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Television

Hillary Clinton's SNL Cameo Was Toothless Satire—Like Most Politicians' SNL Cameos

There are rare exceptions, but this is how it usually goes.

Jesse Walker | 10.5.2015 10:43 AM

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This past weekend Saturday Night Live started its 41st year on the air, which means it's reached the point in its life when a more insecure show might buy a sports car, get an age-inappropriate haircut, and start dating a woman half its age. Instead it's taken up with an older woman, bringing on Hillary Clinton to lightly spoof herself in what amounted to a late-night campaign ad:

Saturday Night Live has a lot of experience inserting visiting pols into the show. The tricky part of such segments, at least in those years when SNL aspires to be funny, is that most political figures are not gifted comedians. Even Bob Dole, a bona fide witty guy, wasn't much of a sketch performer: Rewatching his SNL cameo from 1996, it's hard not to notice that he had trouble keeping a straight face. There are occasional exceptions—Jesse Jackson turned out to be genuinely funny, and Ron Nessen was, if nothing else, a pretty good straight man to Chevy Chase's Gerald Ford. But on the whole, you're not going to be able to count on a candidate or a political flunky to be a good comic. So the program is more likely to treat its guest as a comic prop: not a funny person, but a person it's funny to see there.

Note: This is actually Al Franken. Lyndon LaRouche has never appeared on Saturday Night Live.
NBC

The Hillary sketch followed one tried-and-true formula for doing this: Stick the politician on camera with the cast member who's been playing the pol. They did it with Dole, they did it with Sarah Palin, they did it with Hillary Clinton back in 2008, and now they've done it with Clinton again. This does the guests the favor of letting them show (or at least pretend) that they don't mind the joke; it also offers a contrast between the caricature and the image the politician would prefer to project. In this case, Hillary Clinton took the opportunity to turn in a better Hillary Clinton impression than her impersonator.

The Republicans in my Twitter feed have been complaining that SNL just planted a big wet kiss on the Clinton campaign's cheek. This is true, but it's also true that if Marco Rubio or Jeb Bush asked, he could probably get a similarly royal treatment. And if Donald Trump decided he wanted the world to think he can take a joke, the show would surely oblige him. The real scandal of these political guest turns on SNL isn't that the program favors one side more than the other; it's that they're so toothless. If they weren't toothless, most of the guests wouldn't agree to participate. There may have been a time when going on Saturday Night Live could be a risky move for a politician, but those days are long past.

So let's wrap this up with a rare case when a sitting official—in this case, a Georgia state senator—was willing to risk crossing, in his own words, "the fine line between comedy and poor taste." From 1977, here's the late Julian Bond:

Decades later, Bond would write that he "feel[s] uneasy about this joke even today." But he also said it was his favorite moment from his episode.

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NEXT: A Short, Sad History of Zero-Tolerance School Policies

Jesse Walker is books editor at Reason and the author of Rebels on the Air and The United States of Paranoia.

TelevisionHillary ClintonElection 2016
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  1. SugarFree   10 years ago

    She was stiff and inhuman, so a little bit better than normal.

    1. Hyperion   10 years ago

      But still better than a Republican, right?

    2. Quixote   10 years ago

      On the contrary, her behavior was entirely appropriate. In the new, stronger, and limper America that we are trying to build, satire must be toothless. Otherwise it risks crossing the line ? in some instances even into rank criminality, as when an individual sends out "Gmail confessions" sordidly portraying a distinguished academic department chairman as justifying an act of alleged plagiarism on the grounds that "if I had given credit to this man I would have been banned from conferences around the world." So let us keep the base satirical impulses of certain elements of the population confined to late-night television shows where the audience expects what they are going to see; let us enact laws that require all satire to be expressly labeled as such; and let us make it clear to everyone that inappropriately deadpan mockery will be requited with prosecution and prison in this country, just as in other countries like Russia and China. See the documentation of America's leading criminal satire case at:

      http://raphaelgolbtrial.wordpress.com/

  2. SIV   10 years ago

    The Julian Bond sketch disproves the oft-heard contention that SNL was never funny.

    1. Almanian - Micro Trumper   10 years ago

      SNL damned sure was funny when I was in high school in the 70's, and into the 80's. Even some recent shows. But the last 4-5 seasons are so bad I just quit watching at all.

      1. RBS   10 years ago

        Everytime I come across it, everyone in the sketch is trying to hold back their own laughter.

