
21 Of The Most Wild, Unbelievable, And Occasionally Controversial Things That Ever Happened On "SNL"
Note: Some of the following moments have been suggested by and commented on by members of the BuzzFeed Community.
1. When Sinead O'Connor ripped up a picture of Pope John Paul II during her performance of Bob Marley's "War":
2. When Adrien Brody decided to improvise his introduction of musical guest Sean Paul by wearing dreadlocks, speaking in patois, and spewing a bunch of Jamaican stereotypes:
3. When Ashlee Simpson got caught lip-synching during her performance of "Autobiography," did a very awkward dance, and ran offstage:
NBC / Via youtube.com
"Instead of 'Autobiography,' her prerecorded track of 'Pieces of Me' started playing. She didn't know what to do, so she did this awkward dance and walked offstage before the show cut to a commercial."
— chelseasometimes23
4. When Kristen Stewart hosted and accidentally dropped the f-bomb in her monologue:
5. When David Bowie performed " Boys Keep Swinging" and included a little phallic surprise at the very end that SNL 's censorer didn't catch in time:
As it was 1979, SNL was already prepared to censor the performance, particularly for the line "other boys check you out." Likely knowing this, Bowie and his team prepared a surprise. For the performance, Bowie's head appeared atop a marionette doll, which danced around to the song. As the song came to an end, a party horn — y'know, those paper, whistle-like things you used to blow on at birthday parties or on New Year's that would unfurl and make a honking sound — shot out of the marionette's pants in a particularly phallic manner. SNL 's team didn't catch it quick enough to edit it out live, nor did they choose to edit it from re-runs.
6. When Martin Lawrence went off script during his monologue, sharing his personal experiences and opinion on women's hygiene and genitals:
Because of network policy, this part of the monologue has been edited out of reruns of the episode since it originally aired in 1994. Instead, the following graphics are displayed explaining what occurred and calling it a "frank and lively presentation" that "nearly cost us all our jobs." You can view the video on YouTube or read the transcript from the original monologue here.
7. When Buck Henry hosted an entire episode of SNL with a bandaged head because John Belushi accidentally cut him with a sword during a "Samurai Stockbroker" sketch:
You can enjoy the whole sketch on NBC.com or watch the moment where it all goes wrong below:
8. When Rage Against the Machine tried to perform with upside-down American flags hanging from their amps and were escorted out of the building immediately after their first song:
NBC
"The upside-down flags were meant to be a protest of the show's host that week: then–presidential candidate Steve Forbes. The crew removed the flags before the show went live, but the band was not invited back in to perform a second song or seen onstage for the goodbyes at the end of the show."
— miss_meggin
9. When SNL Executive Producer Dick Ebersol had the audience vote on whether or not they should keep Andy Kaufman on the show...and fans voted him out:
10. When Chevy Chase and Richard Pryor did a "Word Association" job interview sketch in which both their characters said racial slurs back and forth, including Chase saying the n-word:
NBC / Via nbc.com
"Chase and Pryor notoriously didn't care for each other IRL, either, and it shows."
— angelusgirl
11. When Mike Myers and Dana Carvey made a joke about the appearance of Bill Clinton's daughter — Chelsea Clinton — in a " Wayne's World" sketch, which was edited out of the segment after airing and does not appear online or in reruns.
While Wayne and Garth are listing the top ten things they like about Bill Clinton, you might notice in the clip on SNL's official YouTube page that it skips from #3 straight to #1. That would be, because #2 is about Chelsea. According to Cracked, Wayne says, "adolescence has been thus far unkind" to then-12-year-old Chelsea, then goes on to note that he thinks she's "going to be a future fox."
Hillary Clinton commented on the joke in a Redbook interview, saying, "I think it's sad that people don't have anything better to do than be mean to a child... I'm going to do everything I can to help Chelsea be strong enough not to let what other people say about her affect her." Bill Clinton added on in a People interview, saying he didn't mind jokes about him on the show, "...but I think you gotta be pretty insensitive to make fun of an adolescent child."
Mike Meyers reportedly wrote a personal letter apologizing to Chelsea and her parents, and Lorne Michaels himself issued a public apology.
