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'SNL' music documentary spills thrills and tea with Prince, Olivia Rodrigo, Miley and more

'SNL' music documentary spills thrills and tea with Prince, Olivia Rodrigo, Miley and more

USA Today27-01-2025
'SNL' music documentary spills thrills and tea with Prince, Olivia Rodrigo, Miley and more
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'Saturday Night Live' celebrates 50 years of comedy
Live from New York, it's the 50th anniversary of "Saturday Night Live."
Six and a half minutes.
That's all it will take to entice you to watch NBC's three-hour documentary 'Ladies & Gentlemen ... 50 Years of SNL Music" (Monday, 8 EST/PST, and streaming Tuesday on Peacock).
Yes, the deep dive into the genre-hopping performances from Billy Preston, the late-night sketch comedy show's first musical guest in 1975, to current pop sensations including Billie Eilish and Olivia Rodrigo, is a romp.
But the brilliantly edited opening montage featuring an encyclopedia of music stars performing on NBC's "Saturday Night Live" is jaw-dropping in its execution.
A clip of Run-D.M.C. singing 'Walk This Way,' segueing to Cher singing 'And you walked away when I needed you most' from 'I Found Someone.' *NSYNC 'Bye Bye Bye'-ing across the stage melding on the beat to Destiny's Child's 'Survivor.' The slashing guitar of U2's 'Vertigo' meshing flawlessly with Eilish bopping through 'Bad Guy.'
It's an electrifying collage and a fitting opening to the three-hour documentary, part of "Saturday Night Live"'s 50th anniversary celebration.
How Questlove steered the 'SNL' music documentary
The architect behind 'Ladies & Gentlemen' is Roots drummer and music aficionado Ahmir 'Questlove' Thompson, who co-directed the special with Oz Rodriguez, an "SNL" producer from seasons 38 to 44.
Questlove, 54, who DJs in clubs and plays with The Roots, the house band for NBC's 'Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon,' believes that people mostly remember the first and last five minutes of anything they watch.
So when his editor suggested blending Vanilla Ice's performance with Queen's 'Under Pressure' (famously sampled in 'Ice Ice Baby') for the opening of the documentary, Questlove knew they were about to create history.
Eleven months later, the chills-inspiring introduction was complete. 'I mean, the Captain Obvious thing would have been to do, like, the 50 best performances in the past 50 years on 'SNL.' That would have been easy,' Questlove says on a recent video call. 'But I don't do things easy.'
Questlove watched every episode of 'SNL' over three years
'SNL' executive producer Lorne Michaels pitched Questlove on a documentary about the show's music in early 2021, shortly after Questlove won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance for his documentary 'Summer of Soul' (which also would nab an Oscar that year).
Questlove and Rodriguez were granted access to every episode of the show, including dress rehearsals, audio from the control room and the filming of promos. For almost three years, Questlove watched three to seven full episodes a day, on an endless loop.
Despite the avalanche of material, the pair wasn't interested in churning out a clip show. So, Questlove says, 'it became 'What is the story I want to tell?''
That story ranges from a funked-up Prince making his first appearance in 1981 with 'Partyup' to Rodrigo confessing she had a panic attack before her first appearance in 2021 with 'Drivers License.'
The performance that co-director Rodriguez spotlights as a possible best-of-all-time is David Bowie's avant-garde depiction of 'The Man Who Sold the World,' which fit the experimental vibe of the show circa 1979.
'The first five years of the show they were throwing stuff against the wall to see what stuck," Rodriguez says.
Miley Cyrus says 'SNL' does what 'no other show can do'
The show, as Miley Cyrus observes, 'changes the way you're seen in a way no other show can do.' And for proof, consider a baby-faced Adele, who says in a vintage clip that her 2008 performance of 'Chasing Pavements' sent her album from No. 45 to the top of the charts almost overnight.
'SNL' was also instrumental in promoting hip-hop. Debbie Harry, an unlikely ambassador for rap, pushed for Funky 4 + 1 to perform with her on an episode she hosted in 1981, marking the first national TV appearance by a hip-hop group.
Decades later, Kanye West created controversy, whether sporting a MAGA hat and giving a rambling political speech in 2018 or stomping off set because he was unhappy with lighting changes. 'Every time Kanye went on it was chaotic,' Rodriguez says. 'The performances were always cool, but there was always chaos.'
More: The best Season 50 'SNL' sketches from Season 50, from Nancy Grace to 'Sabado Gigante'
'SNL' doc explores Sinead O'Connor and Ashlee Simpson controversies
Two other frenzied moments in 'SNL' lore are explored thoroughly in the documentary: Sinead O'Connor ripping up a photo of Pope John Paul II at the end of her striking performance of Bob Marley's 'War' in 1992 and Ashlee Simpson's 2004 lip-syncing debacle.
O'Connor essentially tricked producers, holding up a photo of a child at the song's end during dress rehearsal and requesting only a tight camera shot in the live show. "I saw this as a chance to put history in its proper context," Questlove says. "Because that was a heroic act."
The Simpson controversy also stems from dress rehearsal, where she lip-synced her second song to preserve her voice. Between rehearsal and air time, it was determined Simpson would lip-sync both songs. Her first song unspooled uneventfully, but in the second performance her drummer accidentally re-cued the vocals for the first.
Hearing the audio from the director's microphone while watching the scene unfold is a case study in the stress of live TV. Questlove, who calls such frantic moments "teachable lessons," said he reached out to Simpson − 'and everyone who had a controversial moment on the show' − to be interviewed for the documentary. He understood when she declined, but says, 'I would like my fellow musical peers and creatives to see the type of storyteller that I am and that I'm not in the gotcha journalism business.'
In "Ladies & Gentlemen ... ," Questlove is firmly in the lively documentary business.
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What trans people need now
What trans people need now

