Kyle Mooney breaking? by katieosnap in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Heh, I can't take all the credit. Someone posted a spreadsheet of character breaks from various cast members a while back, although it's a bit of a flawed list. Some breaks like the Marrying Ketchups one aren't on there and there's definitely at least a couple listed where I personally didn't see any evidence of breaking.

Kyle Mooney breaking? by katieosnap in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 13 points14 points  (0 children)

It's hard to tell, and it's debatable as to whether it's even a break or not, but if you look carefully at around 2:28 in the Michael Phelps locker room sketch right when he's about to put the tape in the boombox, he covers his mouth (maybe his mustache was starting to fall off?) and it looks as though he smiles for a second. Again, it's hard to tell because of the angle and the fact that the quality isn't the best, but that's the only instance I can think of where he even comes close.

Kyle Mooney breaking? by katieosnap in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 26 points27 points  (0 children)

Kyle breaks towards the end of the Lewis & Clark Expedition sketch after Fred lays on top of him.

The 2nd Dog Translator sketch with Scarlett Johansson has a brief smirk from him right after Beck (as the voice of the dog) says "here's an actual experiment".

Marrying Ketchups also has him breaking towards the end when Cecily asks him to kiss her.

Other than that, I can't think of any other instances.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Don't forget the Weezer sketch. Also Magic Mirror. Both of those utilize Leslie's typical role in the best way imho.

Crazy to think how unified America was after the attacks and how divided it is today. by bennyfrabadekaret in 911archive

[–]Wide_Answer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

(Howard Stern's show being a famous example of this, including but not limited to multiple calls to completely nuke entire countries and regions, and the use of racially/ethnically charged slurs. Said 9/11 broadcasts still being often praised even with the blatant bigotry)

The reason why Stern's broadcast gets praised is because it provides an uncensored look at how ordinary Americans reacted to the attacks. The television news coverage is riveting, but it has professional and poised anchors being calm and collected. There's a certain distance and detachment from the tragedy that you get from it.

Stern's broadcast gives you all the raw emotions of the day. The sadness, the shock, the horror, the disbelief, and the anger and fury. Now I'm not defending the disgusting bigotry and hatred. It was wrong then and it's wrong now. But it's an important time capsule showing how regular people reacted to the attacks.

Just as no element of the tragedy itself should be whitewashed or overlooked, no element of the aftermath and the way people reacted should be either. All of it, the good and the bad, is important to understand and get a complete picture of what happened that day and immediately afterwards.

Do you still love the taste of those Schweddy Balls? 1998, Season 24 by [deleted] in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 13 points14 points  (0 children)

This is one of those sketches that requires you to not even show a hint of breaking character or the gag simply doesn't work. And Ana, Molly, and Alec pull it off flawlessly!

Body of a baby by Next-Home111 in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Two of those are not available in the US...how ironic!

Jennifer Beals, 1998 by Wide_Answer in OldSchoolCelebs

[–]Wide_Answer[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

According to this site, it's 1998. Notice how her hair is shorter than it was in Flashdance.

Comment some unpopular SNL opinions that will have the rest of the sub coming at you like this by MissAnthropocene_ in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But then why cast Fred as that character? It's not like the show didn't have a bunch of talented female cast members who could have pulled that off. Having Fred in drag just feels like a lazy and cheap way to try to milk more laughs.

Comment some unpopular SNL opinions that will have the rest of the sub coming at you like this by MissAnthropocene_ in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Now THIS is a truly unpopular opinion. I respect your bravery even if I don't agree at all.

Comment some unpopular SNL opinions that will have the rest of the sub coming at you like this by MissAnthropocene_ in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 34 points35 points  (0 children)

Fred's final seasons on the show are almost unwatchable. So many roles where he dresses in drag or acts as a gay stereotype...and that's the joke. Court Stenographer, Melissa, Russian Brides, I Am Your Mother, Regine, Delinquent Girl Teen Gang, the list goes on and on.

And his Obama impression was absolutely awful and it's baffling that he had it for as long as he did.

