Tina Fey on SNL: 3 Sketches You Have to See


In its season finale, this 43rd season of Saturday Night Live went out the same way it came in: Unsure how best to tackle Trumps America. Its been a rocky road all season, and Im not convinced its entirely the shows fault. Pushed to huge ratings highs due to its Trump-related content in Season 42, the show had to figure out how to keep up with a world in which new events, scandals, and real-life operatic twists threatened to make each weeks topical cold open stale by airtime. The show also had to contend with large shake-ups in front of the camera as well as behind it. All of this led to a show that would more than occasionally connect, but also flounder as often as it succeeded.

In Tina Fey, the show had a beloved host to close out the season and seed some good will heading into the summer break. What unfolded said more about SNL the show than anything else. Here are the three sketches people will be talking over the next week.

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Tina Fey Monologue

Why pick a segment I actually didnt like? Because arguing what this monologue theoretically doesthat the core cast has often been lost this season as the show has morphed into Celebrity Saturday Night Liveis like arguing with the weather itself. I can simultaneously say that Id like to see which SNL cast member could bring the freshest approach to Donald Trump and completely understand why the show gets the biggest names it can to populate the screen for 90 live minutes of television each week. This is a show designed to get ratings to sell ads to make money. Arguing that Luke Null should get more screen time than Benedict Cumberbatch is something that I believe and also not the hill upon which Im going to die.

Whats objectionable here is that this is the second Tina Fey-hosted episode that has served to essentially haze the youngest members of the cast. In 2013, her monologue and then New Cast Member Or Arcade Fire sketch kicked off a season that saw half of those featured players not return the following season. Blaming that one-two punch for their departures isnt fair, but neither is putting them on blast in their first episode. (Even then, you could argue, Well, at least they were onscreen.) Two episodes isnt a trend, but its still bizarre to see Fey-led episodes dedicate so much energy to comedically antagonize a subset of the cast that serves as a vital link between what the show is now and what it will become. Sketches like this dont poison the well, but they certainly dont help the cause.

Donald Trump Robert Mueller Cold Open

This week marked the one-year anniversary of the Robert Mueller investigation and potentially the end of the Alec-Baldwin-As-Trump Era on SNL. Now, anything can happen over the summer, and since this is 2018, saying anything can happen isnt hyperbole so much as recognition of reality. Its possible that Trump wont be in the White House. Its possible Baldwin simply wont want to play him anymore. Its possible Lorne Michaels goes a different way come Season 44. So why not mark this end of this controversial year by paying homage to one of the most controversial TV series finales of all time?

Kate McKinnons Rudy Giuliani is one of her greatest impressions, with the over-exaggerated eyes and gnarled fingers painting a picture of a completely unhinged man. But the audio for Journeys classic Dont Stop Believin' was so loud that most of her lines were drowned out, which suppressed initial laughter. Things got better later in the sketch, especially by the time Alex Moffats Eric Trump tried to parallel park his child-sized three-wheeler outside the diner.

But theres been something off about every sketch that has featured Trump all season. Having Baldwin, Robert De Niro, and Ben Stiller in the same sketch will make for great headlines, but theres nothing more to satirize at this level anymore. SNLs real strength this season has been dramatizing the schism in everyday America because of what those in power have been doing. Showing Baldwin simply repeat dialogue from Twitter doesnt provide any catharsis, but simply serves a reminder of whats already happening in front of our eyes. Who knows what next season will bring. But in any case, it probably shouldnt be more of this.

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Full disclosure: I couldnt tell you a single line Mikey Day has said in any of these segments all season. Not a one. If I learned he had been systematically working his way through the Cheesecake Factory menu all season, I wouldnt be surprised. Thats because all eyes and ears have been on Alex Moffat all year, with his Eric Trump having turned into one of the truly great Season 43 creations.

Ive written before about the specificity of movement Moffat brings to the table, with his gestures a half-second behind Days at all times yielding a seemingly spontaneous performance that is in fact calibrated like a finely-tuned violin. Just watch how he turns Days attempt at a high-five into a synchronized wave to an imaginary crowd: theres choreography at work thats amazing for both its execution and its consistency. For everything in this season finale that harped on its present state, here was one that showed its path to continued success in the future.