September 25, 1976 – Norman Lear / Boz Scaggs (S2 E2)

Sketches are rated on a scale of 1-5 stars

COLD OPENING
with GIR’s help, hospitalized CHC simulates a fall via phone
   
— They’re making a big deal addressing Chevy’s absence, which goes to show you how important he was seen as being to SNL.
— I almost thought Gilda actually was going to do the pratfall, before the phone interruption.
— Ha, it’s the voice of Chevy calling from his hospital room, accompanied by a still photo.
— Great ending with Gilda making the phone do a pratfall, followed by Chevy’s voice saying LFNY.
STARS: ***½

OPENING MONTAGE
— Pardo announces Chevy as “The voice of Chevy Chase”.

MONOLOGUE
stars of host’s sitcoms [real] feign reverent attitudes toward their boss
 
   
— Something about the way Norman Lear looks is reminding me of future cast member Bill Murray.
— Going by the disclaimer on screen now, I guess the gag with the sound cutting out is a topical reference to something that happened at one of the Ford/Carter presidential debates.
— Wow, it feels strange hearing Jean Stapleton’s normal voice, which sounds so drastically different from her Edith voice.
— Hilarious when the mustached actor (sorry, I don’t know his name; I do recognize Bernadette Peters next to him) was being held back from hitting Norman.
— It’s funny seeing Jeffersons-era Sherman Hemsley casually dressed in a normal t-shirt & jeans, which you would NEVER see him wear on The Jeffersons.
— Haha, the ball-and-chain revelation was perfect.
— I’m absolutely loving seeing these on-the-set interviews of some of my all-time favorite 70s sitcoms.
— The water-dumping bit was very funny, especially Norman having no reaction to it.
STARS: ****½

PAID POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT
Jimmy Carter (DAA) says his lusty heart perpetuates Democratic tradition
 
— Just from the “sexual performance in the White House” line early on, I can already tell I’m in for a good sketch.
— This audience is loving this.
— Overall, this whole sketch was very funny.
STARS: ****

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE

THE SNAKEHANDLING O’SHEAS
host’s sitcom about a family with odd traits
 
— A very funny title to the fictional sitcom.
— I’m liking the absurdity of this sitcom scene.
— A good laugh from each of the family members chanting to their snakes; Dan’s chanting and John’s facial expression are especially funny to me.
STARS: ****

NEXT WEEK
GIR announces that Eric Idle [real] will be hosting next week’s SNL
 
— Hey, it’s Eric Idle!
— I’m not sure why exactly he’s doing what he’s doing with the newspaper. Still making me laugh though.
STARS: N/A

WEEKEND UPDATE
LAN reports from Times Square about lack of activity during Rosh Hashanah
   
— Ah, Jane makes her temporary-for-now-but-soon-to-be-permanent debut as an Update anchor.
— It feels so weird to see someone else doing Update, after I’ve gone day-after-day of seeing Chevy as the anchorperson in all the episodes I’ve reviewed so far. That’s one of the things I love about the idea of going through SNL’s timeline in my ‘One SNL a Day’ project: it’s going to feel so interesting to me whenever there’s a big change on the show. And so far, I think this is the very first big change I’ve had to cover in SNL’s timeline.
— LOL at Jane’s ‘golden shower’ opening phone conversation.
— Jane’s delivery started a little slow at first, but it’s getting better now.
— I was mistaken when I said in my review of last season’s Candice Bergen Christmas episode that Victoria Jackson would later (in 1989) do a complete knock-off of the Times Square New Years commentary that Laraine did in that episode’s Update. Looking at the description of Victoria’s commentary in the SNL episode guide, the holiday Victoria reported about the inactivity of was Rosh Hashanah, so it was actually tonight’s Laraine commentary that Victoria’s commentary ripped off. I still wonder if the writer of Laraine’s bit complained to the show in ’89 for stealing his/her material, because as I mentioned in the Bergen review, Victoria’s commentary was mysteriously removed from all reruns.
— Weird seeing a news story about Elton John coming out as “bisexual”. I guess he wasn’t ready back then to announce that he’s 100% gay.
— The “Women’s Wear Daily Magazine” joke about Elton’s coming-out is another Update joke that would probably be considered too un-PC nowadays.
— The “Speedy Alka Seltzer” suicide jokes were absolutely great.
— Yay, no mid-WU fake ad break tonight!
— Overall, Jane did fine in her first night as Update anchor, even if she doesn’t quite have the personality that Chevy added to the desk.
STARS: ***

