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  • 12 Old SNL Sketches That Wouldn’t Fly Today

    12 Old SNL Sketches That Wouldn’t Fly Today


    Here are 12 SNL sketches they wouldn’t do today, thanks to changing standards of what’s funny. As the show marks its 50th anniversary, we look back on things that were funny then but might not fly now.

    Some SNL sketches and characters — like the Dana’s Church Lady, above — hold up incredibly well. In fact, SNL brought her back this past season.

    But not every Saturday Night Live sketch stands the test of time because what the general public considers OK is always changing. And evolving technology — people no longer have to send letters or call NBC, they can just gripe on X — can create a very fast, very public sense that objections to a given joke or setup are snowballing, which makes everyone involved in the show more hesitant to run the risk of doing something potentially offensive to someone, somewhere.

    Let’s take a dip into the past and remember some SNL sketches that some would prefer to be forgotten.

    Pat

    NBC

    Perhaps the most infamous of SNL characters is Pat. The “It’s Pat” SNL sketches were all built around a single joke: Nobody could tell if Pat was a man or a woman. They’d poke and prod around, trying to find the answer, but they never would.

    You can probably deduce why Julia Sweeney’s Pat character would be missing from modern SNL sketches.

    Remarkably, there was a Pat movie, probably the worst movie ever produced based on an SNL character, which is really saying something.

    Uncle Roy

    NBC

    Buck Henry was primarily known as a great comedy writer whose work included The Graduate and Get Smart. He was also a staple of the early seasons of Saturday Night Live, hosting a total of 10 times between 1976 and 1980.

    He also had his own recurring characters, including three appearances as Uncle Roy — a predatory babysitter. The sketches are, obviously, very uncomfortable.

    Anne Beatts was one of the writers on the Uncle Roy sketches. A veteran of National Lampoon, she was famed for her brazenness, a necessity to be a female comedy writer back in the 1970s.

    Ching Chang

    NBC

    Dana Carvey had some incredible SNL sketches and countless great recurring characters: Garth. Church Lady.

    Then, there’s Ching Chang. We don’t even like writing the character’s name out.

    There is no malice in Dana Carvey’s Ching Chang character, but he’s hard to watch now. There’s a reason they didn’t make the Best of Dana Carvey collection. Let’s just focus on all the good Carvey characters, like Church Lady (above).

    Lyle, the Effeminate Heterosexual

    NBC

    Hey, Dana Carvey returns! This one is less dicey, but does feel like something that would probably be avoided now, given the potential for it to stir controversy. Like many Saturday Night Live characters, this is a one-note premise, and it is right there in the character’s name.

    Carvey plays Lyle, and basically everybody assumes he’s gay because of his mannerisms. These could have been really iffy, but the “game” of the scenes is that everybody who assumes he’s gay is totally fine with it, including his wife.

    Much of the comedy comes from Lyle’s surprise and shock that anyone could think he’s gay.

    John Belushi’s Samurai

    NBC

    A white guy could be a samurai. Tom Cruise did it in a movie! However, John Belushi was not simply playing a samurai who was white in all his various sketches about a samurai who runs whatever business. No, in the samurai SNL sketches, Belushi is playing a Japanese samurai.

    That means, in addition to his traditional garb and hairstyle associated with samurai, Belushi is doing gibberish Japanese. He appeared in many sketches, mostly involving Buck Henry. Henry was a fan of the original sketch and asked to do a samurai sketch every time he hosted.

    That’s even though one time Belushi hit Henry with his sword and cut his head open.

    Robert Goulet

    NBC

    Will Ferrell played Goulet, the famed crooner, a few times. He’s a very Ferrell style person to play. There was no inherent issue with Ferrell’s Goulet impression. No, it is one particular time that Ferrell played Goulet that would not fly today.

    The joke in one of the Goulet SNL sketches was that he was crooning famed rap songs such as “Thong Song.” A couple of the songs in the sketch, though, contained the N-word. And Ferrell said it. Live from New York.

    Famously, Chevy Chase and Richard Pryor did a sketch that involved the use of that word, but it was 1975, Pryor was central to the sketch, and it was actively about racial prejudice.

    Canteen Boy

    NBC

    We will stump for the infamous iteration of the Canteen Boy sketches not being problematic, if only being fitfully funny and a smidge lazy. Adam Sandler played Canteen Boy several times, but only once was did it spark offense — so much so that it was referenced in Alec Baldwin’s monologue the next time he hosted.

    Canteen Boy is a classic Sandler character in that he is almost an anti-character. He’s just an odd assistant scoutmaster who has a canteen. Baldwin, in one sketch, played the scoutmaster who, well, makes sexual advances on Canteen Boy. Canteen Boy knows what is going on, and he flees and summons animals to attack Baldwin’s scoutmaster.

