Trump's Tariff Move Has Created a Massive Opportunity for 401(K)S

As President Trump slaps China with new tariffs, the Fed is boxed in--and gold is skyrocketing just like it did during Trump's first term. JPMorgan just grabbed $4 Billion in gold bars... should you? Discover a "Tariff Assistance Loophole" to move funds from your IRA & 401(k) into gold--tax-free!

At 50, 'Saturday Night Live' celebrates its past as a comedy icon — and wonders about its future

DAVID BAUDER
February 13, 2025

NEW YORK (AP) -- Tune into the Oct. 11, 1975 premiere episode of "Saturday Night Live" -- then without "live" in its name -- and you may be instantly surprised at some of the bones of the show that are still intact today.

There's the cold open skit, featuring cast members John Belushi and Michael O'Donoghue. At its end, Chevy Chase gingerly walks by the prone bodies of the two actors, playing dead, for the very first call of "Live from New York, it's Saturday night!"

NBC is rebroadcasting that episode Saturday, part of a feast of 50th anniversary programming that includes a three-hour special on Sunday reuniting dozens of past cast members and friends and a homecoming concert from Radio City Music Hall being livestreamed Friday night on Peacock.

The original cast surely would have mocked the display of showbiz excess, much like the actors in last year's fictional backstage depiction of opening night in the movie "Saturday Night" couldn't hide their disgust at Hollywood legend Milton Berle.

Not ready for prime time? Hardly

Back then, they were known as the Not Ready for Prime Time Players. Success has long since made a mockery of that name. Among viewers under age 50, the late-night show is more popular than anything NBC airs in so-called prime time, and that doesn't even reflect the way many people experience it now, through highlight clips online.

"Saturday Night Live" is the engine of comedy, minting generations of stars from Belushi to Bill Murray to Eddie Murphy to Adam Sandler to Will Ferrell to Amy Poehler to Kristen Wiig to Kate McKinnon to Bowen Yang. It launched movie franchises too numerous to mention, and NBC's late-night comedy lineup of Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers traces its lineage to "SNL." It's still the first place people turn when they want to make comedic sense of current affairs.

At its center, then and now, is the inscrutable figure of Lorne Michaels, the executive producer who was 30 during that first season and turned 80 last fall -- on a show night, naturally.

Michaels left "SNL" for five years and, upon his return in 1985, hit upon the formula that guaranteed its continued relevance.

He recognized, as author Susan Morrison writes in the biography "Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live," due to be released Tuesday, that "just about every person who has ever watched SNL believes that its funniest years were the ones when they were in high school."

That means constantly moving forward, always adding new blood, even being ruthless about it. That means trusting young writers to keep the cultural references relevant, and invent new ones. That means booking musical acts that Michaels and his good friend, singer Paul Simon, probably haven't heard of but his people tell him are on the cutting edge.

It's not perfect. It never was.

"The history of the show reads like an EKG," said James Andrew Miller, co-author with Tom Shales of the 2002 book, "Live From New York: The Complete, Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live." "There are fantastic years, there are growing years, there are years to make you carsick, there are years to make you wonder if it should still be going on."

Substitute the word "shows" for "years" in that quote, and it still makes sense.

Creating viral moments before 'viral' was a thing

"Saturday Night Live" is often -- usually -- wildly uneven. But it produced viral moments before the internet existed. Garrett Morris' news for the hard of hearing, Murphy's irascible Gumby, "Lazy Sunday," the cowbell sketch, Tina Fey's impersonation of Sarah Palin: The memories alone produce laughs. The duds, the ideas that never took off or hosts who couldn't rise to the challenge fade away. Or maybe they're the price of genius.

It can be easy to lose sight of how hard this actually is, said Bill Carter, veteran chronicler of television comedy and author of "The Late Shift: Letterman, Leno, and the Network Battle for the Night." A 90-minute program is written from scratch every week, sets are constructed in a New York office building, hosts of various degrees of talent accommodated.

Ready or not, the show must go on Saturday at 11:30 p.m. The clock is unforgiving.

"It's a different creative enterprise, every show," Carter said. "That's why it is good and bad, but it's also why it's exciting ... 'Live,' that is the essential feature of the show. You know when you are watching that it is actually happening in New York City right now."