      2. Rufus J. Firefly   10 years ago

        What Almanian said.

        Even the Week-End updates were good; especially under Miller.

        Now SNL you watch for the intro and change the channel; if that.

        It's a shame because there are some really funny people that have come through in the last little while. Like Bill Hader.

        1. Almanian - Micro Trumper   10 years ago

          Bill Hader was awesome. Andy Samberg was sometimes awesome (Lazy Sunday), sometimes stupid.

          Now it's just....well, I don't know, cause I haven't watched in over two years.

        2. MJGreen - Docile Citizen   10 years ago

          SNL is not meant to be watched in its entirety in this age. You wait until Sunday morning to hear which sketch is worth checking out on hulu.

          And yeah, until the past couple years, that was usually the Hader sketch. Their current lineup is sad; most of the women are funny, while only Taran Killam and Bobby Moynihan are the only men with anything to offer.

      3. OneOut   10 years ago

        What Almanian said.

        In those days it was so funny that I would stay home Saturday nights until it was over and then go out. That is a statement when a male in his 20s takes time away from hunting females with likewise raging hormones.

      4. xenia onatopp   10 years ago

        Absolutely. I was in high school when it debuted, and it was a can't miss every week. Remember, this was a time when kids and parents occupied completely separate pop culture worlds, and for the most part TV was on the responsible adults' side of the divide. As teenage druggies, our consumption of comedy was pretty much limited to records-- I still remember the many stoned hours spent listening to Fireside Theater, George Carlin, Richard Pryor, and Cheech & Chong; that, and reading National Lampoon.

        In that universe, SNL was revolutionary-- TV your parents wouldn't get. Even within the puritanical FCC regulations then governing TV content, the swearing and drug references were everywhere and obvious if you knew what to look for. There's been a lot of rough going, interspersed with the occasional stellar cast, in the decades since, but the first five or so seasons were both hilarious and subversive.

        1. xenia onatopp   10 years ago

          *Firesign Theater, that is. Auto correct apparently has a different set of memories than I do.

          1. PapayaSF   10 years ago

            It's actually "Firesign Theatre."

            1. xenia onatopp   10 years ago

              Yeah, the moment I noticed that correction was the moment I flung the phone across the room. Why isn't Android content to let me make my own mistakes?

    2. Crusty Juggler   10 years ago

      That was funny.

      SNL was funny when it took risks. Now, it is rarely funny because they never take risks for fear of offending a celebrity, etc.

    3. Notorious UGCC   10 years ago

      I hear it's what they call a two-joint show now, that's how much it would take to make it funny.

  3. Almanian - Micro Trumper   10 years ago

    SNL is still a thing?

    1. Lee G   10 years ago

      Not really

      1. Almanian - Micro Trumper   10 years ago

        ...then there's still hope!

        1. Princess Trigger   10 years ago

          No, not really.

          1. Pl?ya Manhattan.   10 years ago

            Not really

            1. Almanian - Micro Trumper   10 years ago

              No!

    2. Calvin Coolidge   10 years ago

      It used to be, way back when Hillary barely even qualified for AARP membership.

  4. Juvenile Bluster   10 years ago

    If Citizens United had been decided the other way, would SNL have been allowed to run this? Serious question.

    1. Trump-o-Matic 5000   10 years ago

      Only if the FEC gave them the okay.

  5. Je suis Woodchipper   10 years ago

    SNL clips on Hulu are about the 800th funniest thing on streaming tv right now.

  6. SugarFree   10 years ago

    Also, Miley Cyrus is 22. Why does she sound like a 50-year-old 2-pack a day smoker? I guess gargling cum and thumbtacks really is bad for you.

    1. Je suis Woodchipper   10 years ago

      am i the only one here who appreciates her joie de vivre?

      1. SusanM   10 years ago

        You and the crew of the USS Saipan

    2. SIV   10 years ago

      For your next trick whine about airbrushing and how plus size models have even less realistic body types than the anorexic waifs. That Jezebel-reading is washing your brain.

      1. SugarFree   10 years ago

        Do you even know what you are complaining about anymore? or are you just a squid shooting out a cloud of ink at anything that scares you in the least?

        1. SIV   10 years ago

          Fat SJW's broadcast their insecurity with snarky whining about Miley Cyrus.

          1. SugarFree   10 years ago

            And you project yours bitching about the phantom cosmotarians that plague your every waking thought.

