nut who last worked at this company 13 years ago and just shows up every fall. This turn has awoken the dead audience.
— When Bobby asks “And he just comes back every fall?”, I love Will’s delivery of his answer: “Yyyyyyup.” A funny little moment that caps off Will’s strong and very busy night in this episode.
— The whole “He allowed me to be raped” part with a deadpan Kenan probably won’t sit well with some people, especially nowadays, but I admit to getting laughs from it.
STARS: ***


GOODNIGHTS


IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— This episode contained an impressive number of pieces that I find fantastic (the MacGruber short with the ping-pong ball trick, I’m No Angel, Tim Calhoun, Amy Poehler’s Sarah Palin rap, Fart Face), though I’d say the episode as a whole was just pretty good, due to the number of average or weak pieces that made up the rest of the episode. Still not much to complain about, though.


MY PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


HOW THIS EPISODE STACKS UP AGAINST THE PRECEDING ONE (Anne Hathaway)
a slight step down


My full set of screencaps for this episode is here


TOMORROW
Jon Hamm makes his hosting debut