March 12, 2005 – David Spade / Jack Johnson (S30 E14)

Segments are rated on a scale of 1-5 stars

STEWART RELEASE
Martha Stewart (DAS) addresses her employees after getting out of prison

— Right out of the gate, it’s good to see the underused Rob Riggle get a bit of a laugh from the audience just from his smug news anchor-type smile after signing on at the beginning of this.
— The banter between Rob and Amy is making me laugh.
— Ha, strangely fitting casting of David Spade as Martha Stewart. By the way, it’s good to see David on SNL again, especially during trying times like season 30.
— I love how David is playing Martha in a very David Spade way. It’s working here.
— David-as-Martha’s reaction to Maya sneaking up on her made me laugh a lot.
— This is surprisingly David’s first time ever delivering a solo “Live from New York…”. He previously said it (well, just the “night” part of the phrase) in unison with the rest of the cast and Steve Martin in the legendary Not Gonna Phone It In Tonight cold opening.
— Pretty good opening overall. Right out of the gate, I’m sensing a much better and more fun vibe in tonight’s episode than I got from the entire Hilary Swank suckfest of an episode that preceded this.
STARS: ***½


MONOLOGUE
DAS answers audience questions about his role in Capital One commercials

— David reveals that an SNL “Best Of” special for himself will be airing later in the year and he humorously says he’s only hosting tonight because SNL is two sketches short for his “Best Of”.
— 15 years after this episode, I now strangely no longer have any memory of David’s Capital One ads from this period.
— I can’t help but feel this monologue is a waste of David (why not just let him do stand-up?), but it’s still funny enough.
— The questions-from-the-audience monologue from both Topher Grace’s episode and tonight’s episode makes me realize how fun and likable a lot of this season’s writers come off when appearing onscreen, especially John Lutz, Liz Cackowski, J.B. Smoove, and, of course, Jason Sudeikis (the latter of whom actually isn’t in tonight’s monologue, unfortunately). How can a season with fun writers like this have such poor writing?
— SNL writer Matt Piedmont looks eerily like Dana Carvey here (the second-to-last above screencap for this monologue).
— Paula Pell’s bit was an odd way of setting up David saying the usual “We got a great show, (insert musical guest here) is here, stick around– etc.”, but it strangely kinda worked for me.
STARS: ***


ART DEALERS
(DAS) & (RAD) are weirded out by hospitality overtures of Nuni & Nuni

— Like last time, some fun visuals of the Nunis’ eccentric furniture and the like.
— Some of the repeated bits from the first Nuni sketch, such as the Nunis clarifying to their visitors how to differentiate the pronunciation of their respective name, are ALREADY starting to get a little old for me, but haven’t completely worn out their welcome for me yet. By the third installment of this sketch later this season, however, I’m sure I’ll have officially gotten tired of it.
— Chris is always funny as the shy butler in these sketches.
— I love Chris entering the room wearing multiple bras while asking “Who wants milk?”
— David’s a good straight man here, as no surprise.
STARS: ***


ABC
new TV dramas Deaf Judge (SEM) & Idiot Doctor (DAS) follow Blind Justice

— The Deaf Judge bit started out okay, but the second scene with him didn’t do much for me.
— I love David’s performance as “Idiot Doctor”, though his scene ended weakly.
STARS: **½


STUNT DOUBLE
stuntwoman (AMP) stands in for DAS on the set of a Vin Diesel (HOS) movie

— A funny eventual reveal that it’s Vin Diesel who Horatio is playing.
— I’ve always liked this sketch so much that I won’t let Horatio’s obligatory instance of cracking up at himself right now taint my review of this.
— Vin Diesel: “I do all my own stunts.” David: “(in a disinterested manner while walking away from Vin) Yeah, great. Who does your acting?”
— David: “Zippety-do-dah, mother-humpers!”
— A fun and very amusing sketch so far.
— I particularly love the ridiculous part with Amy gleefully and girlishly swinging on a wrecking ball while saying things like “Wheeee! I’m David Spaaaade!”
— Vin Diesel: “You know, on The Chronicles Of Riddick, I fought fire monsters.” David: “Yeah, I know, Vin. We all read about that in Who Cares Magazine.” This sketch has some great snarky one-liners that fit David’s style so well that you’d think he wrote this sketch himself.
— Solid ending.
STARS: ****½


WOOMBA
— Rerun from 12/18/04.
— Weird hearing Tina’s ending line about “the little pink robot that cleans your noonie” in the same episode that a Nuni sketch appeared in.