12. When James Franco accidentally squirted fake blood straight into Leslie Jones' mouth during the "Gift Wrap" sketch:
13. When Fear caused a bit of a riot during their performance and were cut off mid-song with a commercial break for ~fear~ that they'd seriously damage the equipment:
"Fear hosted the Halloween episode in 1981 thanks to the help of cast member John Belushi getting them in the door at 30 Rock. They performed offensive songs — including the anti-New York song 'New York's Alright If You Like Saxophones'; had a mosh pit that destroyed the set; and continuously used vulgar language. Concerned they'd destroy the equipment in the studio, the crew cut to a commercial when they began playing 'Let's Have a War.'"
— Evelina Zaragoza Medina
14. When Charles Rocket dropped the f-bomb during a sketch, resulting in him getting fired in the middle of the season:
"The show was already in limbo, and that mistake cost half the jobs on the show, including Rocket's. SNL would've tanked entirely were it not for Eddie Murphy."
— colleend9
15. When both the stage and the audience went uncomfortably silent after the n-word was dropped in this "Commie Hunting Season" sketch:
For reference, this sketch aired in 1980, during the show's sixth season. The whole thing is a hard watch and definitely never should've made it to air. Still, you can watch it on YouTube, as SNL has uploaded it to their official account.
16. When Elvis Costello stopped playing "Less Than Zero" 15 seconds into the song and performed "Radio, Radio" — a song that NBC had objected to — instead:
NBC / Via youtube.com
"He was then banned from appearing on SNL until he made his triumphant return playing the same song backed by the Beastie Boys years later! THAT was punk rock in its purest meaning."
— Brian B.
17. When Kanye West went on an unexpected pro-Trump rant at the end of the episode he appeared on and was ultimately cut off:
NBC / Via youtube.com
"In 2018, he wore a MAGA hat and talked about his public support of Trump while the audience booed and cast members — including host Adam Driver — were visibly irritated in the background. While his whole speech didn't air on TV, you can get a quick refresher of what was said and shared by Chris Rock — who'd been in the show's audience that night — on Instagram here."
— swifty_girl
18. When Alec Baldwin and Adam Sandler starred in this "Canteen Boy and the Scoutmaster" sketch, in which Alec played a scoutmaster who repeatedly made inappropriate sexual advances on a boy scout in his troop, prompting massive backlash and a response from the Boy Scouts of America:
NBC / Via youtube.com
In a Chicago Sun-Times article, a Boy Scouts of America representative said, "We see nothing funny about child molestation, and are surprised that this unfunny subject would be selected for a comedy sketch."
Washington Post reports that the clip appears in re-airings with a title card saying the sketch "is based on actual events" and Canteen Boy is "a highly intelligent though quite eccentric 27-year-old who still lives with his mother, and who, despite his age, remains active in scouting," as was canonized in previous Canteen Boy sketches.
19. When Jenny Slate made a splash in her very first episode by accidentally dropping an f-bomb:
NBC / Via youtube.com
"It was rumored for a while that the slipup during the 'Biker Chick Chat' was what got her fired from the show, but Slate explained that it was because she wasn't a good fit. It's good to see she's doing a lot more for herself now."
— ursulabuffay
20. When Fred Armisen did an impression of then–New York Gov. David Paterson on "Weekend Update" that essentially made fun of him for being blind:
NBC / Via nbc.com
During the segment, Armisen squinted and was unable to do basic tasks, seemingly due to his inability to see. According to the New York Times, the governor's office issued a statement about the impression, saying "this particular Saturday Night Live skit, unfortunately, chose to ridicule people with physical disabilities and imply that disabled people are incapable of having jobs with serious responsibilities."
You can watch the original "Weekend Update" segment on NBC.com AND the updated 2010 impression in which Paterson himself joins Armisen onstage to comment on it.
21. And finally, when Cypress Hill started their performance of "We Ain't Goin' Out Like That" by smoking a joint live on air:
NBC / Via Facebook: video.php
Not only did DJ Muggs smoke weed on national TV, but the band also trashed their instruments at the end of their performance. Safe to say, it wasn't a huge surprise when Lorne Michaels didn't welcome them back on the show.
Did we miss any more wild and controversial SNL moments? Let us know in the comments below!
Note: Some submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity.
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USA Today
23 minutes ago
- USA Today
Stephen Colbert is out at CBS. Is all of late-night TV officially doomed?
