SNL UK is putting the second-rate American…
Live from New York it’s . . . the second-best “Saturday Night”?
It makes me really feel for-Lorned to say it. But “SNL UK,” the brand-new British counterpart to the 51-year-old American sketch-comedy collection is, frankly, kicking NYC’s arse.
I watch both exhibits every week — UK airs right here Sundays on Peacock — and the sample is clear.
On NBC, if we’re fortunate, there’s one strong sketch showcasing breakout Ashley Padilla. Marcello Hernández is going to be an Adam Sandler-level film star, 100%, but I never need to see Domingo again. Most of the materials over at Studio 8H these days favors a wacky, coked-up premise over construction or payoff. Nothing is good. Scenes normally fall off a cliff.
Meanwhile in London, the far superior model with an accent has been persistently pleasant from start to end. Often it’s phenomenal. The spin-off is more hilarious, wittier, edgier and boundlessly inventive. It’s proving “SNL” may be good.
“SNL UK” has confirmed a lot better than its long-running American counterpart. Sky TV
And I’m not the first to say that. Of all people, “SNL” creator Lorne Michaels has said so.
“My design for it was that it would be the cooler of the two shows, and it would be the thing they beat us up with,” the man with the plan told Deadline. “It’s smarter, funnier, more original.”
That comment must’ve stung over at 30 Rock. Who wants TV critics when you’ve received Lorne?
The beautiful success of “UK” — significantly on YouTube and Instagram where clips have racked up thousands and thousands of views — may very well be a consequence of beginning out with a goal on its back.
Everybody, including me, thought it was a horrible concept.
The first cold open took intention at Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Sky TV
You may’ve heard that British comedy is sort of a big deal. How may a half-century-old American format improve upon such a proud custom?
But, hey, isn’t that how the authentic show started in NYC — as a massively doubted underdog?
Both the 1975 program with Gilda Radner and Chevy Chase and the 2026 British one have been scrappy and unfamiliar to skeptical audiences and confronted mass confusion in the lead-up: What precisely is this and why is it occurring?
In the mid-Seventies, “SNL” turned a smash that made superstars of its younger solid.
Five a long time on, you can really feel those same plates shifting after the astounding first UK cold open on March 21.
A “Traitors” spoof was called “Great Big Crab Man.” Sky TV
George Fouracres performed Prime Minister Keir Starmer, a tail-between-his-legs Dilbert sort who most Americans don’t care a lot about or even know. He interpreted him as a scared little gerbil while the dweeb fretted over phoning President Trump about the battle with Iran.
“I’ll try anything, I’ll do anything. Except take a stand,” Fouracres’ Starmer nervously sputtered.
It was the sort of pure-gold political satire our “SNL” — which leans nasty and childish — is no longer succesful of. They took an in any other case boring politician, very similar to George H.W. Bush or Al Gore, and boiled him down to his ridiculous essence. And to extraordinarily embarrassing impact.
Starmer must be mortified. I might’ve beloved to have seen his face when Trump, who also received dinged in the skit, posted the mocking sketch on social media the next day and rocketed “SNL UK” to a perch of instantaneous cultural relevance.
One sketch mocked UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s flip-flopping on his former ambassador to the US, Peter Mandelson.
Then last week, Fouracres’ PM returned on a reality-TV sendup called “Who Wants To Remain A Millionaire?” on which he received a query about former ambassador to the US Peter Mandelson, a pal of Jeffrey Epstein’s.
“Is it ever a good idea to give Peter Mandelson a job?,” the host requested. The solutions have been: A) No; B) Of course, not; C) Not in a million years; and D) Yes.
Starmer requested to telephone a pal.
“Who’re you going to call?,” the host replied.
“I’d like to call Peter Mandelson.”
Absolutely hysterical.
Jack Shep turned a breakout star for his good impression of Princess Diana. Sky TV
The “UK” solid is made up of all unknowns — for now. Nobody has been hanging out for 20 years yet, and so every sketch brings with it the pleasure of discovering what else they will do.
Jack Shep has been a major pressure this season. On the first episode, the 26-year-old received a lot of reward for his good impression of Princess Diana.
Per week later, he was another, more controversial royal: Prince Andrew.
The scene was set in 1997, and Andrew was summoned to the headquarters of MI5 to focus on a top secret project: A 29-year plan to make his brother Prince Charles look better by comparability before he ultimately turns into king.
“And you actually want me to do all this stuff?,” he said. “Even the part about befriending a notorious pedophile?”
A well-liked sketch urged Prince Andrew’s downfall was a plan by MI5. Sky TV
The non-topical sketches and videos have been just as strong. A spoof of the TV show “Traitors” was called “Great Big Crab Man,” and in it a contestant performed by Emma Sidi saved guessing that everyone around the desk was the Great Big Crab Man besides the precise pink, shelled Great Big Crab Man.
And in a deranged pre-tape, host Riz Ahmed performed a man who turned dangerously obsessed with the board sport “Operation.”
The show is still “SNL,” of course. It will inevitably have some dips. If the program lasts, it is going to get new solid members we’ll insist are a lot worse than the outdated ones.
But in these wonderful early days, it’s abundantly clear that out-of-luck Rockefeller Center may use a British invasion.
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