Los Angeles Times

time4 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

What trans people need now

There's a scene toward the end of 'Will and Harper' that I can't get out of my head. I'm referring to the 2024 road-trip documentary where Will Ferrell is reintroduced to his old 'Saturday Night Live' buddy Harper Steele as a trans woman. The two zigzag through several red states, as Ferrell, star of 'Anchor Man,' 'Talladega Nights' and 'Elf,' is his quirky self, posing awkward questions ('How are your boobs?'), donning cartoonish disguises and pulling a series of public stunts, some of which backfire. The goofiness comes to a halt when Harper drives them to Trona, Calif., a tiny town in the Mojave Desert, southwest of Death Valley. She pulls up to a dilapidated house with boarded-up windows on a small dirt plot — sad to even look at. She bought the place six or seven years before, wanting to get away from the world after another holiday season of uncertainty, regret and suicidal thoughts. 'I just hated myself so much,' she says, and breaks down crying. ' I just felt like a monster.' She brings him inside. The house has been vandalized; there's broken furniture, walls full of graffiti, a bare mattress stained and smeared with who knows what. They step out on a small balcony overlooking an empty street with telegraph poles, the desert horizon in the distance. 'I was going to be a woman here,' Harper tells Will. 'That was the plan. … I was just gonna close the curtains and walk around this house and it was a safe space.' That's pretty desolate: an Emmy-winning comedy writer and producer, willing to forfeit everything, just to be a woman residing alone in the middle of nowhere. But the most desolate thing in the scene is Will Ferrell's face, stricken with pathos. He has shifted from curiosity to certainty. Trans identity is real. He gets it. Transgender and cisgender people are the same in this way: We'd sooner die than live outside of our gender. The difference is that cis people don't have to face that predicament, while every trans person has. Earlier this century, mainstream America started to catch on to the same thing about gay people: They're real. They were born this way. Homosexuality isn't a disease that straight people were going to catch. It took decades of LGBT organizing and fighting and (way too much) dying to get to that place. It also required a majority of straight Americans to perceive that gay identities are as real as theirs, to pave the way for marriage equality. Transgender children are equally real, though conservative politicians and Christian nationalist groups have campaigned furiously to convince us otherwise. To be sure, many children go through phases of experimenting with gender expression. The way parents know one of their children is trans is by observing if their urge to transition is consistent, insistent and persistent. Consistent means you watch, insistent means you listen and persistent means you stay patient. These three things will make it quite obvious. There's one other thing. All parents of trans children experience a moment similar to Ferrell's in the desert: They witness a person whose life is on the line, a person they must protect. Red state lawmakers, who know nothing about medicine, want us to think 'do no harm' means stripping trans kids of medical care, lest they make 'permanent' decisions before they're adults. Parents of trans children, and every major American medical organization, know that 'do no harm' means preventing the catastrophe of undergoing puberty in the wrong gender. They also want to prevent suicide, and the nightmare of being forced to live in exile from your identity, which is a living death. Even Ron Burgundy, the Anchor Man, knows that. The Supreme Court Skrmetti decision handed down June 18, upholding a Tennessee law banning healthcare for trans minors, was as contorted as it was predictable. The justices had one thing to decide: Did a law explicitly targeting trans people deserve the heightened scrutiny applied to laws discriminating against protected groups or on the basis of sex? Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., writing for the conservative majority, argued that the Tennessee law doesn't 'exclude any individual from medical treatments on the basis of transgender status but rather removes … gender dysphoria, gender identity disorder, and gender incongruence from the range of treatable conditions.' This is like saying we're not targeting diabetics, just removing their insulin. Cisgender kids in Tennessee, however, can still receive hormones and puberty blockers because 'the state has an interest in encouraging minors to appreciate their sex.' Justice Amy Coney Barrett, for good measure, claimed that transgender people don't qualify as a protected group because a) we're too hard to 'define,' and b) we don't suffer from a history of legal discrimination. The Skrmetti decision will go down as discriminatory, deadly and patently false in its claims. After the Trump administration declared trans people nonexistent (then went about trying to eradicate what doesn't exist), the court now sets a precedent and a permission structure for states to do whatever they want to us. In her dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor effortlessly defined transgender people as a group, then pointed to 'a lengthy history of … cross-dressing bans, police brutality, and anti-sodomy laws' that have criminalized trans people dating back to 1843. 'Those searching for more evidence of de jure discrimination against transgender individuals,' she added, 'need look no further than the present. The Federal Government, for example, has started expelling transgender servicemembers from the military and threatening to withdraw funding from schools and nonprofits that espouse support for transgender individuals.' Under New York state law I could have been arrested for cross-dressing in the 1980s, and instantly have lost my job as a public school teacher. A generation earlier, in San Francisco's Tenderloin district, police often walked into Gene Compton's cafeteria, a gathering place for neighborhood trans women, and randomly arrested customers for 'female impersonation.' Amanda St. Jaymes was one of them. She described repeated arrests, being stripped and locked up for refusing to let them shave her head. 'One girl [spent] 60 days in the hole because she wouldn't let them cut her hair. That's how important it was to us back then.' In 'Screaming Queens: The Riot at Compton's Cafeteria' (another movie worth watching), historian Susan Stryker chronicles, through firsthand accounts, 'the first known instance of collective militant queer resistance to police harassment in United States history.' It started with a police raid on a hot August night in 1966 (three years before Stonewall). 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We're real. We need you. Diana Goetsch is a poet, essayist and journalist and the author of the memoir, 'This Body I Wore.'