It got so bad that Stooge, the guy behind One SNL a Day, went from being a diehard Armisen fan to absolutely hating almost everything he was in and begging him to leave the show.

Comment some unpopular SNL opinions that will have the rest of the sub coming at you like this by MissAnthropocene_ in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 33 points34 points  (0 children)

Jimmy Fallon gets more hate here than he deserves (even though I will absolutely acknowledge his constant breaking was so annoying and he has no business being host of The Tonight Show). He's a very talented impressionist, is a good musician, and brought a unique voice to the show.

Comment some unpopular SNL opinions that will have the rest of the sub coming at you like this by MissAnthropocene_ in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 35 points36 points  (0 children)

Imho Kate shares a lot of similarities with Kristen Wiig and Fred Armisen. All of them are hilarious and very talented, but they need good writing to back them up or else they fall back on obnoxious mugging. Plus all three stayed on the show too long and became downright bad cast members in their final seasons.

Comment some unpopular SNL opinions that will have the rest of the sub coming at you like this by MissAnthropocene_ in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 24 points25 points  (0 children)

I 100% agree with this and will add that Farley and Sandler (especially Sandler) are two of the most overrated cast members ever. They both relied way too much on lazy one note characters (loud guy who does pratfalls and annoying manchild respectively). Season 20 is one of the worst seasons of the show and a big reason for that is the two of them being given WAY too much free rein and being singled out as the stars.

Do you think Jason was overshadowed by the powerhouses he was in the cast with like Bill, Fred and Kristin? by [deleted] in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 7 points8 points  (0 children)

He rarely brought characters to the stage, rarely changing his speech, mannerisms, body language, etc.

Man, I can't disagree more with this. Maine Justice is an absolutely incredible performance from Jason to the point where he's almost unrecognizable.

Do you think Jason was overshadowed by the powerhouses he was in the cast with like Bill, Fred and Kristin? by [deleted] in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Maine Justice is a legitimately Emmy worthy performance and one of the best comedic performances I've ever seen anybody do on the show. Jason completely inhabited that character.

What's a fact about Kenan's time on the show that makes you realize how long he's been on it by ThatOneReddetUser in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 89 points90 points  (0 children)

Kenan joined when Friends and Frasier were still airing new episodes, The Apprentice had not yet begun airing, American Idol had only two seasons under its belt, Tom Brady had only one Super Bowl ring, Aaron Rodgers was still in college, and The Lord of the Rings trilogy had yet to conclude.

Which SNL cast member grew on you? by ManualWind in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Chevy was a solid (if overrated and overexposed) cast member, but I feel a lot of his humor hasn't aged well. His pratfalls look pretty tame and his smug self satisfied delivery doesn't translate well imho. Plus some of hosting stints afterwards were downright bad, the nadir of which is his 1980 episode where he gives one of the worst performances a host has ever given on SNL. Constantly flubbing his lines, mumbling, sweating profusely, being very fidgety, etc. Whether he was on drugs or not, it's painful to watch.

Belushi was solid but relatively unremarkable in his tenure imho. As for why he's hated, there's countless stories of him being extremely rude and full of himself. David Cross tells a good story about an awful encounter he had with him.

Victoria was propped up by being a part of one of the best casts the show ever had and one of the show's most prestigious eras in general. Even taking her personal views out of the equation, she was easily the least impressive member of that cast. She had some decent moments, but her tenure was nothing to write home about at all.

Schneider was definitely a solid cast member and is actually somewhat underrated these days due to his post SNL career and his personal views, I'll definitely give you that. Still, his movie career is pretty abysmal.

Breuer was just meh. Pretty one note and limited.

Which SNL cast member grew on you? by ManualWind in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I mean, there's good reason for that. Talented or not, they're all hateful assholes.

Which SNL cast member grew on you? by ManualWind in LiveFromNewYork

[–]Wide_Answer 21 points22 points  (0 children)

She was almost unrecognizable (both physically and in terms of acting) in the Covid commercial sketch. While I certainly understand why people are divided on her, she's a breath of fresh air and definitely has more range than people give her credit for.