View Full Version : 101 SNL Moments countdown on E!
oliegirl
06-27-2008, 01:52 PM
I did a quick search and didn't see this. I watched part of this last night, but fell asleep, it's on again now and I am cracking up at all these old skits!!!!
101. Eddie Murphy as Gumby
100. Phil Hartman as Bill Clinton
99. Chris Farley on ice skates
98. Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer
97. The Killer Bees
96. Mike Myers and Mick Jagger as Mick Jagger and Keith Richards
95. The Denise Show
94. Britney Spears addresses lip-synching/fake boob rumors in monologue
93. Unhip music teachers Bobbi and Marty Culp
92. Janet Reno (Will Ferrell) meets the real Janet Reno
91. Pepper mills sketch with Dana Carvey and Adam Sandler
90. The Ambiguously Gay Duo
89. Dana Carvey as Johnny Carson
88. Joe Pesci and Robert De Niro make surprise appearance on The Joe Pesci Show
87. Mr. Short-Term Memory
86. It's Pat
85. Eddie Murphy as James Brown in Celebrity Hot Tub
84. Deep Thoughts by Jack Handey
83. Tommy Flannigan, "The Liar"
82. Steve Martin and Gilda Radner dance
81. Will Ferrell in red, white and blue thong
80. The Spartan Cheerleaders
79. Dana Carvey as George Bush
78. The Gap Girls
77. The Sweeney Sisters
76. Woodrow, the homeless guy
75. The Superfans
74. The Land Shark
73. Nat X
72. Frank Sinatra Duets
71. William Shatner mocks Trekkies
70. Master Thespian as Santa Claus
69. Lord and Lady Douchebag
68. The Roxbury Guys
67. Men's synchronized swimming sketch
66. Total Bastard Airlines ("Buh-Bye")
65. Weekend Update: "Jane, you ignorant slut"
64. Velvet Jones
63. Inside the Actors Studio, with Kate Hudson as Drew Barrymore
62. Film with John Belushi outliving all castmates
61. Mr. Robinson's Neighborhood
60. Fernando's Hideaway
59. Toonces the Driving Cat
58. Eddie Murphy as Rev. Jesse Jackson
57. Arnold Schwarzengegger visits Hanz and Franz
56. Andy Kaufman does theme from Mighty Mouse
55. Phil Hartman as Charlton Heston
54. The Richmeister
53. Mr. Bill
52. Operaman
51. Judy Miller
50. Brian Fellow
49. Celebrity Jeopardy!
48. Ed Grimley
47. Will Ferrell as Harry Caray
46. The Chris Farley Show
45. Fred Garvin, Male Prostitute
44. David Spade as stubborn receptionist
43. Mary Catherine Gallagher
42. Old Glory Insurance (Sam Waterston sells robot insurance)
41. "White Like Me"
40. Dana Carvey sings about broccoli
39. Zagat Guide to Restaurants sketch
38. The Czech Brothers ("Wild and Crazy Guys")
37. Richard Pryor and Chevy Chase racial word association
36. Delta Delta Delta sorority
35. Sprockets
34. David Spade's Hollywood Minute
33. The Ladies' Man
32. The Coneheads
31. Molly Shannon and John Goodman as Monica Lewinsky and Linda Tripp
30. Nick the Lounge Singer
29. Will Ferrell as George W. Bush
28. John Belushi's Samurai accidentally cuts Buck Henry
27. The Girl Watchers
26. Lyle, The Effeminate Heterosexual
25. Roseanne Roseanneadana
24. The nude beach sketch (penis said numerous times)
23. Canteen Boy gets sexually harassed by scoutmaster
22. The Five-Timers Club
21. Buckwheat assassinated
20. Matt Foley, Motivational Speaker
19. Amy Fisher sketches
18. The Boston Teens
17. The Sinatra Report
16. Stand-Up Situations
15. Hanukkah Harry
14. Eddie Murphy messes up
13. The Sensitive Naked Man
12. Church Lady gets hit by Sean Penn
11. The Blues Brothers
10. The Bradys vs. The Partridge Family
9. Chris Farley auditions for Chippendales
8. The Hanukkah Song
7. Joe Piscopo and Eddie Murphy duet as Frank Sinatra and Stevie Wonder
6. Coffee Talk crashed by Barbra Streisand
5. Cowbell sketch
4. Phil Hartman sings goodbye to Chris Farley on Hartman's last show
3. Schweaty Balls
2. Rudy Giuliani introduces first episode after 9/11
1. Wayne's World with Aerosmith
I don't agree with No. 1....I think it's one of the funnier skits of "modern" SNL, but I think some of the older ones from the Chevy Chase, Eddie Murphy, Steve Martin era are much funnier. Sweeney Sisters and Schweaty Balls are two of my all time favorites though.