            1. Tonio   10 years ago

              No, that's me. One of the components of Wartyvision projects images directly into the human brain. I'm using SIV as a test subject since the already insane suffer fewer noticeable effects than normal people.

            2. Sam Haysom   10 years ago

              I hate cosmotarians and Miley Cyrus, who is like the ultimate SJW so I really don't know what SIV is talking about.

            3. MJGreen - Docile Citizen   10 years ago

              Damn it SugarFree, two people can't hate the same thing! You whine about Cyrus? You must be a SJW white knight trying to score by bitching about her.

      2. Swiss Servator   10 years ago

        Lighten up, Francis.

    3. mad.casual   10 years ago

      Also, Miley Cyrus is 22. Why does she sound like a 50-year-old 2-pack a day smoker? I guess gargling cum and thumbtacks really is bad for you.

      This sounds like sound moral judgement plausibly disguised as decent taste...

      As a libertarian I say, "How dare you?!?!"

      1. Cyto   10 years ago

        I thought she showed that she still has comedic chops in her sketches - despite the lame writing. She's doing her "weird pop star" thing, trying to make some bucks. As 22 year old party-girl gozillionaires go, she's not doing so bad. She's still working hard, which is more than most 22 year old gozillionaires manage.

        I ain't throwing any stones.

        1. Cyto   10 years ago

          This made me curious so I asked google. Apparently her net worth is $160 million. At 22. Also per the googles she's been working in entertainment since she was in elementary school.

          I'd say she's due a little defference on her life choices, since she seems to be doing a lot better than any of the rabble here. But then that's the default libertarian position anyway, isn't it?

    4. Lord Humungus   10 years ago

      You leave Miley alone!

  7. Crusty Juggler   10 years ago

    The Republicans in my Twitter feed have been complaining

    Complaining? On Twitter? You don't say!

    I like how the right-wing answer to the left-wing's social media dominance is to become like them, but somehow even more whiney.

    1. lap83   10 years ago

      Yeah! they should whine in the comment section of an obscure libertarian blog instead *runs away*

      1. Almanian - Micro Trumper   10 years ago

        Ohhhhh, SNAP!

      2. Swiss Servator   10 years ago

        We are ...snarkier? We have SugarFree, Warty and STEVE SMITH?

        Help me out here, people!

        1. Charles Easterly   10 years ago

          I think it's true, Swiss, that the levels of snark here seem at times to approach epic proportions.
          Of course, there's also the brutal deconstruction of others in keeping with a driving misanthropy (either naturally extant or developed over time) and the widespread mordancy somewhat unique to this comment section.

          I enjoy the inane diversions some of us engage in as well, even if they sometimes risk going so far of topic that we never return to whatever an article was discussing.

          Distractions

  8. kinnath   10 years ago

    Thanks for the link to Jesse and "Green Eggs and Ham".

    One of the best moments to ever air on SNL.

  9. The Late P Brooks   10 years ago

    Does anybody actually watch that show anymore?

    1. Lee G   10 years ago

      It seems to exist solely to produce short videos which the entertainment media can talk about on Monday morning.

  10. Je suis Woodchipper   10 years ago

    Clinton's proposed gun regs on her site are absurdly amorphous as expected.

    Ban on "military style assault" weapons such as.. ?? Pistol grip? Suppressor? SBR? Semi-auto?

    1. WTF   10 years ago

      The shoulder thing, that goes up.

      1. Brian   10 years ago

        Bayonet mounts are a big no-no.

        We've been lucky so far that none of these gunman went in with bayonet mounted.

        1. Almanian - Micro Trumper   10 years ago

          Does this mean I have to give up my M-1 WITH ORIGINAL BAYONET??

          Not happenin'.....

          *tightens grip with cold, not-yet-dead, hands*

  11. Brian   10 years ago

    Politicians being funny! Why, it's like they're almost human! Oh, could I love them more?

  12. The Late P Brooks   10 years ago

    Bayonet mounts are a big no-no.

    But I REALLY REALLY want a Trench Gun, goddammit!

  13. Calvin Coolidge   10 years ago

    Isn't that cute!? She thinks she's people! Silly Hillary.

  14. egould310   10 years ago

    Ron Nessen, although a real human being, was played by writer/actor Buck Henry in that clip.

    1. Jesse Walker   10 years ago

      Arrgh, I linked to the wrong one. Thanks. It's fixed now.

