Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Posted: 2017-01-11T22:20:06Z | Updated: 2017-10-23T05:01:02Z The 12 Best 'Saturday Night Live' Sketches of 2016 | HuffPost

The 12 Best 'Saturday Night Live' Sketches of 2016

The 12 Best 'Saturday Night Live' Sketches of 2016
|
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

Saturday Night Live returns for its first show of 2017 this Saturday, January 14 at 11:30/10:30c on NBC. This will mark the midway point in Season 42, which has proven to be one of the most popular and impactful seasons in recent years. In addition to the memorable impressions, original characters, and music videos, all of the political sketches were on point this past year, which is typically true for SNL in election years, but there was something particularly alluring about the on-screen hilarity that ensued in an otherwise unfunny year. This is partly because Alec Baldwin returned to the show to play Trump in an impression so accurate that the now president-elect has taken it upon himself to send out multiple tweets insulting Baldwins performance, partly because Emmy award-winning Kate McKinnon created the definitive comedic impression of Hillary Clinton, and partly because comedic masterminds Chris Kelly and Sarah Schneider were promoted to co-head writers of SNL this season. To celebrate this well-deserved success, below is a roundupand another contribution to the conglomerate of articleschronicling the best SNL sketches of the 2016 year.

Open Image Modal

Lin-Manuel Miranda and the cast of SNL on Saturday Night Live.

NBC

Feat. Lin-Manuel Miranda is reason enough to watch the music video, but its also one of the most accurate parodies of a middle school/high school musical production. Between the constant singing, the clich musical references that the students manage to work in throughout night, the flirting disasters and hookup failures, the poor adult who has to host the cast party, and, of course, Mirandas Hamilton-esque rapping, the sketch is a must-watch.

11.) The Day Beyonc Turned Black (February 13, 2016)

Open Image Modal

Cecily Strong on Saturday Night Live.

NBC

The fake movie trailer to The Day Beyonc Turned Black perfectly captures white peoples reaction to Beyoncs Super Bowl performance, where she debuted Formation, which represents a sort of anthem for the Black Lives Matter movement. Its a wonderful song, but not one that white people are able appropriate for themselves. What about Single Ladies? one person asks Kenan Thompsons character. She was black in that, he says. What about Jumpin, Jumpin? she asks, with furthering panic. She was black in that, too, he says. What about the Pink Panther movie? she finally asks, to which he pauses, smiles, and admits, OK, yeah, she was white in that.

10.) Hillary Actually (December 17, 2016)

Open Image Modal

Kate McKinnon on Saturday Night Live.

NBC

From the last episode of the year comes a skit that ties together the wit, satire, and underlying compassion unique to Saturday Night Lives special brand of comedy. After acknowledging that she lost the election, Hillary holds up a sign that reads: but I still care about this country, before offering a loving smile that had viewers, and Cecily Strongs elector character, swooning. Former cast writer and head writer Seth Meyers summarized it perfectly when he tweeted , So much to love here from premise to jokes to perfect performances from Kate and Cecily, capping off a stunning year for SNL.

9.) Wells for Boys (December 3, 2016)

Open Image Modal

Emma Stone on Saturday Night Live.

NBC

The Fisher-Price well, for sensitive boys, is such a weird and wonderful sketch. Emma Stones take on a concerned mother, who just wants to have one thing for her son that he can really enjoy, is stellar, as is the boy who stars in the skit. The commercial, narrated by Cecily Strong, goes on to describe other items from the sensitive boy line, which include balconies for when theyre ready to announce something, or a shattered mirror to examine the complex contradictions of their being.

8.) Actress Round Table (October 1, 2016)

Open Image Modal

Sasheer Zamata, Kate McKinnon, Aidy Bryant, Cecily Strong, and Margot Robbie on Saturday Night Live.

NBC

Roundtables are always entertaining to watch, but throwing in Kate McKinnons fictitious old Hollywood starlet, Debbette Goldry, was a smart move that payed off, as she spends the sketch playing off of the other real women perfectly. Between butchering Lupita Nyongos name (Little Peter No No), Margot Robbies inability to stop laughing, and the Glamour editors horror with each increasingly insane story told by Debette, the sketch handles Hollywoods sexism issues in an ingenious way that only SNL can pull off.

7.) This Is Not A Feminist Song (March 12, 2016)

Open Image Modal

Leslie Jones, Cecily Strong, Kate McKinnon, Ariana Grande , Aidy Bryant, Sasheer Zamata, and Vanessa Bayer on Saturday Night Live.

NBC

Once again starring the ladies of SNL, as well as Ariana Grande, the premise of the video is that the group wanted to write a feminist anthem, but this is pretty nuanced stuff and putting it all in one song is tough, so they wind up with a catchy song that is not, in fact, what is traditionally considered feminist. This Is Not A Feminist Song is at once self-deprecating without tearing down women as a whole, with shots of an old womans hands, before backpedaling in the song to say not to call a woman old, or judge a womans hands we know a woman shouldnt be reduced to just her hands. The sincerity of the groups intention matches the hilarity of the sketch, much like other music videos produced by this generation of SNL cast members. This is not a feminist song. Were just women singing a song, they sing while clapping on a beach, all realizing something at once. But doesnt that make it a feminist song? I guess this was feminist all along. The song is inherently self aware, and ultimately comments on the warped perception that many people have of feminism, in that its not women trying to rise above men, but instead simply wanting to be equal.