oliegirl
06-27-2008, 02:03 PM
Yes...that is why it starts with 101 and counts down to 1
:)
ShaneTheMaster
06-27-2008, 02:11 PM
Hmm.. no Sinead O'Connor? ;)
oliegirl
06-27-2008, 02:14 PM
No, I mean Gumby at 101 and Wayne's World and Schweaty balls at 1 and 3?
Yep.
That was my first thought as well, there are way too many "modern" skits in the top 10 - 20...
Maple Leafs
06-27-2008, 02:16 PM
How old is that list? I don't see any of the Digital Short stuff. You'd think Lazy Sunday or Dick in a Box would be on there somewhere.
I also don't see Bassomatic, which I never thought was all that funny but which everyone over the age of 40 is required by law to think was hilarious.
MikeVic
06-27-2008, 02:18 PM
Schweaty Balls was awesome.
st.cronin
06-27-2008, 02:19 PM
65. Weekend Update: "Jane, you ignorant slut"
Should be top 3.
evil homer
06-27-2008, 02:20 PM
no jackie rogers jr. $100,000 jackpot wad?
BrianD
06-27-2008, 02:20 PM
I think Matt Foley - Motivational Speaker should be higher. That cracks me up every time I watch it.
cartman
06-27-2008, 02:22 PM
Yeah, I remember this coming out a few years back. Surprised that the Steve Martin's Penis Beauty Creme sketch didn't make it.
Dr. Sak
06-27-2008, 02:30 PM
I'll take the rapist for $300
st.cronin
06-27-2008, 02:36 PM
Gaye beer?
Pumpy Tudors
06-27-2008, 02:37 PM
Many of those aren't even "moments." I was thinking something more along the lines of Charles Rocket's "I'd like to know who the fuck did it" when I saw the word "moments" in there, but oh well.
Bad-example
06-27-2008, 02:37 PM
I wish E! would unclench their keisters and start playing Phil Hartman-era episodes at least once daily. I really miss the good old days when Comedy Central aired them 6 times a day.
Signed,
Lothar of the Hill People
cartman
06-27-2008, 02:38 PM
Theodorick of York is another that didn't make it:
"Well, I'll do everything humanly possible. But unfortunatly, we barbers are not Gods. You know, medicine is not an exact science, but we're learning all the time. Why just 50 years ago we would've thought your daughter's illness was caused by demonic posession or witch craft. But now adays, we know that Isabelle is suffering from an inbalance of bodily humors. Perhaps caused by a toad or a small dwarf living in her stomach. "
mckerney
06-27-2008, 02:39 PM
Premiered: Sep 26, 2004
Ah, that explains the epic failure of Dear Sister not being #1.
RomaGoth
06-27-2008, 02:41 PM
I love the Matt Foley, motivational speaker skits. Those and the Chippendale try-outs with Chris Farley. That was some funny shit. A lot of people didn't/don't like him, but I think he was hilarious. He played to his own style; fat and dimwitted. He did it well.