NORMAN PULLS A CHEVY
host takes a fall to make up for CHC’s absence
 
— Norman’s pratfall came out of nowhere and was surprisingly good.
STARS: N/A, because this was just a quick set-up to the following sketch

CHEVY’S GIRLS
singing Chevy’s Girls GIR, LAN, JAC wish CHC was falling for them
 
— Oh, this is a classic, well-known sketch.
— I love how the song is referencing all of Chevy’s SNL trademarks, even his Generalissimo Francisco Franco running gag.
— The girls are doing a great job and the song has a very catchy 70s sound.
— Gilda’s solo was very funny.
STARS: *****

THE METRIC LEISURE WEEK
Joseph Franklin describes the effects of metric time conversion
   
— It’s Dan’s decabet guy from last season. I didn’t know this was a recurring bit.
— Also, didn’t he have dark hair last time? Now he has gray hair.
— I get the feeling this is going to pale in comparison to the decabet sketch.
— The sleeping habit comment was funny.
— I’m liking this more and more as it’s going along.
— Love the concept of the Government Adrenaline Supplement.
— The dramatization is taking this into a different direction from the first one.
— Overall, while not quite as strong as the decabet sketch, I still enjoyed this a lot.
STARS: ****

SIGHT GAG
Gary Weis [real] hums “Yankee Doodle Dandy” as SNL cast does slapstick
 
— WTF at the sudden quick cutaways to a different cast member having something zany happen to them, in time to the music. This is actually cracking me up, as random as it is.
— Overall, I liked the structure of this, and this was surprisingly laugh-worthy for a Gary Weis film.
STARS: ***

WIFE ABUSE
divorce lawyer (JOB) abuses (GIR) while coaching her testimony
JOB breaks character & attacks host during skit
 
— Meh, I’m not crazy about how this seems to be yet another sketch with John beating up Gilda while he’s showing her how to do something, just like in that director sketch from last season.
— Him yanking Gilda by the nostrils made me laugh right now, I admit.
— Haha, I love how this suddenly broke the fourth wall and has turned into John dropping character and violently going off on “Mr. Lear” because he’s sick of the overexposure of Lear’s sitcoms. That redeemed this whole sketch.
— One has to wonder how John would’ve felt about the overexposure of Chuck Lorre sitcoms in more recent years. I’m sure some of us wouldn’t mind seeing Chuck Lorre get the same treatment that John gave Lear in this sketch.
STARS: ***

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE

PEACE TALKS
Henry Kissinger (JOB) uses song while mediating Rhodesian negotiations
    
— I think I heard Lorne’s voice just now, once again playing an unseen reporter asking a question in a press conference setting.
— I think I remember seeing this sketch before. Doesn’t this have a scene toward the end with John and some other guys crouching on the table while bickering like kids, or singing in a drunken manner, or something like that?
— This feels like the first real thing Garrett has done all night, and we’re near the end of the show!
— Dan’s dignified accent is pretty funny.
— I think Dan has had that same gray dye in his hair in every sketch he was in tonight, starting with the Jimmy Carter sketch early in the show.
— Garrett seems to like saying “umbwebwe” as a nonsense African word. He did the same thing several times in the Idi “V.D.” Amin sketch last season.
— Dan and Garrett’s insults to each other are cracking me the hell up!
— LOL at Dan’s line flub, exclaiming “You can’t look at a white man like that!” (in response to Garrett eagerly looking at a woman in a Playboy magazine) when he meant to say “white woman”, not “white man”. Garrett correcting him afterwards made me laugh a lot, too.
— Ah, there’s John crouching on the desk, like I had remembered. However, my memory of it was a little fuzzy, getting some of the sketch details mixed together.
— Hilarious ending.
— Overall, I liked this sketch a lot. The silliness of it appealed to me, and the performances were fun.
STARS: ****

NORMAN’S JOKE
host & an audience member try to tell a joke together

— Did the girl really screw up the joke set-up, or is this part of the act?
— Oh, never mind, it appears to be part of the act.
— Nice ending with Norman revealing that the girl is actually his daughter.
STARS: ***

SPANISH PEANUTS
by John Brister- stop-motion nuts have a celebration
 
— Another home movie using peanuts and stop-motion. Is this a sequel to last season’s peanut movie?
— The visuals are well-done, but not exactly funny or all that interesting so far.
— Okay, I’m getting bored now……
STARS: **

GOODNIGHTS
 
— I didn’t notice this in the season premiere goodnights (probably because I was distracted by all the Antler Dancing going on), but “Danny” Aykroyd and John Belushi have been added to the writing staff this season, as well as an unfamiliar name: Bruce McCall. I wonder if Dan and John’s addition to the writing staff is just temporary to make up for Chevy’s absence.