  15. DJ1706   10 years ago

    At least it was just one episode.

    "Madame Secretary" is full-blown Hillary 2016 series.

    Which, of course, could be done away with if Hillary got her way on Citizens United.

    1. Rufus J. Firefly   10 years ago

      Unfrickenbelievable there's such a stupid show.

      1. Swiss Servator   10 years ago

        The Left West Wing was the fantasy Mario Cuomo Administration - Madame Secretary is the hallucinatory-planted memory style Hillary history.

  16. mad.casual   10 years ago

    Who sits down at the bar and says, "And uh, how 'bout you?" to the bartender when they ask, "What brings you here tonight and/or what do you do for a living?"

    1. Rich   10 years ago

      That's the joke, DUH!

      1. mad.casual   10 years ago

        Silly me, I must be out of touch with the common bartender.

        1. dantheserene   10 years ago

          Yeah, that's the sticking point. Beyond that, the whole skit is plausible and worth watching.

          /sarc

  17. Rich   10 years ago

    "This committee was set up, as they have admitted, for the purpose of making a partisan, political issue out of the deaths of four Americans," she said. "I would have never done that! And if I were president ? and there were Republicans or Democrats who were thinking about that ? I would have done everything to shut it down."

    Bullshit.

    1. kbolino   10 years ago

      Worse than bullshit--she, as President, would have tried to shut down Congressional investigations? I believe we call that dictatorship.

    2. Notorious UGCC   10 years ago

      From her Wikipedia page: "In 2005, Clinton called for the Federal Trade Commission to investigate how hidden sex scenes showed up in the controversial video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas."

      So you see that she supports federal investigations of *important* topics, just not the first murder of an American ambassador since the Carter administration.

  18. Robert   10 years ago

    most political figures are not gifted comedians

    Then why do so many judges think they are? Bad judgment, I guess.

  19. Arizona_Guy   10 years ago

    I watched SNL.
    .
    Besides the cameo from Hillary Nixon, the "Weekend Update" segment was shilling for her hard. It was embarrassing.
    .
    And Miley Cyrus? Yeah, I would.

    1. Arizona_Guy   10 years ago

      The only bright side is they made fun of Uncle Bernie

      1. Notorious UGCC   10 years ago

        Let me guess - because he's running against Hillary?

        1. Arizona_Guy   10 years ago

          yep. I'm sure they'll sing his praises if he gets the nom.

  20. SamDod598   10 years ago

    Over the mountians and through the woods dude.

    http://www.Full-Anon.tk

  21. Stephdumas   10 years ago

    That old Mad TV skit titled "I'm sorry Mrs. Jackson" is more funny than that SNL skit.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6k3v9uK31Do

    As for Miley Cyrus, some ponder if she'll be in the 27 club?

  22. Cyto   10 years ago

    The problem with shilling hard for a politician in a comedy show is that it kills the comedy. Having Hillary come out and get ribbed for how awesome she was to do so much for gay marriage (but she could have done it sooner!) isn't funny. Sure, the team-Hillary kids in the crowd ate it up, but it ain't even a little bit funny.

    But you can't blame them for not hitting her during her appearance. That's always poor taste. You can blame them for failing to do anything with any of the issues this administration has given us. Heck, how can you fail to make some decent comedy out of the personal email server? That's politician comedy gold, because it mixes hubris with banality and it doesn't touch any real political issues that might trip you up into preachy-land.

    Instead they rib the administration for how difficult it is having to deal with all those evil republicans. Har-har.... comedy gold!

    These guys aren't even good progressives. They are just team-blue democrats. At least if they had some good hardcore progressive ideals they'd be able to gin up some outrage against the Dem leaders and make a decent biting commentary.

    1. Notorious UGCC   10 years ago

      "Mrs. Clinton, your campaign has the momentum of a runaway freight train...why are you so popular?"

      [laughter, extended applause]

  23. Austrian Anarchy   10 years ago

    Not a single mention of the 'best' presidential candidate cameo ever, John Anderson? He was even featured in a skit by a future Senator!

  24. PatrickPayton   10 years ago

    I make up to $90 an hour working from my home. My story is that I quit working at Walmart to work online and with a little effort I easily bring in around $40h to $86h? Someone was good to me by sharing this link with me, so now i am hoping i could help someone else out there by sharing this link... Try it, you won't regret it!......

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