    Still, the idea of a sexually aggressive scoutmaster upset people. Modern SNL sketches tend not to make jokes about this kind of thing.

    Jazz Man

    NBC

    Billy Crystal was only on Saturday Night Live for one season, the infamous 1984-85 season when a show that was on the ropes was trying to right the ship. That included bringing in people like Crystal who were already famous.

    In fact, Crystal had previously appeared on Saturday Night Live, and the first time he did he brought his Jazz Man character into the mix.

    The Jazz Man is one of the wilder recurring characters in comedy. Crystal has brought it out time and time again, including into the new millennium. It’s one of multiple characters Crystal plays in blackface. At least when he plays Sammy Davis Jr. he’s doing an impression of a real person (not that it inoculates him, of course). With the Jazz Man, he’s just doing a stereotypical jazz guy. In, you know, blackface.

    David Paterson

    NBC

    Paterson was the governor of New York for a couple years, and SNL is a New York-based show. Fred Armisen played Paterson several times on SNL. Given their respective racial makeup, that was already not ideal. However, Paterson is also legally blind, and Armisen’s impression of Paterson leaned heavily into that.

    Armisen’s Paterson was a squinting, bumbling klutz. That would be questionable if Armisen was just playing a generic blind guy, but he was playing a real person who was legally blind. He turned Paterson into Mr. Magoo.

    The real Paterson was bighearted enough to appear next to Armisen doing his impression one night — part of Armisen apologizing for the broad caricature.

    Vinny Vedecci

    NBC

    Bill Hader is a fantastic impressionist, and he loves old-school archetypes. There’s a reason why he did a recurring Vincent Price sketch. One of his other recurring Saturday Night Live characters was Vinny Vedecci. Vedecci was the host of an Italian talk show, and he was boorish and brash. He also spoke largely in gibberish Italian. You know, that classic patter of Italian that isn’t actually words.

    We include this one because Hader himself has said he would not do Vedecci again. An Italian woman told him that she did not like the sketch, because it sounded so much to her like a gibberish version of her father.

    Hader had seen it in his head as a riff on classic comedy tropes, but this changed his perception.

    Nude Beach

    SNL Sketches
    NBC

    We end with a sketch that only occurred once, and personally we have no problem with it, but it raised huge objections at the time.

    We’re talking about a beach sketch written by the indelible Conan O’Brien alongside the also great Robert Smigel. Matthew Broderick was the host when it finally aired, and Dana Carvey features prominently again. The sketch takes place at a clothes-free beach, and even the amount of skin in the sketch feels like it might not be tried today.

    However, when writing the sketch, O’Brien and Smigel had a goal: “Penis” is a clinical, medical word that refers to an organ of the male body. O’Brien and Smigel set out to use it as many times as they could — more than 40 times in all.

    Reportedly, well over 40,000 complaints were registered with NBC. We doubt the show would ever poke the bear this way again.

    The Sharon Stone Airport Security Sketch

    Dana Carvey Doesn't Apologize for 1992 Sharon Stone Sketch on SNL
    NBC – Credit: C/O

    Last year on his Fly on the Wall podcast, Dana Carvey playfully apologized to Sharon Stone for a 1992 SNL sketch in which he played one of several airport security employees who try to get her to undress — supposedly “for security reasons.”

    Besides the sexual harassment joke, Carvey played the character as Indian. Carvey joked on the podcast that “we would be literally arrested now,” for attempting to do the sketch today.

    But he later clarified that he was just joking when he apologized to Stone, noting that when the sketch aired, “the whole audience went crazy, you do the sketch like six times with the read-through and the rehearsals, and she was such a sport with it. So there was no reason to apologize.”

    He also noted that he’s done imitations of all nationalities and doesn’t apologize. But the modern SNL would never go for the sketch today.

    Liked These Old SNL Sketches That Wouldn’t Fly Today?

    NBC

    You might also like this list of the 12 Best Saturday Night Live Sketches or this list of 15 Best SNL Characters.

    Main image: SNL. NBC



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  • 12 Old Scary Movies That Are Still Terrifying Today

    12 Old Scary Movies That Are Still Terrifying Today


    Some old scary movies just don’t feel scary anymore. But these films stood the test of time.

    The Exorcist (1973)

    Warner Bros. – Credit: Warner Bros.

    Profoundly chilling even before Linda Blair’s head starts spinning, The Exorcist did for unearthing ancient demons what Jaws did for going in the water.

    The franchise returned last year with David Gordon Green’s Exorcist: Believer, in which Ellen Burstyn reprised the role of Chris MacNeil for the first time in 50 years.

    Jaws (1975)

    Universal – Credit: Universal Pictures

    A perfect movie that deploys its doll-eyed villain with impeccable skill, Jaws made everyone who has ever seen it think about sharks at least a little bit every single time we went to the beach for the rest of our lives.

