Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Bill Swerski's Superfans" was a recurring sketch about Chicago sports fans on the American sketch comedy program Saturday Night Live. It was a prominent feature from 1991 to 1992, and its characters have made various other appearances since its inception.
Saturday Night Live Samurai: December 13, 1975 John Belushi: John Belushi plays a samurai warrior, who speaks only (mock) Japanese, and wields a katana. He is seen in various occupations ranging from a hotel desk clerk to a tailor. Mel's Char Palace December 20, 1975 Dan Aykroyd: A steakhouse commercial parody featuring Dan Aykroyd. At Mel's ...
Pat Sullivan, Recurring Saturday Night Live characters and sketches introduced 1999–2000 one of The Boston Teens (1999–11) Patrick Fitzwilliam, co-host of Top o' the Morning (2002) Randy Goldman from Wake Up Wakefield! (2001) Rodney "The Zipper" Calzoun from Rialto Grande (2003) Señor Galupe Juameras from The How Do You Say? Ah, Yes ...
Saturday Night Live wrapped season 49 and kicked off its hallmark season 50 in 2024, delivering a slew of viral cameos and sketches along the way. Perhaps the most viral SNL moment of the year ...
From the ever-catchy "Domingo" song to John Mulaney forgetting names, we rounded up the best sketches from NBC's "Saturday Night Live" Season 50.
The sketches always begin by showing the BBC logo with a faux British announcer back-announcing some ridiculously insipid sounding programming on right before it. The show borrows its theme song from a British children's television series called Simon in the Land of Chalk Drawings , though, aside from the concept of a young boy who draws, the ...
One of the most anticipated musical guests of SNL 50 was undoubtedly Chappell Roan, and while fans theorized about what songs she might perform ("I hope she plays 'Hot to Go'") the audience was ...
Saturday Night Live has long mocked the television medium with many fake commercials and parodies of TV shows themselves. Another of the show's frequently used styles of recurring sketches has been the talk show format (e.g. "Brian Fellow's Safari Planet", "The Barry Gibb Talk Show", etc.).