Season 38, Episode 3
I’m not even going to pretend to write out an intro paragraph
for tonight’s write-up. This is one of the worst SNL episodes in recent memory. Click through to find out why….
Monologue: So,
an “in memoriam” gag about all the people Craig has killed while making movies
over the years? Umm okay. (But by not including Layer Cake, this joke was doomed from the start.) Actually there
was maybe one good joke here – I liked the idea of Daniel Craig killing a sound
technician – but by not sticking with the weird/dark gags, this monologue
didn’t really live up to its potential.
Construction Site:
A construction worker whose terrible at making catcalls is the sort of anti-humor
sketch that doesn’t really play to SNL’s
strengths, and it’s hurt even further by the fact that it’s the sort of premise
that feels really tired. But, credit where it’s due, Craig really went all out
in order to sell this joke, and when he got some particularly weird lines
(“butt soup and a whole lot of nipples” was particularly funny), the sketch
actually justified its existence. But there weren’t enough of those lines.
(And can we talk
about how actual female cast members, not just extras, were used as basically
props for the construction worker characters’ leering, without getting any
lines of their own. Also, the sketch went on without any sort of comment on how
terrible it was that the construction workers were leering. In fact, we were
supposed to laugh with the lines they were using. I fee like I need a shower.
Lesser-Known Bond
Girls: This is a straight up impression sketch, and these sketches tend to
soar or fall based on the quality of the impression work being done. (Also:
whether or not impression sketches match your personal taste.) There was a nice
collection of actresses being mimicked here, but it didn’t get to the wild and
crazy depths that the best impression sketches get to.
(Second disgusting
casting decision of the night: Kate McKinnon, an out lesbian, played the two
lesbian actresses who visages were used in this sketch. Regardless of how well
her impressions were – and they were serviceable at best – it’s pretty gross.
Real fucking classy, SNL.)
MSNBC’s Three Days
Later: This essentially marks SNL redoing all the jokes that they trotted
out in the cold open, and while focusing on the pundits was moderately more
successful in terms of conception, it provided less laughs than the cold open,
perhaps because it was such a retread of the same material.
Long Island
Medium: I know it might be hard to believe, but this is an actual show in
actual life that airs on actual television. Without ever having seen the
series, I can’t say for certain, but it seems like so many other TLC which are
already so ridiculous that making fun of them seems like a fruitless venture.
So yeah, this sketch was pretty much DOA, but dammit it McKinnon didn’t sell
her material anyway.
Kirby: This is
what a would call a “gaggy voice” sketch, in that I’m sure some writer or
another heard Bobby Moynihan say the word “kitty cat” in a child-like voice and
wrote a sketch around it. That is literally all I have to say about this
sketch, and if you found it funny, then all the better for you. I however did
not find it funny, and spent the whole sketch wondering when the actual jokes
were going to start.
Weekend Update:
In addition to Seth Meyers’ usual shtick, we also got…“Winners and Losers”,
which was essentially this episode’s third attempt to mock the debate, which
shows a real dearth of creativity from the writer’s room…Big Bird (!) shows up,
and while it seems sort of obvious in retrospect, it was still kind of an
awesome moment anyways. Too bad the Sesame Street style of humor doesn’t mesh
well with what usually appears on WU...And finally, McKinnon shows up as Ceclia
Giminez, the woman who ruined that fresco painting for Jesus some months back.
While this is an old story that’s already been picked over many times, the show
surprising found some fresh material here by mocking the old woman in question.
And while mocking an old, well-meaning woman may seem mean, McKinnon managed to
imbue her character with enough fire of her own that it was actually a highlight
of the night.
A Sorry Lot We
Are: In truth, I’m not really sure what the point of this sketch is, if
it’s meant to be skewering British sitcoms, or the British working class, or
what. As such, it’s formlessness just left me scratching my head.
Regine: Another
sketch were I’m not really sure what the point is, apart from having Fred
Armisen making weird faces. And much like with gaggy voices, this either is or
isn’t your thing. Obviously, it’s not my thing.
The Undecided
Voter: This sketch already aired. (Though really it’s embarrassing for SNL to be reusing a sketch just three
episodes into a new season. Perhaps the sketch that was supposed to go into
this lot got scrapped.)
I’m not even going to bother doing a best sketch/worst
sketch breakdown for tonight’s episode. In truth, it was all pretty bad, and
I’ll be hard pressed to figure out which of these was The Worst. (And to call
one of these The Best would be an affront to all those I had called The Best in
the past.) That being said, Kate McKinnon was on fire tonight, and I wouldn’t
be surprised if she gets promoted to a series regular before the season it out.
Quotes, Etc.:
“Mr. Romney has just said that he killed Osama bin Laden.
Would you like to respond?” “No, you two go ahead.”
“Must hang on for girls. Sasha…and the other one.”
“You hear that, Mitt Romney? You are a badass
motherfucker.”
“So many great actors have come before me as James Bond.
There’s Sean Connery and…well, they’re all great.”
“Well, you have to hand it to Mitt Romney, because
President Obama sure did.”
“Biggest winner: America. Is there anything better than
Joe Biden thinking it’s up to him to get the lead back?”
“Big Bird left, right?”
Daniel Craig did well in Lesser Known Bond Girl, but that was it. I think Kate McKinnon did the best in her many roles. McKinnon plays Ellen DeGeneres perfectly. I couldn’t catch the show last night since I was working late at DISH. I set my Hopper a while back to record the entire season to the two terabyte DVR automatically. I am just happy that I can watch it when I want without having to worry about how much space I’ve got. I can’t wait to see Christina Applegate next week!
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