This certainly isn't the future that Stephen Colbert had in mind for himself. The host of CBS' "Late Show with Stephen Colbert" announced on July 17 that he only has one year left of monologues from New York's Ed Sullivan Theater. And it's not just him who's leaving. "This is all just going away," the comedian, 61, told his appalled audience, explaining that he's not being replaced, but the show will air its final episode in May 2026. "Next year will be our last season. The network will be ending 'The Late Show.'" The news sent shockwaves through the entertainment industry, which has accepted late-night TV shows like "Late Show" and NBC's "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" as an immutable fact, not an optional part of the network lineup. The idea that a series as long-running and culturally ingrained as "Late Show," an institution on the network since David Letterman defected from NBC to create it in 1993, could simply go away is as unfathomable as the idea of CBS itself going away. Or is it? It's 2025, not 1993, and late-night TV is becoming more expensive and less profitable every year, as ratings sink and costs go up. YouTube clips may be viral, but they don't make up for the revenue lost as live viewership declines. It was always a question of when – not if – late-night TV would cease to exist in its traditional form. But nobody expected it to happen quite so soon. This is the end of an era, a moment in Hollywood history that will be remembered: There was the time before Colbert was canceled and after. And it remains to be seen if any of his remaining late-night compatriots – Jimmys Fallon and Kimmel, Seth Meyers and Jon Stewart – will survive on the air in the years to come. Why is CBS canceling 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert'? After Colbert's jaw-dropping on-air announcement, viewers had only one question: Why? If you ask CBS' parent company, Paramount, it's simply about the math. "This is purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night. It is not related in any way to the show's performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount," Paramount and CBS executives says. "We are proud that Stephen called CBS home. He and the broadcast will be remembered in the pantheon of greats that graced late-night television." "Other matters happening at Paramount" is the operative phrase in the statement, an oblique reference to the company's current efforts to finalize an $8.4 billion merger with Skydance Media, which requires regulatory approval from the federal government. And Colbert is an outspoken critic of President Trump's administration. Hardly a night goes by in which Colbert doesn't use his "Late Show" stage to poke at the president. And even his own parent company is not immune from Colbert's ire. Just three days before he revealed the cancellation news, Colbert used his bully pulpit to sharply criticize Paramount for what he saw as capitulating to Trump, after CBS News settled a defamation lawsuit with the president for $16 million. Colbert called it a "big fat bribe," an effort to smooth the way for the Skydance merger. "As someone who has always been a proud employee of this network, I am offended,' he said. 'And I don't know if anything will ever repair my trust in this company. But just taking a stab at it, I'd say $16 million would help.' Paramount also owns Comedy Central, which airs the equally anti-Trump "Daily Show" with Jon Stewart and other comedians. The company hasn't said anything lately about the future of that political late-night series, which (along with "Late Show" and "Jimmy Kimmel Live") just received a 2025 Emmy nomination for best talk series. The CEO of Paramount's hopeful new owner Skydance is David Ellison, who happens to be the son of Larry Ellison, the billionaire chairman of Oracle who has hosted a fundraiser for President Trump on his property and donated to Republican-friendly super-PACs. Is this the end of late night TV as we know it? Critics and analysts are furiously debating whether the "Late Show" cancellation was truly a financial move or more politically motivated, but whatever the ultimate truth, it doesn't affect the trajectory of the late-night genre: Colbert will be gone in 10 months, and the other dominoes could start to fall. CBS recently ended its 12:30 a.m. series, comedy panel show "After Midnight," after just over a year, when host Taylor Tomlinson decided to leave in favor of her standup career. NBC's "Late Night with Seth Meyers" recently axed its live, in-studio band as a cost-cutting measure. "Tonight Show" went from five nights a week to four in 2024, joining the other late-night shows. ABC's Jimmy Kimmel routinely threatens to leave the grind of late-night behind. Conan O'Brien, who briefly inherited the "Tonight Show" throne, has moved from decades of traditional late night TV on NBC and later TBS to the low-fi world of podcasting. Samantha Bee's TBS talk show was also canceled. We are far from the days of Johnny Carson as America's father figure lulling us to sleep each night, or even of Letterman and Jay Leno trading barbs and competing for millions of viewers at 11:35 p.m. There was a time when late-night TV was our pop-culture North Star, and the hosts were tastemakers and star-makers. Now the genre is well known as a