One of the humorous skits on Saturday Night Live is the Black Jeopardy on in which contestants have yo give correct answers to categories that come straight from the hood.
I missed this one when it originally aired and has Chadwick Boseman reprising his T'Challa role from Black Panther as a contestant on Black Jeopardy with hilarious results.
But see for your selves.
Showing posts with label comedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comedy. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 24, 2018
Tuesday, November 17, 2015
SNL Destroys The Bathroom Meme
It's too late for it to help us here in Houston, but what I have been saying for a while is that the bathroom meme needs to be made into such a joke and radioactive to conservafools they won't dare throw it .
Here's Saturday Night Live comedian Pete Davidson giving the HERO loss the wicked comedic treatment it deserves.
Thursday, January 16, 2014
About Time SNL You Addressed The Lack Of Diversity
This weekend I'm going to get a chance to see for the first time since Maya Rudolph left the show in 2007 something I've only seen four other times in SNL's 39 year history, and my watching the show goes back to its inaugural season in 1975.
A Black woman as a cast member.
Sasheer Zamata will be joining the NBC Saturday Night Live cast this weekend in a long overdue move and congratulations to her for getting the nod after that secret audition they held last month to address their lack of diversity problem in the onscreen cast.
What is even more important were the other hires made immediately after Zamata's.
They addressed a problem that I made mention of at the end of my December 12 post.
By the way, may also help immensely if you diversify your team of SNL writers while you're at it.
Guess somebody was paying attention to the end of my post discussing the December audition. Two African-American women, LeKendra Tookes and Leslie Jones were hired as part of the SNL writing team and started on Monday.
Tookes and Jones were also part of the December audition and caught the eye of SNL's producers.
They are starting as writers, but don't be surprised if you don't see them in front of the camera one day. Tina Fey got her start as an SNL writer.
And yeah, the white menz are hatin' already and flinging the affirmative action hire shade. Hey, if comedy writing wasn't an exclusively white male dominated province, wouldn't be necessary for us to point that inconvenient for you fact out. As far as I'm concerned, the more diverse the writing team, the better and anything that changes that vanillacentric dynamic is a good thing.
One of the major reasons I stopped watching the show was the lack of cast diversity and it ceased being funny to me. The November SNL show that Kerry Washington hosted was the first time since Maya Rudolph left I've even bothered to flip the TV to NBC to watch it.
SNL shouldn't stop with just Black talent and writers. There is a need to have more diversity reflected onscreen and behind the cameras. Latinos are the largest minority group in this country, but there has never been a Latina cast member on Saturday Night Live in the nearly 40 year history of the program. We could also use Asian cast members as well, because they are also woefully underrepresented in the show's cast.
So yes, time to get busy making that happen.
Diversity will make SNL better, and hopefully return this iconic show to the glory days as America's preeminent comedic satire show and improve its ratings at the same time.
A Black woman as a cast member.
Sasheer Zamata will be joining the NBC Saturday Night Live cast this weekend in a long overdue move and congratulations to her for getting the nod after that secret audition they held last month to address their lack of diversity problem in the onscreen cast.
What is even more important were the other hires made immediately after Zamata's.
They addressed a problem that I made mention of at the end of my December 12 post.
By the way, may also help immensely if you diversify your team of SNL writers while you're at it.
Tookes and Jones were also part of the December audition and caught the eye of SNL's producers.
They are starting as writers, but don't be surprised if you don't see them in front of the camera one day. Tina Fey got her start as an SNL writer.
And yeah, the white menz are hatin' already and flinging the affirmative action hire shade. Hey, if comedy writing wasn't an exclusively white male dominated province, wouldn't be necessary for us to point that inconvenient for you fact out. As far as I'm concerned, the more diverse the writing team, the better and anything that changes that vanillacentric dynamic is a good thing.
SNL shouldn't stop with just Black talent and writers. There is a need to have more diversity reflected onscreen and behind the cameras. Latinos are the largest minority group in this country, but there has never been a Latina cast member on Saturday Night Live in the nearly 40 year history of the program. We could also use Asian cast members as well, because they are also woefully underrepresented in the show's cast.
So yes, time to get busy making that happen.
Diversity will make SNL better, and hopefully return this iconic show to the glory days as America's preeminent comedic satire show and improve its ratings at the same time.
Labels:
comedy,
diversity,
media,
television
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Looks Like SNL Was Paying Attention To The Criticism
One of the major reasons I stopped watching NBC's Saturday Night Live long ago (except for the recent show in which Kerry Washington was the host of course) is not only because it ceased being humorous to me, but I don't see people who represent my ethnic heritage significantly represented as members of the cast.
And yeah, I go way back to the SNL original cast in the 70's.
.
Rumors are flying there was a recent double secret audition held in Los Angeles for Black women only to address that problem 11-25 Black comediennes were auditioned for spots in either next season's SNL or one will be added in January, depending on what you hear or read, and yeah it's sorely needed.
Black women have a long, distinguished history in standup comedy starting with Jackie 'Moms' Mabley and continuing through to the present day with people like Marsha Warfield, Whoopi Goldberg, Kim Coles, Kim Wayans and one of the few who actually made it onto SNL in Maya Rudolph.
It mystifies me when In Living Color proved that Black comedians not only are funny, but can get ratings from mainstream audiences, that SNL didn't do so a long time ago. It's a travesty that you can count the number of Black women on one hand that SNL has had on their show in its nearly 40 year history, and hope they are on the road to expeditiously correcting that.
By the way, may also help immensely if you diversify your team of SNL writers while you're at it.
And yeah, I go way back to the SNL original cast in the 70's.
Rumors are flying there was a recent double secret audition held in Los Angeles for Black women only to address that problem 11-25 Black comediennes were auditioned for spots in either next season's SNL or one will be added in January, depending on what you hear or read, and yeah it's sorely needed.
Black women have a long, distinguished history in standup comedy starting with Jackie 'Moms' Mabley and continuing through to the present day with people like Marsha Warfield, Whoopi Goldberg, Kim Coles, Kim Wayans and one of the few who actually made it onto SNL in Maya Rudolph.
It mystifies me when In Living Color proved that Black comedians not only are funny, but can get ratings from mainstream audiences, that SNL didn't do so a long time ago. It's a travesty that you can count the number of Black women on one hand that SNL has had on their show in its nearly 40 year history, and hope they are on the road to expeditiously correcting that.
By the way, may also help immensely if you diversify your team of SNL writers while you're at it.
Labels:
Black women,
comedy,
television,
TV shows
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