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"Saturday Night Live at Home" refers to the final three episodes of the 45th season of the late-night comedy program Saturday Night Live. [1] Whereas SNL typically consists of sketches performed live in-studio, these "at Home" episodes were recorded remotely due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on television; none of the sketches were performed live for any of these episodes, and none of ...
After Meyers' departure, Colin Jost, a staff writer for the show since 2005 (and head writer for seasons 38 and 39), joined the cast on March 1, 2014, as the eighth featured player that season, and as Meyers' successor on Weekend Update, co-anchoring with Strong. [2]
It stars Tom Hanks as Saturday Night Live character David S. Pumpkins. The 21-minute [1] special was written by and also features Mikey Day, Bobby Moynihan, and Streeter Seidell. Peter Dinklage narrates the story, which follows a brother and sister who go trick-or-treating, meet Pumpkins and catch the troublemakers who had disrupted Halloween.
[1] This season saw the first appearances of three frequent SNL hosts: John Goodman, [2] who auditioned to be a cast member on SNL during the 1980–81 season [3] [4] and frequently appeared on SNL in the mid-1990s as Linda Tripp; Christopher Walken; [5] and Alec Baldwin [6] (who later surpassed Steve Martin as the most frequent SNL host). [7]
Wolf (who joined the writing staff in 1993) left the show after the Bill Pulman-hosted episode after about three calendar years. [10] This was Norm Hiscock's final season as a writer. Hiscock (joining the writing staff in 1994) departed from the series after three seasons. [11]
It also broke Spider-Man ' s records ($114.8 million) for the highest weekend debut for a summer release, for a PG-13 rated film, and of all-time as well as Spider-Man 2 ' s record ($88.2 million) for the highest weekend debut in July and The Incredibles ($70.7 million) ' record for the highest weekend debut for a Walt Disney Studios film.
Moynihan said they wanted to make a Halloween-themed version of the viral video "Little Superstar" [1] with a character who was a "Santa Claus for Halloween". [2] The writers said the character's middle initial "S" stands for Simon. [3] The writers bought a pumpkin-themed suit for $12.99 at Party City, intending to use something that looked ...
1: January 9, 1994: Mrs. Doubtfire: $11,536,024 [2] 2: January 16, 1994: Philadelphia: $13,817,010: Philadelphia reached No. 1 in its first weekend of wide release and fourth overall week. It was the highest-grossing wide debut in January [3] [4] 3: January 23, 1994: $8,830,605: Philadelphia remained number 1 with a margin of just $32,487 over ...