Season 37, Episode 21
Will Ferrell is hosting tonight, which makes for his
third time hosting the show, and the third time that a SNL alum has hosted this season. Those numbers don’t really mean
anything, other than the fact that I don’t have much to say about Ferrell’s
hosting ability going into tonight’s episode. He’s obviously familiar with the
show, and as with most hosts, it generally means that the show will bring it’s
A-game and/or some of Ferrell’s previously recurring characters. Let’s see
which one(s) it is.
Monologue: Awww,
somebody brought their mommy. Okay, I kid, because that moment was actually
kind of sweet, be that Ferrell’s actual mother or not. However, this was also a
highly unoriginal sketch, as it banked on an upcoming holiday AND Ferrell
acting like an obnoxious boob. Obviously “obnoxious boob” is what Ferrell is
known for, and at times it’s a shtick that works, but deploying the go-to move
this early in the show does not bode well for a variety throughout the night. (Also,
that reminds me that I need to find an e-card to send to my own mom…)
One-A-Day Night
Cold Medicine: Case in point, this commercial, where the joke is just
Ferrell yell-sneezing at random intervals. It’s lazy and unfunny, and I can’t believe
this is what the show chose to follow up the monologue.
LGBT Prom:
Okay, admission. I never got any of The Culp sketches. Even in the show’s glory
days, when all of the other sketches would work, I would never really enjoy
these sketches. I think it has something to do with the fact that I’ve never
been a fan of “laughing at white people” comedy. I usually find it stiff and
stilted in a way that doesn’t make for good laughs, and this was no exception.
ESPN Classic - Ladies
Long Drive Championship: This marks Cameo #2 of an SNL alum, as well as
another reminder that Lorne Michaels needlessly cut Will Forte from the show.
This wasn’t a particularly strong sketch – skipping back and forth between some
random (and admittedly pretty funny) maxi pad quips and some not-all-that-funny
jokes about an unprepared reporter (which was weirdly set during the OJ Simpson
car chase) – made it a bit awkward to watch. But Forte killed all of his lines
tonight, and reminded me that the anchor section is always the only good parts
of these ESPN Classic sketches. (Oh, there was also something in here about
ladies’ golf, but the less we say about that, the better.)
Digital Short –
100th Short: As a sucker for callback comedy, this was right up
my alley. Yes, the song was random and goofy in the sorts of ways that don’t
usually benefit the Digital Shorts, but here the randomness worked. While it
would have been easy for the show to just name check its most famous and viral
shorts (which of course they did), but they also weren’t afraid to reach into
the back catalog and include some more subtle references the lesser-known one.
It was a bunch of mad-cap tomfoolery, and I enjoyed it.
Weekend Update:
In addition to Seth Meyers doing his usual shtick, we got…Three jokes in a row
about President Obama support for gay marriage, because apparently the writers
couldn’t be bother coming up with a few other news stories to mock…A “Really?”
segment about the controversial “breastfeeding mom” Time magazine cover, which like all “Really?” sketches since Amy
Poehler left is just a mixed bag of one-liners...And A ”Get in the Cage” with
Liam Neeson. Sure, it was an excuse for Neeson to shill his fare The Grey (on
DVD Tuesday!) and Battleship, but who cares? It was another fantastic offering,
even if said offering seem to be using the host-guest dynamic less and less.
2012 Funkytown
Debate: This is one of those weird little SNL sketches that was enjoyable,
even if it didn’t make me laugh once. The actual joke - with fuddy-duddy Janet
Nichols getting passed over for the funkier candidates – didn’t really get any
traction, and there weren’t even any pauses for the audience to laugh. It was
still enjoyable though, because of how well the show sold the funky aspect of
everything, and here specificity was key. (But hey, after two SNL Alum cameo appearance, and then two
sketches with famous stars dropping in, it’s apparently time for the musical
host to make his second comedic appearance with Usher showing up. So that’s all
of the bases covered there, right?)
Broadway Sizzle:
Continuing the pairing off of sketches that seems to be going on tonight, we
got a second sketch that was musically inclined in nature. However, unlike “2012
Funkytown Debate”, this one wasn’t enjoyable in the slightest. It’s set on a
fake show that doesn’t make any sense (and not in a fun way), and the joke is a
close-minded mockery of gender-bending song choices. Come on, it’s 2012. Guys
singing songs meant for females just isn’t funny anymore.
Anniversary Party:
I’ll never understand how this “pass the mic” format sketch keeps coming back
year after year, but it does, and tonight was just another excitable example of
why this sketch belongs in the Seventh Layer of Hell along with “Secret Word”.
(Well, except for Will Forte’s appearance, where he eked out another win from a
sketch that didn’t really seem to work. Hey, it’s another sketch pair!)
Almost Pizza:
Not only has this one been aired before, but also it’s like the show is mocking
us by brining out something good to close off an episode that’s so bad.
This is going to be another one of those times where I won’t
bother putting up a Best/Worst sketch breakdown, because frankly all of the
live sketches weren’t that great. (I try not to include Digital Shorts and
Weekend Update in the list if I can help it.) Even more disappointing was the
fact that the show continues to bury its host. Doing so with Ferrell, who’s
arguably the host the show would least want to bury, it’s just a poor choice.
We were robbed of so many possibly great recurring sketches, and while I’m all
for originality, I think the show would have been better served by just
sticking to the safe choice this time around.
Next Week: Mick
Jagger hosts (yes, really), and he brings in Arcade Fire, Foo Fighters, and
Jeff Beck to back him up for the musical performance. This is going to be
biggest quality discrepancy between music and sketches ever.
Quotes, Etc.:
“That should be me! Vice-Presidents never get to go
anywhere!”
“I would have just finished hooking up the Slurpee
machine, and setting into a Charles in
Charge marathon, and that ol’ penguin would come waddling in and say ‘Put
your damn pants on, we’re about to bombe blah-blah-blahaibity-blee-blah.”
“Literally or figuratively?” “What’s the one where
there’s a real fire?”
“It’s the downstairs patch for your baby hatch.”
“Once again, it’s 1994.”
“I see London, I see China, I see one happy vagina.”
“Stay Free Maxi Pads: When your uterine lining looks like
the elevator from The Shining.”
“This week President Obama was finally outed as a Democrat.”
“Okay buddy, we get it – you’re not a Muslim.”
“This photo doesn’t say ‘I am loving mother,’ it says
‘I’m the creepy mother from Game of Thrones.’”
“If you wanted a great photo, you would have Photoshopped
out the chair.”
“I have a hard time believing he was harassed, because
$12,000 sounds like a number you reach after some haggling.”
“Spare me your pity, Neeces Pieces.”
“Don’t condescend me, Tall Bono!”
“You played characters named Rhas-Az-Guhl and
Qui-Gong-Jin, which are the names of two of my three testicles.” “I’m afraid to
ask, but what do you call the third one?” “We call him The Fixer. Let’s just
say he makes problems go away.”
“So let this be a lesson kids: Drugs make you very
strong.”
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