Always thought the Wayne's World stuff was overrated. Funny at first, but after 20 of them and some movies it lost its appeal with me.
Fidatelo
06-27-2008, 02:45 PM
Chris Farley was awesome. As was Hartman. I can't believe it's been a decade already.
RomaGoth
06-27-2008, 02:45 PM
Dola
The Celebrity Jeapardy still cracks me up just thinking about it. They made Sean Connery look so ridiculously stupid....:lol:
BrianD
06-27-2008, 02:47 PM
I love the Matt Foley, motivational speaker skits. Those and the Chippendale try-outs with Chris Farley. That was some funny shit. A lot of people didn't/don't like him, but I think he was hilarious. He played to his own style; fat and dimwitted. He did it well.
Always thought the Wayne's World stuff was overrated. Funny at first, but after 20 of them and some movies it lost its appeal with me.
It took me a while to appreciate Farley - which is odd since I love physical comedy, but I really grew to like him. You have to appreciate a guy who is willing to go face-first into a table without bracing himself to get a laugh.
RomaGoth
06-27-2008, 02:48 PM
Chris Farley was awesome. As was Hartman. I can't believe it's been a decade already.
Agreed. That show just isn't the same anymore, not nearly as funny now. Although I will admit that the "McGruber" stuff is moderately funny.
BTW, I enjoy your signature, Mallrats is heeeelarious!!! :lol:
Passacaglia
06-27-2008, 02:57 PM
What about The Chris Farley Show? Good stuff.
Anyway, I'm with Pumpy about them not knowing what a "moment" is.
ShaneTheMaster
06-27-2008, 02:57 PM
I couldn't name 1 person on SNL now.
Maple Leafs
06-27-2008, 02:58 PM
Agreed. That show just isn't the same anymore, not nearly as funny now.
Not saying you're wrong, but everyone always thinks the old episodes are way better than the current ones. A dozen years or so ago the cast had Farley, Hartman, Chris Rock, Adam Sandler and Mike Myers, plus guys like David Spade and Rob Scnheider. And the critics all agreed that it was the worst cast ever and the show needed to fire everybody and start from scratch in order to get back to the heights of the Jon Lovitz era.
Although I will admit that the "McGruber" stuff is moderately funny.
Anal lube?
Fidatelo
06-27-2008, 03:00 PM
It's sort of bizarre what has happened to SNL. Where is the next generation of great comedians? I don't think Amy Poehler quite cuts it.
That said, McGruber is great and I have hope that a couple of standouts will again land on the show in time.
RomaGoth
06-27-2008, 03:02 PM
It's sort of bizarre what has happened to SNL. Where is the next generation of great comedians? I don't think Amy Poehler quite cuts it.
That said, McGruber is great and I have hope that a couple of standouts will again land on the show in time.
The guy that plays McGruber is pretty funny in most of the skits that I see him in. Besides Darrell Hammond and Poehler, I can't name any of the cast members now.
Fidatelo
06-27-2008, 03:05 PM
Not saying you're wrong, but everyone always thinks the old episodes are way better than the current ones. A dozen years or so ago the cast had Farley, Hartman, Chris Rock, Adam Sandler and Mike Myers, plus guys like David Spade and Rob Scnheider. And the critics all agreed that it was the worst cast ever and the show needed to fire everybody and start from scratch in order to get back to the heights of the Jon Lovitz era.
I don't remember that. I remember everyone wanting to fire the cast shortly after most of those guys left, during the era of Mark McKinney, Jim Breur and co which took up a couple years in the late 90's. And they were right, that was a pretty bad show for 2-3 years.
But then they did fire lots of people, and Will Ferrell found his way, and the show picked up again for a few years.
It's just that since he left, it's been very, very uneven. There are bright spots, but just not as many as during the 'good times'. We are in the late 90's again.
