Amy Poehler, Tina Fey and Seth Meyers challenge Colin Jost and Michael to a Joke Off
The ‘SNL’ vet brought her ‘Weekend Update’ wives with her as she hosted the show for a third time.
The standup comedian delivered a bounce-back episode while the show shook up who plays the president.
After the first dud of an episode in a long time last week, Saturday Night Live got back on track with Nate Bargatze hosting this week. Two major things we need to talk about: Nate Bargatze is a very good SNL host. And Mikey Day is a not very good Joe Biden.
As I’ve mentioned since he was announced as an SNL host, Bargatze wouldn’t be in this position in a world where the actors weren’t on strike. And that’s unfortunate, since Bargatze — who I would consider a successful but not A-list standup comedian — effortlessly slipped into his role as host this episode. His timing was great, his line readings were natural and he looked like he belonged in the SNL cast. I shouldn’t be surprised, as some of the best SNL hosts are standup comedians. (Unless you’re Dave Chappelle, then you don’t participate in most of the sketches that aren’t just retreads of characters from your TV show.)
While Bargatze is a one-and-done moment for SNL (unless they bring him back to host in the future, which I’d welcome), Mikey Day assuming the mantle of Joe Biden is something that will have an effect on the show for not only this season but possibly years to come.
Let’s take a few steps back. A long time ago (1991!), Kevin Nealon played Biden in one sketch. Biden didn’t become a major SNL role until he was running for president in 2007 and became Barack Obama’s vice president, which then saw Jason Sudeikis deliver what is still the show’s iconic version of Biden. Sudeikis played Biden until he left SNL, occasionally reappearing as him in the years after.
SNL then went through a few temporary Bidens. Woody Harrelson played Biden when hosted the show in 2019 and returned twice more to keep doing so. John Mulaney played Biden when he hosted that year too.
Here’s where we reach one of the biggest blunders of SNL’s celebrity cameo era: Jim Carrey as Joe Biden. As Lorne Michaels gave away major SNL roles to established actors — Donald Trump to Alec Baldwin, Kamala Harris to Maya Rudolph — he brought in Carrey to play Biden through the rest of the 2020 election. Carrey’s portrayal of Biden was a disaster, and it often looked like the actor had no idea who Joe Biden was.
In the aftermath of Carrey’s departure, Alex Moffat briefly assumed the role of Biden, playing him until SNL found its best Biden since Sudeikis: James Austin Johnson.
The only problem with Johnson is that he’s also SNL’s Donald Trump — and he’s the best Donald Trump the show has ever had, a mimicry on the same level as Will Ferrell’s George W. Bush. Michaels and SNL must understand that having Johnson play Biden and Trump as the duo heads toward an inevitable electoral rematch would be an impossible task. Sure Baldwin played Trump and Bill O’Reilly in the same sketch once, but neither of those portrayals were good and that would be an unsustainable plan.
So unfortunately it appears that we’ve seen the last of Johnson as Biden. Mikey Day is a fantastic SNL castmember, but his Biden isn’t great …
Multiple parts of Day’s Biden confused me. Does Joe Biden love Halloween? Is this an established fact? A lot of choices in this portrayal remind me of Carrey’s Biden. I appreciate that Day might be trying to craft a character beyond a caricature, but this isn’t working.
Nate Bargatze’s monologue was a version of his standup routine, which is a pretty normal thing for a standup comedian to do when they host SNL. The interesting part is that it went on 9 minutes and 35 seconds.
That’s long for an SNL monologue. But was it historically long?
The past two monologue’s this season clocked in at 6 minutes and 52 seconds for Pete Davidson (a standup comedian himself) and 4 minutes and 53 seconds for Bad Bunny.
OK, I thought, maybe Davidson just didn’t want to do a long routine. How do other standup comedians compare to Bargatze’s monologue?
OK, so Louis CK and Mulaney both cracked the 9-minute mark. And it turns out Bargatze’s monologue was brief compared to two other comedians.
Dave Chappelle doesn’t host SNL. SNL hosts Dave Chappelle. So it’s no surprise that his three monologues clocked in at 11 minutes and 37 seconds, 16 minutes and 36 seconds, and 15 minutes and 22 seconds.
I had a distant memory of Dane Cook delivering an especially long monologue when he hosted SNL back in 2005, but it doesn’t appear that his monologue is available on YouTube. I did wind up finding a listing for it on Apple TV, which advertised it as being 26 minutes long. Twenty-six minutes! That’s almost a third of an episode of SNL.
I don’t know if this truly was the standout sketch of the week, but I loved seeing Sarah Sherman as Fran Drescher. Sherman has quickly become one of my favorite SNL castmembers over the past few seasons, and it was great seeing her have a few moments to shine this episode.
This sketch was one of the reasons I found Bargatze to be such a great host. His demeanor was perfect to play a white chef who not only somehow won a soul food face off but is then showered with honors like a Howard University letterman jacket.
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A Stab at Love would be a successful Hallmark movie, right? Hallmark audiences love these romantic comedies. A dash of what’s made the murder podcast genre a booming market would only propel a Hallmark movie to the next level.
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Once again, Bargatze’s cadence is what sold this sketch. The timing, the pauses, the refusal to answer Kenan Thompson’s characters question of “and the slaves, sir, what of them?”
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With James Austin Johnson no longer playing Joe Biden, we didn’t get to see him until later this episode when he was alongside Andrew Dismukes and Bargatze singing about hanging out at a lake beach.
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Sarah Sherman mercilessly making fun of Colin Jost has already become a classic Weekend Update genre. (Like Leslie Jones doing the same before her.) This sketch found a new way to keep that joke going, with Sherman playing J.J. Gordon, Jost’s agent with awful opportunities.
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I could not have guessed where this sketch was going to go when it began. With Chloe Fineman as pregnant woman going into labor on a plane, I thought we were in store for a sketch focused on that. Nope. Turns out it was time for a debate over whether lawyer or engineer is the “second best job” after doctor.
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After seeing multiple Please Don’t Destroy segments not air during SNL and instead get posted on YouTube under the “cut for time” banner last season, the trio is already three for three this season. They were even featured in the credits again.
I’m not sure what changed (a Peacock movie to promote?), but Lorne Michaels has elevated Please Don’t Destroy to their highest level of prominence during their SNL tenure. At least they’re repaying him by eating dog food. Sorry, Dawg Food.
Timothée Chalamet hosts SNL on Nov. 11 with boygenius as the musical guest.
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