The director’s latest film feels like the capstone to his career. PLUS: First trailers for ‘Whalefall’ and ‘The Social Reckoning,’ Jake Johnson and Damon Wayans Jr. are together again, and we’re going back to ‘Jump Street’ ... ‘24 Jump Street.’
Josh Brolin can host Saturday Night Live anytime he wants.
Seriously. It’s ridiculous that it’s been twelve years since he last hosted. He nails his sketches, he gives the show his all, and he’s not afraid to take off his clothes. Several times. It’s also nice to have an episode of SNL where the host isn’t someone controversial or someone who the Internet is going to be bizarrely weird about.
Pop culture writer Alisha Grauso succinctly summed up Brolin’s eagerness to give SNL his all:
SNL writers: So, for the 1st skit, we were thinking- Josh Brolin: Yes SNL: What? Brolin: I'll do it SNL: But you h- Brolin: I'm in SNL: ...er. Ok. Anyway, for the 2nd skit, w- Brolin: Fuckin' DOWN. SNL: O...k. We thought we m- Brolin: Let's do it, FREAK FLAGS ALL AROUND, BABY!!
— @alishagrauso.bsky.social (@AlishaGrauso) March 10, 2024
This was Brolin’s third time hosting SNL. Let’s make him a member of the Five-Timers Club. (Also, the man has fantastic hair.)
This episode also lit up social media thanks to the cold open featuring Scarlett Johansson as Katie Britt, sending up the senator’s response to the State of the Union. Johansson nailed the portrayal, but I wish we had seen a cast member like Chloe Fineman or Sarah Sherman in the role.
While the episode kicked off with a Weekend Update connection (Johansson, of course, is married to Update co-anchor Colin Jost), Update itself was brisk. According to Saturday Night Network, this was the first time since Feb. 26, 2022, that Update featured no guests.
• • •
SNL announced that Ramy Youssef will host its March 30 episode. With that being Easter weekend, there won’t be a Deep SNL Thoughts to cover the episode. Taking a few weekends off only to come back on a holiday weekend is a weird move.
A week of pop culture in one newsletter
Join the hundreds of subscribers who already get the free newsletter every Friday. (Plus bonus editions on Sundays and Mondays.)
Popculturology is a free newsletter fueled by my love of pop culture. If you’re already a subscriber, please consider becoming a supporter by upgrading your account.
Wow, it’s so great seeing Punkie Johnson playing Kamala Harris, I thought to myself as the cold open began. SNL is finally past its obsession with stunt casting.
On a purely performance level, it’s hard to complain about Johansson as Britt. Great work. Great writing. But I worry, especially going into a presidential election, that celebrity cameos are like Pringles to Lorne Michaels. Once he pops, can he stop? It’s also always unfortunate to see a cool moment like this go to someone who isn’t in the cast.
Snore more years: Is it too late to ditch Mikey Day as Joe Biden? It isn’t working. It never worked.
THE MONOLOGUE
It’s been twelve years since Josh Brolin last hosted SNL, and he wasted no time making it clear to anyone watching that it had been twelve years too long.
Brolin clearly loves hosting SNL. He threw himself into every sketch, kicking off his time hosting the show by stripping down to his boxer briefs and socks and hopping into an ice bath. (This wasn’t the last time Brolin would take his clothes off this episode.)
Read the full story
Sign up
now to read the full story and get access to all posts for
subscribers only.
The director’s latest film feels like the capstone to his career. PLUS: First trailers for ‘Whalefall’ and ‘The Social Reckoning,’ Jake Johnson and Damon Wayans Jr. are together again, and we’re going back to ‘Jump Street’ ... ‘24 Jump Street.’
The pop star is halfway to an EGOT. PLUS: ‘Supergirl’ tickets take flight, new trailers for ‘The End of Oak Street,’ ‘Onslaught’ and ‘How to Rob a Bank,’ and Olivia Munn says farewell to ... Jon Stewart.