a difficult financial sell and viewed mostly by older viewers who are less appealing to advertisers. YouTube clips can garner a few hundred thousand views, sure, but even the one-time viral video king Fallon doesn't get tens of millions of hits anymore. Generation Z and millennials are increasingly turning to short-form video platforms like TikTok. The monologue, two guests and a band format is stilted, unyielding and increasingly a marker of the past. If Colbert can't survive this landscape, it's not clear if anyone can. According to citing Nielsen ratings, "Late Show" was leading the pack in ratings so far in 2025. The show wins the 11:35 pm hour with an average of 2.417 million viewers for the three months ended in June. Kimmel and Fallon were far behind in that metric, averaging 1.77 million and 1.19 million, respectively, although Kimmel is replaced by guest hosts during the summer. What's next for Stephen Colbert? Colbert rose to fame on "The Daily Show" in the 2000s, playing a right-wing conservative character as satire that he kept going on spinoff "The Colbert Report" for nearly a decade, from 2005-14. He took over "Late Show" in 2015 after Letterman's retirement from the program in a much ballyhooed transition that coincided with other shifts in late night, including Fallon's 2014 takeover "Tonight" from Jay Leno. With a different pair of eyeglasses and stripped of his faux persona, the world met the real Colbert for the first time, and he quickly developed a comfortable routine. Political punchlines dominated his nightly monologues, with openly anti-Trump sentiments for the duration of the president's first term and the 2016, 2020 and 2024 elections. His standup is followed by the traditional easygoing celebrity interviews and musical performances. With his political-comedy chops, Colbert hosted more politicians, newscasters and thinkers than Fallon ever has on his gimmick-and-game-happy "Tonight." On July 17, Colbert welcomed Senator Adam Schiff, the California Democrat. But in spite of his penchant for political barbs, many of Colbert's segments are surprisingly soft and heartfelt, whether he's nerding out over "The Lord of the Rings," "Severance" and "Star Wars" or sharing the stage with wife Evelyn in one of her frequent cameos. There ware no indicators that Colbert was ready to slow down on "Late Show." His appearances are routinely energetic and whip-smart; no fatigue has crept into his comedy, and there was no reason to believe that he couldn't have keep doing "Late Show" for another decade. Of course, CBS had other ideas. Now he's soon to be a comedian without a stage, the town crier without a box on which to stand and shout. But it's unlikely he'll remain idle after he takes his final bow. His options are likely to be multifold, from podcasting like O'Brien to a streaming or cable series like Stewart or Letterman, although streamers have not yet successfully cracked the talk-show format, and anything with Colbert will likely come with a hefty salary. His former "Daily Show" colleague John Oliver has found great success on HBO with Emmy-winning "Last Week Tonight." Or Colbert could come up with something all his own. Nobody had done anything like "Report" before he tried it. But Colbert isn't making any plans yet, at least not publicly. He's still mourning what he's about to lose. "I'm so grateful (to CBS) for giving me this chair," he told viewers. "It is a fantastic job. I wish somebody else else was getting it. It's a job I'm looking forward to doing with this usual gang of idiots for another 10 months. It's going to be fun. Y'all ready?" Ready or not, the next 10 months will usher in a new era in TV. But hopefully we won't stop hearing Colbert's opinions about it and everything else. His voice is too funny, too smart and too important to go quietly into the night.


Time Magazine
an hour ago
- Time Magazine
Doubt Is Cast on Reasons Behind 'Late Show' Cancellation
Late-night TV has been on the decline for years, as viewers spend more time on streaming services and often favor late-show clips on YouTube or TikTok over nightly appointment viewing. But CBS's The Late Show was still leading the race by a mile. Second-quarter Nielsen ratings show that the program helmed by comedian Stephen Colbert had 2.42 million viewers across 41 new episodes, taking some 9% of the audience share and besting other shows in his timeslot. It was also the only show to rake in more viewers than in the previous quarter. And earlier this week, it received a Primetime Emmy nomination for outstanding talk series. So when Colbert told his audience at a taping on Thursday that 'next year will be our last season,' viewers were blindsided. Spectators at the Ed Sullivan Theater booed. 'Yeah, I share your feelings,' the host responded, explaining that he'd learned of the decision only the night before. More than three decades since it first aired, The Late Show is making its final curtain call in May 2026. Colbert won't be replaced by a new host. 'This is all just going away,' he said. The cancellation of The Late Show comes just a few days after Colbert ridiculed CBS' parent company Paramount's $16 million settlement with President Donald Trump. Trump had sued the entertainment company over the editing of a 60 Minutes interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris. Colbert, in his monologue, called the settlement a 'big fat bribe,' referencing the pending sale of Paramount to Skydance Media, which requires the approval of the Trump Administration. 