Maple Leafs
06-27-2008, 03:10 PM
I don't remember that. I remember everyone wanting to fire the cast shortly after most of those guys left, during the era of Mark McKinney, Jim Breur and co which took up a couple years in the late 90's. And they were right, that was a pretty bad show for 2-3 years.
I was referring to the 1994 and 1995 seasons season (which now that I look it up, wasn't quite how I described it -- Rock had been gone a few years and Hartman left in 1994).
That was the year that the critics just killed the show, and Lorne Michaels was almost fired. It was so poorly received that Sandler and Farley were actually fired.
They replaced all those guys with the McKinney/Breur et al case, which I agree was pretty poor.
oliegirl
06-27-2008, 03:11 PM
The days of Lovitz/Carvey/Myers were great, and they made some really amazing comedy, but to me, the old school stuff from Chase/Akroyd/Belushi/Radner/Curtin/Murphy...that is the best stuff. Buckwheat, The Land Shark, the "Jane you ignorant slut" Nightly News, Blues Brothers, Wild and Crazy guys...that will always be the best cast/era to me...
Fidatelo
06-27-2008, 03:11 PM
The guy that plays McGruber is pretty funny in most of the skits that I see him in. Besides Darrell Hammond and Poehler, I can't name any of the cast members now.
The McGruber guy is definitely funny, they have something there. And Poehler is good too. But there are too many cast members that just don't cut it.
Or, it could be the writers, for that matter. If these guys are getting served dog turds there is only so much they can do with them.
molson
06-27-2008, 03:11 PM
Not saying you're wrong, but everyone always thinks the old episodes are way better than the current ones. A dozen years or so ago the cast had Farley, Hartman, Chris Rock, Adam Sandler and Mike Myers, plus guys like David Spade and Rob Scnheider. And the critics all agreed that it was the worst cast ever and the show needed to fire everybody and start from scratch in order to get back to the heights of the Jon Lovitz era.
I remember everyone saying the show sucked then but I don't think they took it out on that particular cast, more like the writers of that era.
You're right though, in that SNL has always and forever been considered "not as good as it used to be". I don't think people would think that if they actually watched an entire old episode.
Fidatelo
06-27-2008, 03:16 PM
I was referring to the 1994 and 1995 seasons season (which now that I look it up, wasn't quite how I described it -- Rock had been gone a few years and Hartman left in 1994).
That was the year that the critics just killed the show, and Lorne Michaels was almost fired. It was so poorly received that Sandler and Farley were actually fired.
They replaced all those guys with the McKinney/Breur et al case, which I agree was pretty poor.
I had forgotten that they actually fired Farley and Sandler. Pretty weak.
I guess my point is that while you're right, people do always remember the old casts more fondly, there are certainly casts that have been stronger than others, and it is generally somewhat clear during the run. Is every skit on one of the old early 90's shows funny? Heck no. But I'd guess that a larger percentage are than on a show from 1996, or 2006.
cuervo72
06-27-2008, 03:20 PM
oliegirl = low tech NetVibes
Maple Leafs
06-27-2008, 03:22 PM
I guess my point is that while you're right, people do always remember the old casts more fondly, there are certainly casts that have been stronger than others, and it is generally somewhat clear during the run. Is every skit on one of the old early 90's shows funny? Heck no. But I'd guess that a larger percentage are than on a show from 1996, or 2006.
I think part of the problem is there's just a natural bias to the older seasons because you forget all the bad stuff. You remember the hits, and the misses just fade away. Not to mention that many of the repeats are only an hour long so the weakest third of material isn't even seen again.
So everyone remembers the best of Farley or Sandler or Myers or whoever, and then they sit down and watch an entire episode of the new cast and say "Most of this stuff isn't funny". But that's always the case with sketch comedy. It's just that the hits make up for it over time.
Just wait, in five years we'll be talking about how the current cast sucks and looking back on the glory years of Dick in a Box and McGruber and whatever else.
oliegirl
06-27-2008, 03:23 PM
oliegirl = low tech NetVibes
Ummmm....huh????