Only so much polish is possible. Someone may flub a line, or get the giggles. Sinéad O'Connor may rip up a picture of the pope, or Ashlee Simpson's lip-sync might fail.

"Saturday Night Live" has leaned more into its history in recent years. Alumni make frequent reappearances, and spotting unbilled cameos has become sport. The Five-Timers Club of guest hosts, while a joke, treads the line of smugness.

It may seem like a franchise with no foreseeable conclusion, and is even built for that. Michaels will have more to say about that than anyone. The backstage boss is also the longest-running on-screen character; his appearance as a straight man to then-New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani on the first show after the Sept. 11 attacks is one of "SNL's" most poignant moments.

"Can we be funny?" Michaels asked.

Replied Giuliani: "Why start now?"

How long will Lorne Michaels stay with the show?

Observers say Michaels has stepped back a bit, relying more on the capable team that he's built. There's no indication that his eye for spotting talent has diminished. Those who have seen it say that his most fearsome skill -- making a series of instant decisions between the show's dress rehearsal and performance, shortening or lengthening skits, moving and changing them to produce the broadcast viewers see -- is flourishing.

The years leading up to the 50th anniversary have been filled with speculation that this will be when he steps down, talk he's even fueled himself in the past. But he hasn't discussed it, or even given interviews surrounding the festivities. The subject is the focus of "After Lorne," a new piece in New York magazine, where author Reeves Wiedeman describes Michaels as a man of mystery, sometimes an intimidating force, to those around the show.

Whoever replaces him -- names like Fey, Meyers and Colin Jost have been mentioned -- would likely face crushing pressure. At a time when broadcast television is fading, NBC would be sorely tempted to cut costs around the program in a way they haven't with Michaels in charge, Miller said.

If the 50th anniversary were to trigger his exit, Carter said that likely would be known by now.

"It's his life," he said. "Why would you walk away from your life if you don't have to? This was a special, unique thing that he created, and if you enjoy doing it, which I think he still does and can do it, I don't see any reason he should leave."

Someday, that time will come. In the meantime, enjoy the show.

___

David Bauder writes about the intersection of media and entertainment for the AP. Follow him at http://x.com/dbauder and https://bsky.app/profile/dbauder.bsky.social

Continue Reading...

Popular

Haven’t filed your 2021 tax return? You might be missing out on a COVID stimulus check

If you haven't filed your 2021 tax returns you might be missing on a COVID stimulus payment. Taxpayers who haven't filed 2021 tax returns who may be eligible for the Recovery Rebate Credit must file it by April 15, 2025 to claim the credit.

What's Going On With Affirm Shares Wednesday?

Affirm shares are trading higher on Wednesday after the company announced it is set to expand its credit reporting to Experian.

The Fort Knox Cover-up? What It Means for Gold - Ad

Trump and Musk are demanding answers: Is Fort Knox empty? If the gold is gone, supply collapses, and prices could skyrocket instantly. Right now, I've uncovered 5 major gold predictions that could make this Fort Knox moment even bigger than people realize. One of them is already unfolding--and the window to act is closing fast.

BranchOut's Partnership With MicroDried Expected To Boost Annual Sales By At Least $5 Million: Details

BranchOut Food's new partnership with MicroDried is expected to generate $5-$6 million in annual ingredient sales, leveraging its GentleDry technology.

Trump threatens Houthi rebels that they'll be 'completely annihilated' as airstrikes pound Yemen

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — threatened on Wednesday that they'll be “completely annihilated” as American airstrikes pounded locations under their control, while further pressuring the group's main benefactor Iran.

Globetrotting CFA Discovers Top Four Gold Miners With 100X Upside Potential - Ad

Most CFAs sit at a desk... But one unusual CFA went all-in on gold investing 20 years ago... and accidentally positioned himself as the expert's expert for the current bull market. Garrett Goggin's research has led him to the the Top Four miners sitting on potential upside of 100X or more for the current gold mania. He's been offered as much as $100k by Hedge Funds.

Can AI help you win your March Madness bracket? One disruptor bets $1 million on 'yes' (and Houston)

DENVER (AP) — Perhaps the surest sign that artificial intelligence really is taking over the world will come the day it wins your favorite bracket pool.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang discusses AI's future at GTC 2025

Nvidia founder Jensen Huang kicked off the company's artificial intelligence developer conference on Tuesday by telling a crowd of thousands that AI is going through “an inflection point.”