6.) Hillary & Bernie Cold Open (May 21, 2016)

Open Image Modal

Kate McKinnon and Larry David on Saturday Night Live.

NBC

Its hard to choose the best Clinton v. Trump sketch, since theyre all top-notch performances, so the one-of-a-kind finale for the Hillary and Bernie showdown naturally stands out as one of the years best scenes. Between the return of Larry Davids wonderful Bernie Sanders impression to Hillary and Bernies one last drink together (Bernie: Ill have a beer, a new brand that people are flocking to. Something refreshing and revolutionary, something that draws huge crowds. Hillary: And Ill have whatever beer no one likes but gets the job done.) to the gentle roasting between the two (Hillary: I love your suit, by the way. Looks old. Bernie: And I love your suit. Looks like you were just elected to the Galactic Counsel.) Their not-so-subtle-subtext leads to a final dance together, where they travel through Studio 8H together with Hillary leading, of course, before finally pushing Bernie into an elevator, all executed to the music of Tchaikovsky.

5.) Melanianade (October 15, 2016)

Open Image Modal

Sasheer Zamata, Emily Blunt, Kate McKinnon, Cecily Strong, and Vanessa Bayer on Saturday Night Live.

NBC

In a brilliant parody of Beyoncs Lemonade, the women in Trumps life have had enough with him and rebel. Melania, Ivanka, Kellyanne, Omarosa, and Tiffany introduce themselves as your wife, your daughter, your mouthpiece, your one black friend, your other daughter, respectively. Cecily Strongs impression of Melania Trump has been a fan favorite on the show, a constant in the many Trump impressions that came before Alec Baldwins. Its always fun when the host can actually do on point impressions, and Emily Blunt matches the success of the cast with her Ivanka Trump impression.

4.) Black Jeopardy with Tom Hanks (October 22, 2016)

Open Image Modal

Sasheer Zamata, Leslie Jones, and Tom Hanks on Saturday Night Live.

NBC

Tom Hankss ninth time hosting SNL is one for the records. The brilliance of this installment of the Black Jeopardy recurring sketch is that the writers turn it on its head with a Trump supporter, of all people, competing. Audiences watch as he proceeds to get the answers right, and slowly develop a relatively friendly rapport with the host and other contestants. The group has a surprising amount of things in common, like Hankss characters response to Tyler Perrys Madea movies: If I can laugh and pray in 90 minutes, that is money well spent.

3.) Election Week Cold Open (November 12, 2016)

Open Image Modal

Kate McKinnon on Saturday Night Live.

NBC

At this point, pretty much everyone has seen Kate McKinnons homage to the late Leonard Cohen and the concept of democracy as a whole, which served as the cold open of the first Saturday Night Live to air after the election. In it, she sings and plays the piano as an incarnation of Hillary Clinton that, at the time, we hadnt yet been privy to. Gone, or at least covered up, was the bullet proof woman who was ambitious to a society-dubbed fault, the hardened political force that audiences watched win each debate, both in real life and on SNL. In her place was a woman who simply wished she could have done better, despite having done her best.

2.) Bern Your Enthusiasm (February 6, 2016)

Open Image Modal

Vanessa Bayer, Cecily Strong, and Larry David on Saturday Night Live.

NBC

Larry Davids Bernie Sanders will go down as one of SNLs most memorable political impressions, with the pinnacle moment coming when he actually hosted the show. Spoofing his own HBO show, Curb Your Enthusiasm, audiences see the real reason that Bernie lost the Iowa caucus, as well as his struggle to find whole milk for his coffee, instead of 2%. Jay Pharoahs Leon and Vanessa Bayers Jane are stellar, but Cecily Strong truly makes the skit with her depiction of Susie, most likely meant to represent Susie Talevski, Sanderss national delegate at the DNC.

Open Image Modal

Mikey Day, Tom Hanks, and Bobby Moynihan on Saturday Night Live.

NBC

The Tom Hanks/Halloween episode is brilliant all-around. Written and created by Bobby Moynihan and Mikey Day (the skeletons), as well as Streeter Seidell, David Pumpkins (David S. Pumpkins) has already become one of the most iconic characters in Saturday Night Lives history. The dedication applied to the sketch is the kind typically attributed to SNLs political skits, as no one throughout the skit even comes close to breaking character (despite the hilarity of the whole thing) and instead completely invests themselves in the strange universe of David S. Pumpkins. On the surface, the sketch is similar to a well-received FBI simulator skit from earlier in the year, but while ridiculous, David S. Pumpkins stands out with its inherently self-analyzing manner and decision not to explain the why of David Pumpkins. Im David Pumpkins, he says. I know, but, like, who are you? asks one of the haunted elevators passengers. Im David Pumpkins, man, he replies again. OK, yeah, yeah. And David Pumpkins is...? the other passenger prompts. His own thing, David Pumpkins answers. And the skeletons are...? asks a passenger. Part of it! the skeletons exclaim. Why are you apart of this ride? an exasperated passenger asks, one last time. To do... this, David Pumpkins says, before the the trios music starts to play again. The surprising ending is simply an additional jolt of joy in the sketch as a whole.

Support Free Journalism

Consider supporting HuffPost starting at $2 to help us provide free, quality journalism that puts people first.

Support HuffPost