Bad-example
06-27-2008, 03:25 PM
Didn't see 'How Much Ya Bench?' on the list. Or the skit with Charlie Sheen called, I think, Young Actors' Forum.
And that one skit where the female host (Juliana Marguiles?) played a woman dating a guy that needed his dad to prechew his food and spit it into his mouth.
Now *those* are moments.
Maple Leafs
06-27-2008, 03:25 PM
I think this is what ML is talking about.
http://nymag.com/arts/tv/features/47548/
That was it, nice find.
Maple Leafs
06-27-2008, 03:27 PM
Or the skit with Charlie Sheen called, I think, Young Actors' Forum.
Was that the one with all the actors just sitting around talking about who they'd banged?
Another similar one was the episode with the child actor criminal gang, with David Spade doing a really accurate, whiny Michael J. Fox impression while the real Fox (playing someone else) is staring him down.
Fidatelo
06-27-2008, 03:29 PM
I think part of the problem is there's just a natural bias to the older seasons because you forget all the bad stuff. You remember the hits, and the misses just fade away. Not to mention that many of the repeats are only an hour long so the weakest third of material isn't even seen again.
So everyone remembers the best of Farley or Sandler or Myers or whoever, and then they sit down and watch an entire episode of the new cast and say "Most of this stuff isn't funny". But that's always the case with sketch comedy. It's just that the hits make up for it over time.
Just wait, in five years we'll be talking about how the current cast sucks and looking back on the glory years of Dick in a Box and McGruber and whatever else.
I'm not disagreeing with you, but I just think that within that, the show ebbs and flows, and you can feel it even at the time. There were a lot of old Dana Carvey-era sketches that sucked balls, I know. But on the whole those were stronger seasons than say something from 2005. It's just the way it is.
To be honest, I think that last year showed a bit of an uptick for the show. I don't get to watch it much anymore, but my brother does all the time, and I can sort of gauge things by how often he talks about the recent shows or implores me to try to find videos of sketches on the 'net. From what I did see, and from the feedback I was getting from my brother, it seemed like a better season than the previous 2-3.
I have hopes that this year will be even better, and I certainly plan to try to catch more of them myself. Having a PVR now will definitely help.
Maple Leafs
06-27-2008, 03:35 PM
I have hopes that this year will be even better, and I certainly plan to try to catch more of them myself. Having a PVR now will definitely help.
Speaking on next year, have they announced any cast changes?
Which is a nice way to say "Have they taken Darryl Hammond out behind the barn and shot him yet?"
Bad-example
06-27-2008, 03:36 PM
Was that the one with all the actors just sitting around talking about who they'd banged?
Yepper.
"We doubled her"
Damn that one was funny.
Fidatelo
06-27-2008, 03:39 PM
I'm not sure, I don't think they normally finalize the cast until later in the summer? I don't know, just seems too soon.
Fidatelo
06-27-2008, 03:40 PM
Dola
And Darrell Hammond and Fred Armisen are definitely two that could stand to go.
RomaGoth
06-27-2008, 03:40 PM
I'm not disagreeing with you, but I just think that within that, the show ebbs and flows, and you can feel it even at the time. There were a lot of old Dana Carvey-era sketches that sucked balls, I know. But on the whole those were stronger seasons than say something from 2005. It's just the way it is.
To be honest, I think that last year showed a bit of an uptick for the show. I don't get to watch it much anymore, but my brother does all the time, and I can sort of gauge things by how often he talks about the recent shows or implores me to try to find videos of sketches on the 'net. From what I did see, and from the feedback I was getting from my brother, it seemed like a better season than the previous 2-3.
I have hopes that this year will be even better, and I certainly plan to try to catch more of them myself. Having a PVR now will definitely help.
