Saturday Night Live Parodies Trump's oppression on TV Late Night, Jimmy Kimmel suspension and Brendan Carr's FCC roll
The Saturday Night Live (SNL) Season 51 premiere, which aired on October 4, wasted no time to address the recent political saga involving the temporary suspension of Jimmy Kimmel Live! The cold Open drafted the incident as a suppression in the late-night comedy by President Donald Trump. ‘Dads watch’ The sketch starts with Colin Jost, in a rare sketch appearance, and plays a tight and furious defense secretary Pete Hegseth, who demands that members of the army lose weight. Hegseth stated that the nation faces the ‘biggest threat to freedom and democracy the world has ever known’, just to be interrupted by James Austin Johnson as Donald Trump, who stated that the true threat was ‘TV late at night’. It seems Johnson’s Trump character monitored the show and specifically warned: “I’m just here to keep my eye on SNL and make sure they don’t do anything too much to me … they’ll be better.” The segment culminates with Trump and emphasizes: “Daddy Look!” Controversies have parodied the Jimmy Kimmel suspension: The Skit showed the temporary suspension of Jimmy Kimmel Live directly! This occurred after FCC chairman Brendan Carr allegedly put ABC under pressure on comments made by Kimmel. The sketch contains Mikey day, which acted as the chairman of the FCC, Brendan Carr, on the tune of ‘Somebody’s Wath’, which indicates Carr as Trump’s ‘Attack Dog at the FCC’. The monologue specifically noted that Carr also investigated a separate complaint about Jimmy Kimmel Live! Trump’s physical appearance: Johnson’s Trump character referred to his well-known penchant for self-brown or non-matching makeup. He holds up the back of his hand and shows an area with “strange discoloration” and joke, “doesn’t look good now. Is going to cover it for the rest of my life. ‘ Foreign policy: The sketch mocked Trump’s conflicting claims about military action: ‘I ended all the wars. Each of them except the two most important that still happens and more angry than ever, “added that the administration” began a new war in Venezuela soon “, despite a suspected government. The political controversy was later reinforced during the “Weekend Update” segment with the debut of the new cast, Kam Patterson. Patterson made a joke about the will of a racial slurp on the air, but was warned by co-host Colin Jost that the FCC would fine the show. Patterson replied: “That’s exactly what Jimmy Kimmel fought for!”