‘SNL’ is another late-night show that has been a target of Trump’s ire
President Trump has said many things about โSaturday Night Liveโ over the years. Few of them are favorable, highlighting his disdain for the late-night sketch comedy show, though his previous stints as host would suggest otherwise.
The president hosted the show in 2004 and in 2015, shortly after announcing his first run for president. The decision to have him host โSNLโ in 2015 was controversial at the time, but NBCโs top brass defended the move, citing his front-runner status among Republicans and the high ratings it produced. โAt the end of the day, he was on the show for 11 minutes and … it wasnโt like the Earth fell off its axis,โ said then-NBC Entertainment Chairman Robert Greenblatt during the Television Critics Assn. press tour in 2016. He would later call Trump โtoxicโ and โdemented.โ
Trump, meanwhile, has repeatedly said he believes the show is unfunny, lacks talent and is โjust a political ad for the Demsโ nowadays. The sentiment echoes comments heโs made about late-night talk show hosts Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel and their respective shows, each known for skewering Trump. With Season 51 of โSaturday Night Liveโ set to begin Saturday, and recent settlements with media outlets and tech companies making headlines โ YouTube settled a Trump lawsuit for nearly $25 million Monday over the suspension of his account โ a renewed focus will be on the show and how it spoofs the president and his policies.
Colbertโs series was canceled by CBS in July and will conclude its 10-year run next year in May. While CBS cited financial reasons for its decision to end Colbertโs show, the host was a vocal critic of both Trump and CBSโ parent company, Paramount, which had recently settled a lawsuit with Trump just before the Federal Communications Commission approved its merger with Skydance Media (Colbert called the settlement โa big fat bribeโ).
Kimmel was benched by ABC in September after the head of the FCC, a Trump appointee, threatened the network over the hostโs comments about Charlie Kirkโs suspected killer. Kimmel has since returned to the air, and used his first episode back to defend free speech. Colbert and Kimmel also appeared as guests on each otherโs shows Tuesday, expressing mutual support and cracking jokes at Trumpโs expense. Trump has also called for NBC to ax its late-night hosts Seth Meyers and Jimmy Fallon, both of whom are โSNLโ alums.
Now, โSNLโ could be the next target of the administrationโs scrutiny. Trumpโs posts on social media have previously aired his disapproval for how the series mocks and satirizes him and his administration, and he has suggested investigating NBC as result.
โNothing funny about tired Saturday Night Live on Fake News NBC!,โ Trump tweeted in February 2019, during his first term in office. โQuestion is, how do the Networks get away with these total Republican hit jobs without retribution? Likewise for many other shows? Very unfair and should be looked into. This is the real Collusion!โ
Donald Trump in 2015, the year NBC cut ties after he made comments about undocumented Mexican immigrants.
(Andrew H. Walker / Getty Images)
Over the years, Trump has had a contentious relationship with the network that once aired โThe Apprentice,โ the show that made him a reality TV star, and his Miss Universe pageant. In 2015, NBC cut ties with Trump over comments he made about undocumented Mexican immigrants.
โSaturday Night Live,โ which celebrated its 50th anniversary earlier this year with multiple specials, has been churning out political parodies for decades, and its comedy has targeted leaders from all political backgrounds.
The first time Trump was portrayed on โSNLโ was in 1988 by then-cast member Phil Hartman. Since then, a host of actors and cast members have cycled through with their Trump impressions, with one of the most memorable being Alec Baldwin, who took over from Darrell Hammond in 2016 ahead of the presidential election.
Trump disliked Baldwinโs portrayal, and wrote in 2018 that Baldwinโs โdying mediocre career was saved by his terrible impersonation.โ Baldwin won an Emmy for supporting actor in 2017 for playing the president.
The โ30 Rockโ actorโs stint as Trump on โSNLโ lasted through 2020, and he made appearances as Trump even when the show was filming remotely during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. Some of his most memorable moments impersonating the president were in cold opens that mocked the debates between Trump and Hillary Clinton.
Alec Baldwin in 2017 as President-elect Donald J. Trump during a โSaturday Night Liveโ cold open sketch.
(Will Heath / NBC)
In March 2019, Trump wrote that โSNLโ continues โknocking the same person (me), over & over, without so much of a mention of โthe other side.โโ The episode that aired the weekend he wrote that tweet was a rerun. โLike an advertisement without consequences,โ he went on.
According to reports from the Daily Beast, Trump took a step beyond airing his grievances over Twitter that time. He reportedly asked advisors and lawyers in early 2019 about what the FCC, the court system, and even the Department of Justice could do to look into โSNLโ and other late-night comedy figures who had mocked him. That inquiry did not amount to any actions, according to the outlet.
In 2022, Trump said the showโs ratings were โHUUUGE!โ when he hosted, but that theyโve since tapered off. The most recent season of โSNLโ was the most-watched in three years, with a season average of more than 8 million viewers.
He went on to write that creator and executive producer Lorne Michaels is โangry and exhausted, the show even more so. It was once good, never great, but now, like the Late Night Losers who have lost their audience but have no idea why, it is over for SNL โ A great thing for America!โ
Michaels, who rarely gives interviews, reflected on the cancellation of Colbertโs show and what it means for late-night television in an August conversation with Puck News. Michaels said he was โstunnedโ by CBSโ cancellation of โThe Late Show,โ but added, โI donโt think any of us are going to ever knowโ if the decision was political.
โWhatever crimes Trump is committing, heโs doing it in broad daylight,โ Michaels went on to say. โThere is absolutely nothing that the people who vote for him โ or me โ donโt know.โ He also called Trump a โreally powerful media figureโ who โknows how to hold an audience.โ
โHis politics are obviously not my politics, but denouncing [him] doesnโt work,โ he added.
While many cold opens and โWeekend Updateโ segments have been dedicated to skewering the president, often making him the butt of jokes, the cold open in the episode immediately following the 2024 election had a different approach. Trumpโs opponent, then-Vice President Kamala Harris, had appeared on an episode just days before the election, but after Trumpโs victory, the cast promised they had โbeen with [him] all along,โ adding that they all voted for him and supported him.
โIf youโre keeping some sort of list of your enemies, then we should not be on that list,โ they said before debuting their new Trump impression, โHot jacked Trump,โ which featured impressionist James Austin Johnson in a muscle tee and a headband.
Johnson began portraying the president on the series in 2021, and Michaels said he will continue in the role for Season 51. His portrayal mirrorโs Trumpโs speech patterns and his tendency to veer into tangents about pop culture. Since Trumpโs inauguration in January, the cold opens have zeroed in on Trump, focusing on his relationship with Elon Musk and his policies.
The โWeekend Updateโ segment, hosted by Colin Jost and Michael Che, tends to take sharper jabs the presidentโs policies and comments, as well as other administration officials.
In the Puck interview, Michaels implied the show wasnโt going to back down, and when he was asked whether political comedy will be tougher in the current climate, Michaels said no.
โI donโt think anybody knows what Michael Cheโs politics are,โ he said, โbut they do think heโs funny.โ
Brendan Carr, the chairman of the FCC who has been in the headlines for his role in Kimmelโs benching, wrote in 2020 that political satire is one of the โoldest and most important forms of free speech.โ
โFrom Internet memes to late-night comedians, from cartoons to the plays and poems as old as organized government itself โ Political Satire circumvents traditional gatekeepers & helps hold those in power accountable,โ he continued. โNot surprising that itโs long been targeted for censorship.โ