Yeah I don't watch it much anymore either. My wife will call me into the room when they do a McGruber bit, otherwise I have no idea what the show is about anymore. I stopped watching it in the late 90's for the most part, it really seemed to go downhill. I guess part of the reason is that I don't feel any type of connection to the cast now like I did back then. I may start watching it again more this season just to check it out again.
I forgot about the Dick in a box stuff. Even though I don't like Justin Timberlake, the one with him doing that bit was damn funny.
Fidatelo
06-27-2008, 03:43 PM
I like Hader and Forte. Poehler and Seth Myers are good on weekend update as well.
Fidatelo
06-27-2008, 03:43 PM
I forgot about the Dick in a box stuff. Even though I don't like Justin Timberlake, the one with him doing that bit was damn funny.
JT is hilarious. SNL would do well to just add him as a cast member, his episodes are awesome.
TCY Junkie
06-27-2008, 03:44 PM
And there's the Saigon whore that bit my nose off!
Fidatelo
06-27-2008, 03:53 PM
And there's the Saigon whore that bit my nose off!
Isn't that from Dirty Work?
Fidatelo
06-27-2008, 03:53 PM
Dola
Which is an awesome movie, by the way. Norm MacDonald rules too.
Bad-example
06-27-2008, 03:54 PM
Put me in the "Darrell Hammond can stay as long as he damn well pleases" category.
cuervo72
06-27-2008, 03:58 PM
Ummmm....huh????
Netvibes (http://www.netvibes.com/)
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Bo Diddley dies... (http://operationsports.com/fofc/showthread.php?t=65593)
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RIP Sydney Pollack (http://operationsports.com/fofc/showthread.php?t=65456)
st.cronin
06-27-2008, 04:03 PM
Dola
Which is an awesome movie, by the way. Norm MacDonald rules too.
He was the greatest on Weekend Update.
TCY Junkie
06-27-2008, 04:07 PM
Isn't that from Dirty Work?
Yeah
Dola
Which is an awesome movie, by the way. Norm MacDonald rules too.
True
He was the greatest on Weekend Update.
I think I found the two Pumpy, do you want to proceed to the next step now.
Mike1409
06-27-2008, 06:01 PM
This list is horrible-
Where is the Cheeseburger Cheeseburger skit?
http://www.nbc.com/Saturday_Night_Live/video/play.shtml?mea=2807
The Star Trek cancellation?
http://www.nbc.com/Saturday_Night_Live/video/play.shtml?mea=2802
Superheroes?
http://www.nbc.com/Saturday_Night_Live/video/play.shtml?mea=2800
The Lupeners?
http://www.nbc.com/Saturday_Night_Live/video/play.shtml?mea=2784
Pyser
06-27-2008, 06:33 PM
moments. not sketches. i guess.
kcchief19
06-27-2008, 09:14 PM
Similar thoughts here ... I'm sure all of us would quibble with the ranking of our own faves, and although there are some universal favorites. I too think there are too few gems from the early days but then again as has been alluded to, not everything back then was gold -- I mean, American did vote to keep Andy Kauffman off the show for a reason.
One of my faves that I don't see on here is Steve Martin's "Tonight Song" where the cast sang about not phoning in the show that night.
Lorne Michaels: Steve, what's going on?
Steve Martin: We're going to do our best tonight, Lorne!
Lorne Michaels: But, Steve, the show's on automatic pilot. I don't even come in until Saturday.
Steve Martin: Lorne, don't you see? That's not the way it was in the 70's. Back in the 70's, people cared. They believed in something! Now it's the 80's, and everything's yuppie, yuppie, yuppie.. spend, spend, spend!
Lorne Michaels: Steve, it's the 90's.
Steve Martin: Whatever. You see..
Karlifornia
06-27-2008, 09:21 PM
Christmas Kangaroo, and Martin Lawrence's monologue are two of my favorites that I didn't see on there.
larrymcg421
06-27-2008, 09:31 PM
Was that the one with all the actors just sitting around talking about who they'd banged?