_______________________________

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS:
— A very solid episode, even better than the preceding week’s season premiere. This season has been having a strong start so far.
— I was curious how Norman Lear would fit into the sketches. While he ended up playing either himself or variations of himself all night, he did fine in his performances and came off as a pretty likable host.
— I was very eager to see how the show would feel without Chevy, though with the phone call cold opening and the Chevy’s Girls song, it didn’t feel like he was all that absent. Maybe his presence will be less felt in the next episode.

HOW THIS EPISODE STACKS UP AGAINST THE PRECEDING ONE (Lily Tomlin):
— a slight step up

My full set of screencaps for this episode is here

TOMORROW:
Eric Idle

September 18, 1976 – Lily Tomlin / James Taylor (S2 E1)

Sketches are rated on a scale of 1-5 stars

COLD OPENING
big-shot host arrives with entourage, intends to do show sans rehearsal
   
— An outdoors cold opening. Is this being done live?
— Lily thinking Gilda is Goldie Hawn is pretty funny.
— “Pepe”? Is that the same Pepe of Butch and Pepe, two little people who would later frequently appear on the show in the Dick Ebersol era?
— This is an exciting way to start the season.
— If this whole opening has been live (again, I’m not sure), I’m liking how this is reminding me of how extensive Buck Henry’s second monologue from last season was.
— LOL at “Jane Belushi”.
— I like the added touch of Chevy chasing Pepe after saying LFNY.
STARS: ****

OPENING MONTAGE
— It’s the same one from last season. There doesn’t appear to be any changes in it, from what I’m seeing.

MONOLOGUE
when the cameras turn off, so does host’s cheerful attitude toward SNL
 
— Heh, figures that when she was naming off the cast, Garrett was almost forgotten and then was added in as an afterthought.
— The monologue’s over already? No, there’s gotta be more.
— Ah, an extended scene after the monologue “ended”. I knew this wouldn’t just end without Lily having done anything funny in the monologue.
— Good ending. I still wanted more out of this whole monologue, though, considering how strong Lily’s last one was. Maybe they made tonight’s monologue so short to compensate for the cold opening being so long and extensive.
STARS: ***

DEBATE ’76
Gerald Ford (CHC) & Jimmy Carter (DAA) discuss the issues
   
— Ah, SNL’s first-ever presidential debate parody. This one is famous for two parts, which I’ll point out when they occur.
— The negro line about Garrett was very funny.
— This is going great so far.
— The slow zoom-in on Chevy’s serious-yet-puzzled facial expression (third screencap above) during Jane’s complicated question is cracking me up so much, especially since I know the classic response that’s coming from him next.
— FAMOUS PART #1: “It was my understanding that there would be no math.” Absolutely hilarious line, and one that would begin a tradition of future presidential debate sketches having one particular legendary line that would go on to become well-remembered for ages (e.g. “Strategery”, “I can’t believe I’m losin’ to this guy!”, etc.)
— FAMOUS PART #2: Chevy’s podium pratfall. It’s not only famous because of how funny and memorable the visual is, but also because of the real-life injury Chevy suffered from it. From what I remember hearing, the prop guys at the show forgot to pad the podium, and thus, when Chevy landed groin-first into it during the pratfall……. yeah, you can imagine the damage that did. I’m not seeing any visible signs of pain from him in the sketch (probably because from what I hear, he had a high threshold for pain back in those days), but the injury ended up being serious enough for him to be hospitalized for a while, which causes him to miss the next two (I think) episodes. Considering how much I’ve gotten so used to seeing him as the show’s star in the episodes I’ve reviewed so far, it’s gonna be interesting seeing an episode without him.
— The ending credits of this sketch has a lot of funny jokes in it.
 
— Overall, a classic debate sketch.
STARS: *****

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE

WEEKEND UPDATE, PART 1
LAN reports on Foreign Legionnaire’s Disease outbreak at the Blaine Hotel
 
— The “tennis without balls” joke about the transsexual tennis player was hilarious, even though it would be seen as very un-PC nowadays.
— The Idi Amin joke was very funny as well.
— John getting struck with the disease was pretty funny.