Travis Kelce says hosting ‘SNL' was hard since he can't ‘read that well': ‘F–ked situation'
Travis Kelce says hosting ‘SNL' was hard since he can't ‘read that well': ‘F–ked situation'

New York Post

time7 hours ago

  • New York Post

Travis Kelce says hosting ‘SNL' was hard since he can't ‘read that well': ‘F–ked situation'

This is why we can't have nice things. Travis Kelce admitted that hosting 'Saturday Night Live!' was a no small feat because admittedly, he 'can't really read that well.' 'The table read was the hardest f–king part,' the Kansas City Chiefs tight end, 35, said on the 'Bussin' With The Boys' podcast on Tuesday. 4 Travis Kelce hosted 'Saturday Night Live' on March 4, 2023. Will Heath/NBC via Getty Images A 'SNL' table read is when the writers, cast and host gather to read through potential sketches for an upcoming episode of the long-running late-night comedy sketch show. The 3-time Super Bowl champ claimed he loved being 'pitched ideas' by the writers, but felt a large amount of pressure not to mess up before cameras even started rolling at 30 Rock. 'I felt like I was just trying to get through the reading instead of actually acting it out and giving it a voice and giving it a character and things like that,' Kelce said. 'Like, I was just focused on, 'Don't f–king skip this line.'' Kelce joked that cold-reading scripts during the table read was 'kind of a f–ked situation' and called himself 'more of an audio guy.' The NFL star made his hosting debut on the show in March 2023. 4 Kelce admitted 'the table read was the hardest f–king part' of hosting the popular show. Will Heath/NBC via Getty Images 4 Kelce made a surprise appearance on the Season 49 premiere of 'SNL' to joke about how the NFL kept focusing on his relationship with Taylor Swift. GC Images Months later, he made a surprise cameo appearance in a skit during Season 49's premiere in October 2023 and joked about the NFL's obsession with him and his girlfriend, Taylor Swift. At the time, his relationship with the 14-time Grammy winner was very new. Kelce didn't plan on being part of the show that night but the writers were able to squeeze him into the sketch last-minute when he and the 'Blank Space' singer appeared backstage. 4 Kelce admitted that he felt pressure when he first read scripts in front of the 'SNL' team. Rosalind O'Connor/NBC via Getty Images ​​'We showed up to 'SNL' having the idea of supporting Ice Spice, her and Taylor are good friends,' Kelce shared on his 'New Heights' podcast days later. 'I've always wanted to meet Pete Davidson, been a fan of his since he was actually on 'SNL.'' The athlete added that he didn't 'even remember' what he said because he 'blacked out' from excitement. Kelce already boasts several TV credits, including the 2024 TV series 'Grotesquerie.' He will make a cameo in Adam Sandler's highly anticipated 'Happy Gilmore 2' movie. The comedy is set to be released on Netflix on July 25.