'As someone who has always been a proud employee of this network, I am offended. And I don't know if anything will ever repair my trust in this company,' Colbert said Monday. Paramount and CBS executives quickly dispelled rumors of any external influence beyond the current state of late night TV: 'This is purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night. It is not related in any way to the show's performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount.' To be sure, even if the axing of The Late Show is the most drastic example, the show is not the only victim of the flailing state of American late-night TV. Its timeslot competitor on NBC, The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, had pared down taping days last year from five to four—with reruns aired on Fridays. NBC's Late Night With Seth Meyers bid its house band goodbye amid budget cuts. In 2023, CBS's The Late Late Show also got axed after its host James Corden left, and a less expensive After Midnight comedy game show—on which Colbert was executive producer—took over the slot. That show, too, was canceled after host Taylor Tomlinson exited to return to stand-up. The state of late-night TV today is a far cry from the dominance of Johnny Carson beginning in the '60s, or the reign of Jay Leno and David Letterman in the '90s and 2000s. Six years ago, the viewership of The Late Show was at 3.81 million; by the 2023-2024 season, it was at 2.6 million, per the Hollywood Reporter. Producing late-night TV is also expensive—its hosts alone rake in millions in annual salaries—and Internet viewership can't fully make up lost ad revenues. But the cancellation also comes at a time when Trump has become more iron-fisted with press freedom. He banned journalists from the Oval Office, pursued legal challenges against media organizations that report critically on him, and sought the dismantling of public broadcasters. It's for this reason that many have cast doubt on the reasons behind the show's cancellation, given that Colbert has imbued the show with more politics since his takeover, sometimes making Trump the butt of his criticism and jokes. Friday morning, Trump celebrated the news, writing on Truth Social: 'I absolutely love that Colbert' got fired. His talent was even less than his ratings. I hear Jimmy Kimmel is next. Has even less talent than Colbert!' Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), who was a guest on the Thursday taping, said on X: 'If Paramount and CBS ended the Late Show for political reasons, the public deserves to know. And deserves better.' Sen. Elizabeth Warren, (D-Mass.), echoed concerns of a clampdown. 'CBS canceled Colbert's show just THREE DAYS after Colbert called out CBS parent company Paramount for its $16M settlement with Trump – a deal that looks like bribery,' she said on X. 'America deserves to know if his show was canceled for political reasons.' ''Financial reasons'' my ass,' said activist Charlotte Clymer on X. 'This is political.' Others, meanwhile, have expressed their sadness over the loss of a late-night pillar. CNN host Anderson Cooper said he was 'shocked and truly saddened' by the news of the cancellation. He lauded Colbert for being 'at heart, an incredibly decent human being.' On Instagram, replying to a video clip of Colbert's announcement, journalist Katie Couric said: 'I am so upset about this. I need more information. We love you @stephenathome' Filmmaker Judd Apatow said: 'My admiration and appreciation for you is bottomless. Excited to see what other brilliance you put into the world.' From Jon Batiste, former Late Show band leader: 'The greatest to ever do it.' Then from Snow White actor Rachel Zegler: 'I am extremely sad. I adore you, Stephen.' And Adam Scott of Severance wrote: 'Love you Stephen. This is absolute bullsh-t, and I for one am looking forward to the next 10 months of shows.' One thing is for sure: the disappearance of the Late Show under the Trump Administration could not be simply swept under the rug. Bill Carter, who wrote several books on late-night television, posted on X: 'The financial side of that business has definitely been under pressure, as CBS release asserts, but if CBS believes it can escape without some serious questions about capitulating to Trump, they are seriously deluded.'


The Hill
2 hours ago
- The Hill
Trump: ‘I absolutely love' that Colbert ‘got fired'
President Trump said Friday morning that he was thrilled by the news that CBS is canceling the decade-running 'Late Show with Stephen Colbert.' 'I absolutely love that Colbert' got fired,' the president wrote in a post on Truth Social. 'His talent was even less than his ratings.' The president also took aim at ABC's 'Late Night' talk show host Jimmy Kimmel and NBC's 'Tonight Show' host Jimmy Fallon, while praising Fox News's Greg Gutfeld, whose talk show 'Gutfeld!' airs an hour earlier than the major late-night shows. 'I hear Jimmy Kimmel is next. Has even less talent than Colbert!' Trump wrote. 'Greg Gutfeld is better than all of them combined, including the Moron on NBC who ruined the once great Tonight Show.' Developing.