DOGE's Next Target Set To Hand 401K Savers A Windfall? - Ad

Musk's Department of Government Efficiency has already uncovered $55B in waste--and Trump's backing his plan to return $2T in savings to taxpayers. But why wait? Unlock a legal Trump IRS loophole to protect & grow your wealth NOW!

Cathie Wood Goes On Shopping Spree Amid Tech Bloodbath Monday: Loads Up On Tesla, Palantir, Coinbase And These Stocks

On Monday, Cathie Wood‘s Ark Invest made significant trades involving Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA) , Palantir Technologies Inc. (NASDAQ:PLTR), Coinbase Global Inc. (N

Tesla tumbles again as investors bail on Elon Musk's suddenly struggling electric vehicle company

Shares of Tesla are sliding again Monday as confidence in Elon Musk's electric car company continues to disintegrate following a post-election “Trump bump.”

Washington Won't Save You--but This 4-Step Plan Might - Ad

America's economy is unraveling--soaring costs, skyrocketing debt, and Wall Street insiders dumping stocks. This isn't a recession--it's an economic breakdown. Stocks could crash 50%, real estate 40%, and inflation will eat your savings. But history shows: the biggest crashes create the biggest fortunes--if you act now!

'Horrific Report': Economists Warn Consumer Confidence Collapse Signals Economic Trouble

U of Michigan consumer confidence survey shows rapid decrease amid high inflation expectations, economists warn of bad omen for US economy.

Claim the "No.1 Coin of 2025" Before March 24th - Ad

After spotting 44 different coins that have returned over 100%...Chris Rowe is now exposing the details behind the "Superpower Coin"... that's partnered with 19 of the largest companies from some of the world's largest superpower nations... A little-known 3-cent coin that is poised to outperform Bitcoin in 2025... starting on March 24th.

Law firm sues over Trump executive order that seeks to suspend security clearances

WASHINGTON (AP) — A during the 2016 presidential campaign sued the federal government Tuesday over an executive order that seeks to strip its attorneys of security clearances.

Why Trump's Recent Moves Could Ignite a New Gold Standard - Ad

Donald Trump's bold policies are driving a hidden gold market boom. Garrett Goggin, a renowned precious metals expert with 20+ years of experience, reveals 5 explosive investment opportunities set to explode in this new era. Backed by triple-digit returns in 2024, Garrett's insights show you how to position yourself for wealth in 2025.

Melinda French Gates Reveals An IBM Manager Inspired Her To Join Bill Gates Co-Founded 'Little Company' Microsoft

Melinda French Gates credited a conversation with an IBM (NYSE: IBM) hiring manager for her decision to join Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), a choice that significantly impacted her career and personal life.

Edmunds: 2025 Honda CR-V vs. 2025 Subaru Forester

The is a redesigned model, but Subaru didn’t exactly stray from the formula of the last generation. It’s still a boxy small SUV with great visibility, adventure-ready versatility, and a no-nonsense approach to interior design. Its many upgrades for 2025 help keep it competitive, but how does it fare against the class best?

Tech Legend Issues AI Warning for May 21st - Ad

And many people are now wondering...Is this the end of the AI boom? A critical AI event scheduled for May 21st, and could have the answers. It's guaranteed to happen...And I believe it's going to be a game-changer for the market.

Trump has begun another trade war. Here's a timeline of how we got here

NEW YORK (AP) — Long-threatened from U.S. President have plunged the country into a trade war abroad — all while on-again, off-again new levies continue to escalate uncertainty.

Trump's Secret Plan to Reboot the Dollar Leaked? - Ad

Steve Bannon let slip 3 shocking words--and Wall Street panicked. According to Bannon, President Trump is poised to restore the gold standard, reset the dollar, and send gold soaring. Position yourself before it's too late! Claim your free 2025 Gold Guide and discover the Trump Loophole to move funds from your IRA & 401(k) into gold--tax-free!

Which US companies are pulling back on diversity initiatives?

A growing number of prominent companies have scaled back or set aside the diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives that endorsed following the protests that accompanied the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd, a Black man, in 2020.