Another similar one was the episode with the child actor criminal gang, with David Spade doing a really accurate, whiny Michael J. Fox impression while the real Fox (playing someone else) is staring him down.
This one was awesome. Chris Farley played Mindy Cohn. Fox was playing Danny Bonaduce. Fox as Bonaduce ended up shooting SpadeFox.
One of my favorite moments that I didn't see on there is Jesse Jackson reading Green Eggs and Ham on Weekend Update.
Swaggs
06-27-2008, 11:01 PM
Does anyone remember an Alec Baldwin episode where he played twins in a soap opera? One of the twins was named Pierce and was head of a company and the other was named Petey (who was retarded and obsessed with chocolate pudding), with Petey capturing Pierce and taking over his company without anyone being able to tell the difference.
They never show that one during the pared down episodes on Comedy Central or E!, but I thought that was one of the funniest skits ever.
EagleFan
06-27-2008, 11:44 PM
Mr. Robinson's neighborhood and the Shatner sketch both need to be higher on the list.
st.cronin
06-28-2008, 08:27 AM
One of my favorite moments that I didn't see on there is Jesse Jackson reading Green Eggs and Ham on Weekend Update.
yes yes
Maple Leafs
06-28-2008, 09:30 AM
Does anyone remember an Alec Baldwin episode where he played twins in a soap opera? One of the twins was named Pierce and was head of a company and the other was named Petey (who was retarded and obsessed with chocolate pudding), with Petey capturing Pierce and taking over his company without anyone being able to tell the difference.
What about the one with Baldwin recording his voicemail message, and sounding gayer and gayer each time he played it back?
Maple Leafs
06-28-2008, 09:38 AM
Put me in the "Darrell Hammond can stay as long as he damn well pleases" category.
Ugh.
He's not even an impressionist. All his impressions are the same: speak slowly, blink often, pivot head slowly while speaking. That's all of them. Jesse Jackson, Bill Clinton, Al Gore... it's all the same.
kcchief19
06-28-2008, 10:17 AM
One of my favorite moments that I didn't see on there is Jesse Jackson reading Green Eggs and Ham on Weekend Update.
+1
Bad-example
06-28-2008, 10:20 AM
Does anyone remember an Alec Baldwin episode where he played twins in a soap opera? One of the twins was named Pierce and was head of a company and the other was named Petey (who was retarded and obsessed with chocolate pudding), with Petey capturing Pierce and taking over his company without anyone being able to tell the difference.
They never show that one during the pared down episodes on Comedy Central or E!, but I thought that was one of the funniest skits ever.
This sounds a lot like a Frankenstein sketch, where his evil twin was trying to steal his bread factory.
Bad-example
06-28-2008, 10:22 AM
Ugh.
He's not even an impressionist. All his impressions are the same: speak slowly, blink often, pivot head slowly while speaking. That's all of them. Jesse Jackson, Bill Clinton, Al Gore... it's all the same.
No.
Hammond's Bill Clinton is still hilarious. His Ted Koppel was great too.
Swaggs
06-28-2008, 02:05 PM
Did that one take place in sort of a southern mansion? If so, I vaguely remember it. Phil Hartman in it too?
I think you are probably recalling the one where Baldwin was a tennis pro who was working in a southern mansion and kept making out with everyone to dramatic soap opera music (including Hartman and the family dog).
Swaggs
06-28-2008, 02:09 PM
What about the one with Baldwin recording his voicemail message, and sounding gayer and gayer each time he played it back?
Baldwin's had some awesome moments on SNL.
My brother and I still give each other quotes from "the Mimic" episode, where he is a secret agent protecting a rich woman and he thinks he can copy anyone's voice perfectly (including the British butler played by Paul McCartney and Julia Sweeney). :)
Also love the one where he is a critically acclaimed soap actor getting interviewed and they keep showing clips of his show, where he plays a doctor and keeps butchering common words. I remember he mispronounces "Yale Medical School" and "asophogus (sp?)".