BBC 'Regrets' Not Pulling Bob Vylan Glastonbury Set Livestream With 'Antisemitic Sentiments'
BBC 'Regrets' Not Pulling Bob Vylan Glastonbury Set Livestream With 'Antisemitic Sentiments'

Yahoo

time13 hours ago

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BBC 'Regrets' Not Pulling Bob Vylan Glastonbury Set Livestream With 'Antisemitic Sentiments'

The BBC 'regrets' not pulling its livestream of a Glastonbury performance in which rap duo Bob Vylan chanted 'death, death to the IDF.' IDF stands for Israel Defense Forces. The television partner of the U.K.'s biggest music festival released a statement Monday as the fest wound down, hours after U.S. star Olivia Rodrigo wrapped up with her headline set. More from The Hollywood Reporter The Motif of the Karlovy Vary Film Fest Visual Identity Is an Embrace. Here Is Why. Canadian Leader Says Trade Talks With U.S. Resume After Canada Rescinded Tech Tax Olivia Rodrigo Brings Out The Cure's Robert Smith as She Wraps Up Politically Charged Glastonbury The BBC drew widespread criticism for airing the set on its livestream. 'Millions of people tuned in to enjoy Glastonbury this weekend across the BBC's output, but one performance within our livestreams included comments that were deeply offensive.' The corporation continued: 'The BBC respects freedom of expression but stands firmly against incitement to violence. The antisemitic sentiments expressed by Bob Vylan were utterly unacceptable and have no place on our airwaves. We welcome Glastonbury's condemnation of the performance.' The judgment on Saturday to issue a warning on screen while streaming 'was in line' with the BBC's editorial guidelines, it also said, and a decision was made not to make the set available on demand. 'The team were dealing with a live situation, but with hindsight, we should have pulled the stream during the performance. We regret this did not happen.' Concluded the BBC: 'In light of this weekend, we will look at our guidance around live events so we can be sure teams are clear on when it is acceptable to keep output on air.' In a statement posted to Instagram, one half of the rap duo, Bobby Vylan, said: 'Teaching our children to speak up for the change they want and need is the only way that we make this world a better place…. As we grow older and our fire starts to possibly dim under the suffocation of adult life and all its responsibilities, it is incredibly important that we encourage and inspire future generations to pick up the torch that was passed to us.' But Glastonbury organizer Emily Eavis also took to the social media platform to condemn the anti-IDF chants. 'Their chants very much crossed a line and we are urgently reminding everyone involved in the production of the Festival that there is no place at Glastonbury for antisemitism, hate speech, or incitement to violence,' Eavis wrote. Eavis continued: 'As a festival, we stand against all forms of war and terrorism…we will always believe in — and actively campaign for — hope, unity, peace and love', adding a performer's comments 'should never be seen as a tacit endorsement of their opinions and beliefs…. With almost 4,000 performances at Glastonbury 2025, there will inevitably be artists and speakers appearing on our stages whose views we do not share.' U.K. prime minister Keir Starmer was among the critics of Bob Vylan's set. It was a politically charged event this year. It often is as Glastonbury attracts a left-leaning crowd, but more so than ever, the polarizing politics of the current day were felt. Also on Saturday, Irish rap trio Kneecap voiced their pro-Palestine views and used the platform to criticize the U.K. and U.S. governments, as well as the U.S. media. Best of The Hollywood Reporter Most Anticipated Concert Tours of 2025: Beyoncé, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar & SZA, Sabrina Carpenter and More Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025 Hollywood's Highest-Profile Harris Endorsements: Taylor Swift, George Clooney, Bruce Springsteen and More

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