Season 38, Episode 14
Christoph Waltz
hosts and tries to prove wrong everybody’s fears that he’s a poor decision for a
host.
Cold Open –
Carnival Cruise: Let’s set aside the fact that the story of the stranded
cruise ship and its passengers was over-reported, and that there were other
more important stories that the media should have focused on and thus SNL should have skewered. That’s not
there fault; as a current events sketch show, they go where the buzz is. (Which
may explain the oddly loud and enthusiastic applause at the beginning of this
sketch.) The sketch itself was nicely structured alternating between the cruise
directors attempting to keep the passengers happy with updates and jokes, and
the on board entertainment trying (and failing) to provide fresh entertainment.
It’s not the most creative way to do a sketch, but what really makes this one work
is that it nails the desperation that the passengers and crew must have felt
have being stranded at sea for days.
Opening Credits:
For some reason, Don Pardo wasn’t able to do the introduction for The Alabama
Shakes and Christoph Waltz. I have no idea why that is, but it was quite
noticeable, and the fact that the show tried to cover it up by having an
also-ran fill in was just sad. (Note: I will feel like such an ass for saying
this if it turns out Pardo is really sick or something.)
Monologue: Much
like with Bieber’s monologue last week, this was the show trying to address the
elephant in the rokm in regard to its host, in this case Waltz’s perception as
Austrian/stern/not funny. This tongue and cheek acknowledgement did help the
gags go down better – but only if you appreciate purposely awful anti-comedy,
as I do. And while I appreciate the monologue trying to illustrate what a
showman Waltz can be, I also wish they would stop having their host burst out
into song when they can’t think of anything better to fill the time.
What Have You
Become?: This was a great idea for a sketch that was a bit undone by the
structure. Much like with the “Dry Eyes” sketch from a few years back, this one
is clearly trying to get laughs from the deep sadness of the contestants, and
asking them to face the bleak desolation of their lives is a brilliant idea for
a sketch. However, we didn’t know the premise until a third of the way through
the sketch (which I get was so that the set-up for each character’s particular
life failings could be set up in an uninterrupted fashion), and even beyond
that the sketch was pretty one note. Still, the idea of having the question be
asked a second time by one of the contestants’ family members was a good one,
and Waltz played his inevitable turn at the question with aplomb.
Papal Securities:
This is essentially a regular financial securities company commercial, redone
with a papal bent, with nothing specific about Papal finances used to make
jokes. Congrats, SNL. You took one of
this week’s biggest stories and managed to find the blandest, least offensive
comedic direction in which to take it.
Tippy: The
idea of character who always comes into conversations at the wrong time and
makes wrongful guesses about what there talking about, and thusly is always
afraid their missing something on the other side of the party is a good one,
and it’s a testament to this sketch that I was laughing as I was cringing
because this one also hit pretty close to home. Yet even though there were some
great line via the bawdy guesses that Tippy made (note: I do not do this when in awkward social
situations), I was a bit bothered by how much this felt like a Bedelia sketch,
another character that Pedrad plays. Granted, I don’t really like Bedelia
sketches, so I’m glad this wasn’t one of those, but it’s a bit disappointing
not to see the show be more creative with its sketch premises.
Djesus Uncrossed:
On the one hand, I should be mad that this sketch only perpetuates the singular
focus the media has for Waltz’s work in Inglorious
Basterds and Django Unchained. On
the other hand, I can’t think of any other films he’s been in either (as I can
no longer say he’ll be in the Muppets sequel), and this sketch got some good laughs out of a premise that admittedly
has been done before, so who am I to complain?
The Jamarcus
Bros.: A white guy singing R&B, and terribly? And he’s also a virgin?
Yes, this a tired premise, and really it shouldn’t have worked. But Waltz
killed it in this sketch and sold a lot of things that shouldn’t have worked.
Throw in some well-written track names (the escalating awkward title tracks
were great), and this one just about breaks even.
Weekend Update:
In addition to Seth Meyer’s usual shtick, we also got…The show goes for another
over-reported news story as Marco Rubio shows up to explain his sip-of-water
faux pas. Luckily, this time SNL took the time to call out the media’s
over-fascination with this slip up – right before they themselves made fun of
it. Still, Killam sold this over-the-top version of the same speech, which made
for some solid laughs…A woman from rural Russia, so that SNL can address that recent meteor that landed in the country,
except that she doesn’t really address the story of the meteor. Instead, it
just becomes a chance for SNL to make
a bunch of tired jokes about how a large portion of Russia lives in urban
poverty…Finally, ‘Stephen A. Smith’ arrived to talk about something going on in
the sports world, and by this time in this overly-long Weekend Update, I
couldn’t be bothered to care, and was too distracted trying to figure out
whether or not WU had trotted out this impersonation before or not. (I don’t
follow sport, and so it’s hard for me to tell most of the sports-world-related
impressions apart.) Either way, the joke seemed to be how Smith always talks
about how he’s friends with the athletes he’s commentating on, which I didn’t
find all that funny.
