“Yoohoo, is this the loser’s room?” asked James Austin Johnson’s Donald Trump Saturday Night LiveIt’s cold tonight. “Don’t we love our country, what a terrible place it is,” he said later in the sketch, which sums up the former real estate mogul and one of the better political options. SNL for a long time.
During a one-man pity party hosted by Mikey Day’s rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), Johnson’s increasingly improved Trump mocked the unprecedented House Speaker for his rejection by his fellow Republicans on NBC. nocturnal saturday. Emphasizes that he “prefers the Jordans to win” SNLTrump made his own comments about what a great speaker he would be, as some Republican wingnuts suggested.
“Unfortunately, I’ll be too busy campaigning,” Johnson mimicked the much-maligned former and perhaps future POTUS. “I travel from city to city and visit their beautiful courtrooms.”
As the chaos, confusion and bloodshed between Israel and the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip continues after the October 7 terrorist attack on the Jewish state, the Republican clown show in Washington DC or the former’s lawsuit Famous student The host clearly gave the direction SNL must open in the cold tonight. In a rare case of split-the-difference, they rightly chose a bit of both – with a bit of Chloe Fineman as Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) and some Radiohead karaoke.
Or as Trump applauded Johnson: “Oh yeah, you’ll be taken care of!”
One of the reasons tonight SNL Cold opening worked so well because it was so self-contained. So often, even when the cold starts, the sketch throws everything in the sink and there is a mess.
Not tonight. Tonight, the cold open stayed with the veteran and Trump – although Days Jordan’s finesse almost makes one wish the flame-throwing Congressman from Ohio had been awarded the speakership simply for his comedic value.
“Some of us are actually here to serve the American people,” Day’s Jordan lamented at the start of the sketch. “All I want is to get Congress back to work so I can shut it down again,” he said is it cake The host added a perfect, realistic summary of the now-failed future Speaker’s leadership ambitions.
“Do you think I can be elected chairman if I try again?” Day’s perfectly coiffed Jordan had his drop-in friend Rep. George Santos (R-NY), again played to perfection by Bowen Yang, asked. “I’d be lying if I said yes, if so,” said Yangs Santos, a man who currently has to do a lot more than lie to get into Congress.
On last week’s season premiere, host and former cast member Pete Davidson, who lost his firefighter father on 9/11, put aside his usual cool to talk about the horrors unfolding in the Middle East. “Sometimes comedy really is the only way through tragedy,” he then told the audience and viewers before launching into a monologue about incest and other things. game of thrones.
With no House speaker for more than two weeks, the Republican Party saw Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), Steve Scalise (R-La.) and Jordan fall at the hands of their own caucus colleagues and surprisingly united Democrats. If Joe Biden wasn’t already in full commander-in-chief mode, given the crisis in the Middle East and Hamas taking Americans hostage, as well as Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine, the Republican Party would default to the prestige -place spotlight.
The second performance of SNLis 49e Season, in today’s episode, Bad Bunny is both host and musical guest. Tonight’s show joins the elite of Paul Simon, Billi Eilish, Nick Jonas, Harry Styles, Stevie Wonder, Willie Nelson, Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake, MC Hammer and Debbie Harry, who became Spotify’s most streamed artist for the second time came up with the Not Ready for Primetime players. Bad Bunny appeared as a musical guest on February 20, 2021. The artist released his fifth solo album, Chart Parade. Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar Manana, on October 13
Nate Bargatze will host next week SNL For the first time with the Foo Fighters as a musical act.
Source: Deadline

Mary Crossley is an author at “The Fashion Vibes”. She is a seasoned journalist who is dedicated to delivering the latest news to her readers. With a keen sense of what’s important, Mary covers a wide range of topics, from politics to lifestyle and everything in between.