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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 ...
Toonces was set to return as "Toonces the Texting Cat" for an OnStar promotion during an SNL 35th Anniversary special in 2010, but plans to produce this show were scrapped. [2] On the September 27, 2008, episode of Saturday Night Live, the stock footage of a car going over a cliff was reused in a different sketch. It was edited so that after ...
In her welcomed return to “Saturday Night Live,” Kate McKinnon revived a few funny characters from her time on the show, including cat lady Barbara DeDrew. ... her 11-year run and some of them ...
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 ...
It's hard to believe that Saturday Night Live has been on the air for five decades, but it has been 50 years since SNL moved into Studio 8H. In that time, the sketch show has created a bevy of ...
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.).
Saturday Night Live tackled all the current TikTok trends in a parody featuring a handful of fun cameos on its October 19 episode. The nearly four-minute sketch, aptly titled “TikTok,” started ...
The characters all have thick Southern accents, and make many references to alligators (an alligator is also featured in the show's logo and as a live-hand puppet in the second sketch) and the bayou. In the sketch's first instance, Judge Boudreaux refers to a character going to school "up there" in Connecticut , but says she could also "learn a ...