Regine: I
wasn’t all that impressed by the first iteration of this sketch, and I can’t
really say that my opinion has improved all that much with a second version. I
did seem like this one played up the character’s snobbishness more this time
around, and while I appreciate the attempt to make the character a bit more
dimensional, it didn’t add any laughs what so ever. And it’s not like it’s all
that important anyway, as the laughs for those who enjoy this is clearly in Armisen’s
slapstick, many moments of which were repeated from the first time around.
Fox & Friends:
I’m surprised that a ‘Fox & Friends’ sketch is buried this deep in the
episode, since they are usually quite good, and this one did not disappoint
either. In fact, with their incorporation of Ted Nugent, this was the iteration
of the sketch which best satirized the show’s hosts’ willingness to agree with
whatever insane thing their guests say. In fact, this point was made so clearly
(or, alternatively, I just now realized that they do that in these sketches)
that the appearance as a British health officer felt a little off. These
sketches are better served when the show is merely showing us the hosts’
inanity, not having characters point it out.
Secret Admirer:
I know, I know, I took the show to task for using lazy Russian stereotypes as
part of Weekend Update tonight, so logically I should be mad that a lot of the
humor from this sketch came from broken English and misunderstood cultural
practices. However, this sketch was also layered with the general creepiness of
the message, the cluelessness of the letter’s recipient, and the fact that the
rest of the office members knew that was Dmitri was responsible and kept trying
to pin the responsibility back onto him.
There was no truly great or hilarious sketch here in this
episode, but there wasn’t anything terribly awful either. (Well, apart from “Regine”,
but that’s just a case of a Recurring Character Who Shouldn’t Be, and we’re
just going to have to accept that.) This was an episode that was wall-to-wall
solid, and while that might be damming the episode with faint praise, remember
that SNL has had a pretty shitty 2013 up until this point. More to this fact, we
should celebrate when the show puts out something that more even-keeled, as
opposed to an episode that’s only two or three good sketches and everything
else is dreck. Additionally, Waltz had some actually meaty parts in the episode
(I was surprised when he showed up as the host in “What Have You Become?”), and
while there weren’t that many of them, he at least didn’t feel as relegated to the
sidelines as the last string of hosts has.
Best Sketch – Fox
& Friends
Worst Sketch – Regine
In Two Weeks:
Kevin Hart hosts for reasons not related to popularity, and whole lot of
unfunny people comment on how Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, a white hip-hop act,
are playing on the same night as a black host.
Quotes, Etc.:
“I’m sorry, I can’t tell anymore jokes. There’s dookie on
the walls, man! How does dookie get on the walls?”
“There is no god!” “Hey, there is a god, he did not
abandon us!”
“Self-employed entrepreneur? That’s not even a thing!”
“All I know is the name of Katy Perry’s cat. It’s Kitty
Purry.”
“‘Mama, let me go to dance school.’ ‘No boy, you have to
go to Game Show School.’”
“It was just social laughter.” “So it’s a black thing?”
“Jesus H. Chirst!” “The ‘H’ is silent.”
“Well, it was a big week for everybody trying to convince
you that everything’s going great.”
“Why did I eat all that cinnamon?” “Yeah, why did I have
all that cinnamon?” “Cause it’s the Cinnamon Challenge!”
“A new study shows that 30% of co-workers marry, and the
other 70% take the long way to the copier.”
“Stephen Nash and I are friends. Steven Nash and I have
held hands in a hot air balloon.”
“Oh don’t worry baby, I’m sure that we will discuss
social politics soon enough.”
“Did you watch the State of the Union address?” “Well, I
meant to, but there was a bee in my apartment and it turned into this whole
thing.”
“My favorite ‘p’ word is ‘pasghetti ‘. Love it!”
“I mean, who eats a horse?” “Well, one time in fifth
grade, I ate a sea horse. They still won’t let me back in that aquarium.”
My favorite correction from the ‘Fox & Friends’
sketch (of those I caught): “Zero Dark
Thirty is not a diet soda.”
For the record, Katy Perry's cat really is named Kitty Purry.
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