I think you are probably recalling the one where Baldwin was a tennis pro who was working in a southern mansion and kept making out with everyone to dramatic soap opera music (including Hartman and the family dog).
the music in that scene is actually from the movie "Vertigo"
just happen to know that
:)
TCY Junkie
06-28-2008, 03:46 PM
The Herlihy Boy House-Sitting Service with Sandler is good but when Farley starts talking it is what comedy is suppose to be in my egotistical opinion.
The Schmitts Gay beer commercial made me laugh non-stop probably because I was shocked. No, that is one of the few times I was shocked but not then aroused.
[Shaking the trunk of the car containing the Saigon whore who bit off his nose]
Jimmy: WAKE UP SLUT! Well, well, well, we meet again... NOSE BITER! TIME TO PAY THE FIDDLER, WHORE!
Mitch: I've never seen so many dead hookers in all my life!
Bystander: Lord knows I have.
Anyone know where to get "A Minute with Stan Hooper". I missed a couple of episodes and I want the complete set, its not the best show but its got Norm.
st.cronin
06-28-2008, 04:16 PM
The Schmitts Gay beer commercial made me laugh non-stop probably because I was shocked. No, that is one of the few times I was shocked but not then aroused.
I remember it being spelled Gaye.
TCY Junkie
06-28-2008, 04:20 PM
I remember it being spelled Gaye.
Nope, I have a better memory than you, or I just played it from my DVR.
st.cronin
06-28-2008, 04:22 PM
Too bad, Gaye would have been funnier.
Eaglesfan27
06-28-2008, 10:56 PM
Watching the first SNL tonight - I never realized that they used to have multiple musical guests. Was that the norm for the early years, or was it just like that in the 1st episode? Also, did all of the hosts just do multiple monologues in the early seasons and not do skits, or is that just Carlin? Now that I think about it, I seem to remember hearing that was something special he requested.
Bad-example
06-28-2008, 11:20 PM
I remember it being spelled Gaye.
I remember it being spelled Schnitt's.
Swaggs
06-29-2008, 07:54 AM
Just to dispel all the myths about the Sandler-Farley commercial:
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Swaggs
06-29-2008, 07:56 AM
Here's the Alec Baldwin voicemail sketch :)
<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/hq3kA1ZoS_E&hl=en"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/hq3kA1ZoS_E&hl=en" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>
oliegirl
06-29-2008, 11:41 AM
I had never seen that - awesome! :)
I can't stand Alec Baldwin in general, but he is amazingly funny on SNL.
Neon_Chaos
06-30-2008, 07:44 AM
Surprised Phil Hartman' "Robot Repair" isn't here. That's one sketch that always makes me laugh.
Fidatelo
06-30-2008, 08:21 AM
Watching the first SNL tonight - I never realized that they used to have multiple musical guests. Was that the norm for the early years, or was it just like that in the 1st episode? Also, did all of the hosts just do multiple monologues in the early seasons and not do skits, or is that just Carlin? Now that I think about it, I seem to remember hearing that was something special he requested.
I watched it on Saturday night as well, and have the same questions. The format was definitely different than the one that I have grown up with through the 80's to today.
I also thought that the show was basically terrible.
Fidatelo
06-30-2008, 08:23 AM
Dola
Colonel Angus should be on that list as well :)
molson
06-30-2008, 10:10 AM
I also thought that the show was basically terrible.
I'm sure it was funny for its time, but I don't see how anyone who watched that first episode could make the case that it was funnier than any new episode today.
It looks like Season 1 had 2 musical guests for about half the episodes, it definitely feels more like a "comedy variety show" than a "sketch comedy show" at that point.
The musical act seems like a relic of the past, I kind of wish they just dumped it - does anyone watch SNL for the music?
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