    It’s still every bit as scary now as it was nearly 50 years ago.

    It also inspired a slew of other scary animal movies — a few of which used real animals.

    Carrie (1976)

    United Artists – Credit: C/O

    The newest film on this list, based on the first Stephen King novel, remains anxiety-inducing not because of the literal bucket of blood, but because of the high-school cruelty that still rings in the souls of anyone who experienced it.

    The casual bullying, from a time when it was much more tolerated than it is today, is as upsetting to watch as it ever was.

    Also Read: 10 Movie Sex Scenes Someone Should Have Stopped

    Night of the Living Dead (1968)

    Continental Distributing – Credit: C/O

    This low-budget George Romero masterpiece retains an eerie, simple power that makes it more frightening than The Last of Us, The Walking Dead, or any of the other countless zombie stories and other scary movies it inspired.

    It’s also one of the most profitable movies ever made, racking in more than 100 times its budget.

    Rosemary’s Baby (1968)

    Rosemarys Baby
    Paramount – Credit: C/O

    Everyone today talks about gaslighting all the time, but Rosemary’s Baby takes us inside a Manhattan apartment building that has perfected it to terrifying extremes.

    When Rosemary (Mia Farrow) becomes pregnant, everyone around her attributes her well-founded fears to hormones and paranoia. But just because you’re paranoid, as the saying goes, doesn’t mean they’re not after you. Or your baby.

    Psycho (1960)

    Psycho (1960)
    Paramount – Credit: Paramount Pictures

    The Alfred Hitchcock classic implied more than it showed, but implied it quite effectively.

    Psycho spawned the slasher genre, made horror respectable, and made lots of people feel a lot less safe in the shower.

    It also contains, for all money, at least one of the all-time greatest movie twists.

    Suspiria (1977)

    Produzioni Atlas Consorziate – Credit: C/O

    A giallo masterpiece worth watching for the lurid colors alone, Dario Argento’s beautiful, haunting and terrifying story follows an American (Jessica Harper, above) at an elite German ballet academy who realizes, via some very creatively presented murders, that the school is hotbed of witchcraft.

    The very confusing sequel, Inferno, released in 1980, is also very worth a watch. Don’t try to sort out the plot. Just let yourself be hypnotized in a wash of blood, color and fire.

    Like them or not, Argento makes the most visually stunning horror movies.

    The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)

    Bryanston Distributing Company – Credit: C/O

    You’re creeped out just reading that title. The film’s relentlessly menacing atmospherics — buzzing flies, animal sounds — make it one of the creepiest things ever committed to film. The chainsaw stuff pushes it far over the top. But Tobe Hooper’s very smart direction also lifts it far above its many imitators.

    Despite the ominous title, the film implies more than it shows — like all the best horror movies.

    Also: Grainy ’70s film stock makes everything scarier.

    What Have You Done to Solange? (1972)

    Italian International Film – Credit: C/O

    This giallo thriller has a straightforward premise: a private school teacher becomes a murder suspect when he can’t provide an alibi for a killing — because he was in the arms of one of his students. The manner of death remains gasp-inducing, all these years later.

    Please note that all the other scary movies on this list are quite tame compared to the next two scary movies.

    Last House on the Left (1972)

    Hallmark Releasing – Credit: C/O

    The directorial debut of future Scream and Nightmare on Elm Street icon Wes Craven, Last House on the Left is a difficult-to-watch story of two young women who are terrorized by escaped convicts.

    Eventually, parents seek vengeance. But before that you have to sit though a deeply unpleasant scene where the convicts treat the women horribly, and one walks hopelessly into water to die, rather than let it go on any longer.

    It’s loosely based on Ingmar Bergman’s The Virgin Spring, and carried the infamous tagline, “To avoid fainting, keep repeating, ‘It’s only a movie … Only a movie … Only a movie …’”

    Johnny Got His Gun (1971)

    Cinemation Industries – Credit: C/O

    Based on a 1939 Dalton Trumbo novel, and adapted into a film by Trumbo during the Vietnam War, this powerful and deeply affecting anti-war story follows a young man named Joe who suffers battlefield injuries that cost him his arms, legs, sight and ability to see and hear. He’s left trapped in his own mind.

    Long after Vietnam, the movie managed to terrify Gen X audiences thanks to Metallica, who featured clips of it prominently in their 1988 video for “One.”

    Its entire ambiance is unsettling, even before we get to the scenes of Joe in his hospital bed. It’s not even technically a horror movie, but it’s one of the most resonant scary movies we’ve ever seen.

    Like Old Scary Movies?

    Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O

    You might also like this list of scary movies that didn’t need to be remade.

    Main image: Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Bryanston Distributing Company



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