The DOGE Shock: Nine Stocks to Buy - Ad

They say that DOGE's real agenda could shock the entire stock market in the coming days - sending a handful of widely unknown stocks soaring. And they've compiled the definitive investment playbook for anyone who wants the opportunity to capitalize.

Universities are facing big cuts to research funding. At Duke, it's a time for 'damage control'

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — Facing the potential loss of hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funding, Duke University is preparing for the worst.

Mohamed El-Erian Says 'Fed Put' Optimism Rises As Inflation Cools - But 'Trump Put' Hopes Are Shaken

U.S. markets rallied on Wednesday after February's inflation report came in softer than anticipated, bolstering expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts while investors reassess the economic impact of President Donald Trump administration's policies.

Debts, Deficits & Destruction of the US Dollar - Ad

The economist Time Magazine called "out of step with economic reality" for predicting the U.S. economy would implode in his 2005 best-selling book Empire of Debt over two years before the Financial Crisis tore America and the global economy apart... is back to issue his next warning. Before you invest a single dollar in the markets -- or make any investment decisions -- it's critical you see this alarming video right away.

Palantir Cofounder Peter Thiel Might Write A Book About Ancient Prophecies, The Antichrist, And Armageddon - He Thinks We're Ignoring The Real Threat

Billionaire tech investor Peter Thiel is exploring a book on ancient prophecies, the Antichrist, and Armageddon, warning that society is ignoring the threat of a one-world government—a concern he believes demands urgent attention.

Australia won't retaliate against 'unjustified' US tariffs on steel and aluminum

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Australian Prime Minister said Wednesday that U.S. tariffs on Australian steel and aluminum were unjustified, but his government would not retaliate with its own tariffs.

March 20th: The NEXT 50X Nvidia Call - Ad

In 2016 Louis Navellier made a big prediction regarding Nvidia's GPUs... Its stock price was a split-adjusted $1 and went up more than 7,000% at its peak. Don't miss Louis NEXT BIG Nvidia call. (Plus 6 stocks you need to own before March 20th.)

Canada's Liberals will elect new leader to replace Trudeau as country deals with Trump's trade war

TORONTO (AP) — Canada's governing Liberals will announce a replacement for Prime Minister on Sunday as the country deals with U.S. President Donald Trump's and as a federal election looms.

Stocks Trigger "Titanic Syndrome" - Ad

The number of stocks moving from all-time highs to making new 52-week lows this month are surging, triggering what traders call "Titanic Syndrome". Today 50-year Wall Street veteran, Marc Chaikin explains exactly what changes you should make to your portfolio today to prepare for more volatility ahead.

Elon Musk Says Ukraine Behind 'Massive Cyberattack' On X: 'We're Not Sure Exactly What Happened...'

Elon Musk stated that the reported "massive cyberattack" that his social media account X faced on Monday is suspected to have originated from Ukraine.

South Africa plans to spend more on health and defense after the US cuts aid

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Lawmakers in South Africa laid out plans to shore up the budgets for health and defense but also put up value added tax by 0.5%, a move that will raise the cost of living as consumers pay more for goods, including food, and services.

New Study: 50 Stocks Will Crash While 7 MAGA Stocks Will Soar - Ad

If you own any of these stocks -- directly or through mutual funds -- I want to encourage you to sell them before April 30th. I've compiled all 50 companies in my "MAGA Blacklist" report. Your retirement could depend on seeing this list.

COPT Defense Properties Faces Risks: Analyst Sees Uncertainty In Leasing Process Amid Budget Cut Risks

JP Morgan analyst lowers COPT Defense Properties' price target to $29, citing risks from budget cuts, Space Command HQ uncertainty, and slow data center growth.

Trending Now

Information, charts or examples are for illustration and educational purposes only and not for individualized investment management This message contains commercial elements, such as advertising. We only send these offers to those who have opted in to our newsletter. Past performance is not indicative of future results. For these reasons we strongly suggest trading in a DEMO/Simulated account. The information provided by us is for educational and informational purposes only. We make no representations or warranties concerning the products, practices or procedures of any company or entity mentioned or recommended and have not determined if the statements and opinions of the advertiser are accurate, correct or truthful. If you use, act upon or make decisions in reliance on information contained or any external source linked within it, you do so at your own peril and agree to hold us, our officers, directors, shareholders, affiliates and agents without fault.

Copyright trendadvisor.net
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service