THE PHONE COMPANY
Ernestine (host) on The Phone Company- “We don’t care, we don’t have to”

— Hey, it’s the Laugh In character that I remember the most out of Lily’s characters on that show.
— Lily’s character is very funny in this with her brash actions and ‘don’t care’ attitude.
— Overall, this was great.
STARS: ****

WEEKEND UPDATE, PART 2
DOP is felled by Foreign Legionnaire’s Disease during Blaine Hotel promo
Emily Litella calls to inquire about “crustaceans” hijacking an airplane
 
— “Guests of Saturday Night Live stay at the Blaine Hotel” – ugh, ENOUGH with that overdone joke.
— Oh, wait, Pardo suddenly getting struck with the disease while announcing the Blaine Hotel promo is actually very funny.
— The Update phone is now ringing. I get the bad feeling it’s gonna be Emily Litella.
— Yep, I was right.
— Litella’s bit ended up being the same-old tired routine; they might as well have just had her appear at the desk like she usually does.
STARS (FOR BOTH WEEKEND UPDATE HALVES): ***

MUPPET MORGUE
in the morgue, host tries to get the Muppets to “Whistle A Happy Tune”
 

— This would end up being the final appearance of the SNL Muppets. Can’t say I’ll miss them.
— It sounds like you could hear whispering right before Wisss appeared.
— Mighty Favog is actually making me laugh in this.
— Interesting hearing a mention of “The Muppet Show”.
— I laughed at Scred’s response to Lily asking them if they’re family entertainment.
— Favog’s face turning inward when trying to whistle is a funny visual.
— This ended strangely.
— And now, this has segued into Lily introducing James Taylor’s next musical performance. Will this Muppets bit be continued later tonight? This felt unfinished.
STARS: ***

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE

TESS
eccentric Tess DiSenzo (host) chats with a real estate salesman (GAM)

— Ha, I hear audio of the Three Stooges!
— I recognize that audio as being from the Stooges’ 1952 short “Gents in a Jam”. As someone who’s a huge Three Stooges fan (which is where I get my online name from), you’ll be seeing me geeking out at any reference to them that SNL makes.
— What’s with the Christmas decorations?
— Garrett’s straight man reactions are kinda funny.
— I’m getting some enjoyment out of the weird details of Lily’s stories.
— Man, the studio audience is not into this anymore.
— Overall, I wanted to like this more than I did. I usually always enjoy the character work that Lily Tomlin does, and while this sketch did have its moments, something about it left me kinda underwhelmed.
STARS: **½

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE

JUDITH BEASLEY
housewife Judith Beasley (host) submits to pointless product tests & more
   
— I know this is a Laugh In character, but I’m only familiar with her by name only. I don’t recall ever seeing any of her sketches before.
— I’m liking this a lot so far.
— The big close-up of Dan’s smile at the camera was hilarious.
— I’m loving how Lily’s being asked to do increasingly ridiculous and irrelevant tasks.
— LOL at the hamster head.
— Ah, there’s the Antler Dance that I’ve always been curious to see.
STARS: ****

WOMEN IN LITERATURE
Elna Sullivan’s (LAN) journal entries lack depth

— I’m not crazy about this so far.
— I can’t think of anything else to say, other than this didn’t work much for me.
STARS: **

TAYLOR MEAD
by Gary Weis- Taylor Mead [real] gives his thoughts about television
 
— Oh, no, no, no! Not another short with this Taylor Mead guy again.
— This one is leaving me just as baffled and weirded-out as the first short with him did.
STARS: *½

LILY TOMLIN: “THE ANTLER DANCE”
host, PAS, SNL Band perform “The Antler Dance”
   
— A very fun and catchy performance.
— And now, Lily’s being joined by the cast, James Taylor, the Muppets (wearing actual antlers on their heads), Pepe, and I think I see some of the writers.
STARS: ****

GOODNIGHTS
at closing, host, cast, audience members do the Antler Dance
 
— A continuation of the fun preceding musical number.
— Quite a sight seeing the whole audience standing up and doing the dance.
— Overall, this has got to be one of the most fun and energetic ways SNL has ever closed out an episode.

_______________________________

IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS:
— A solid way to start a season. There wasn’t much to complain about, a lot of moments were fun, we got a classic presidential debate sketch, even the Muppets made me laugh, and Lily did another top-notch job as host. She was such a natural for SNL that I wish she would’ve hosted more often in this era; IIRC, the next (and last) time we see her as host will be much later in 1983, where SNL had a completely different cast and completely different tone.

HOW THIS EPISODE STACKS UP AGAINST THE PRECEDING SEASON (1975-76):
— about the same

My full set of screencaps for this episode is here

TOMORROW:
Norman Lear