HOLDING CELL
overmatched (DAS) tries making (ROR) his bitch in a suburban holding cell

— Fun characterization from David here.
— A good way to get mileage out of the huge size difference between David and Rob.
— Despite the one-note homoerotic premise, which is YET ANOTHER example of this season’s bad hyperfocus on hacky gay humor, David’s performance is making this sketch work. Even his mere physical mannerisms each time he slowly walks over towards Rob is adding a lot to the humor.
— Wow, that ending was awful. How was Rob just saying “Well… thank god that’s over with” supposed to be a way to end a sketch? A possible explanation for the shoddiness of this ending is the fact that this was apparently a last-minute change to this sketch. Reruns of this episode would replace this sketch with the dress rehearsal version, which has a completely different ending. Unfortunately, I can’t remember that ending too well. I think it might have Kenan and Rachel’s security guard characters proceeding to put the moves on Rob’s character after David spent the whole sketch doing that exact same thing. Hmm, not sure that’s any better than the awful ending from the live version.
STARS: ***


MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Sitting, Waiting, Wishing”


WEEKEND UPDATE
AMP recounts feud between 50 Cent & The Game in her Hip-Hop Breakdown

Jorge Rodriguez lists problems he encountered while preparing his taxes

— Oh my fucking god. After doing her weekly joke about Michael Jackson being a pedophile (she ain’t no Norm Macdonald when it comes to that type of joke, I’ll just say that), Tina actually CONGRATULATES herself on her “witty” punchline. Ugh. That’s the return of a terrible habit she previously had for a short while towards the end of season 28, and I was hoping she left it there.
— At least tonight’s audience didn’t keep interrupting Amy by laughing when she merely says “Fiddy Cent”, unlike the last time she did a joke where she says that name.
— Hmm, “Amy Poehler’s Hip-Hop Breakdown”? I can’t help but be VERY wary of this segment, but I’ll give it a shot and see how it goes.
— Aaaaaaaaaand, as no surprise to anyone who knows how I feel about the Fey/Poehler era of Update, it turns out that I hated the “Amy Poehler’s Hip-Hop Breakdown” segment. I at least tried to go into it with an open mind, but it just turned out to be a typical display of unfunny Fey/Poehler self-indulgence, and also felt like a variation of an unfunny Update segment Tina and Amy did earlier this season where they act out an incident with 50 Cent on a plane with a terrorist.
— OH, NO. Not the return of Horatio’s tepid Jorge Rodriguez character from the preceding season’s Lindsay Lohan episode. Geez, the return of this character is so half-assed that even the graphic of his name on the bottom of the screen accidentally misspelled his last name (screencap below).

— Feels kinda odd seeing Jorge Rodriguez not playing off of Jimmy Fallon like he did last time he appeared.
— Ugh, like last time, there goes Jorge Rodriguez’s endless listing off of an endless number of things. How the hell is this supposed to be funny?
— I hate myself for actually laughing at Horatio’s way of comically over-pronouncing the “p” in “receipts”.
— Amy’s exasperation during Jorge’s endless listing off of things mirrors my attitude during this commentary.
— And there goes the exact same turn in the last Jorge Rodriguez commentary, where he reveals “I’m looking for Pepe. Anyone seen him?”
— Feels weird in retrospect seeing a cyberbullying mention as early as 2005. I thought the term “cyberbullying” didn’t exist until around 2010. Maybe 2010 was just when cyberbullying incidents started becoming more widespread and more talked-about.
— When this episode originally aired, I remember being disappointed that we ended up getting no Hollywood Minute commentary from David. Am I remembering correctly that it was eventually revealed that a Hollywood Minute commentary actually got cut after this episode’s dress rehearsal?
STARS: **


SEAN PENN’S CELEBRITY ROAST
Sean Penn’s (SEM) humorlessness dooms his roast of Clint Eastwood (DAH)

— Oh, back when this season originally aired, I recall this being a particularly popular sketch among a lot of online SNL fans (myself included), who considered this one of the better sketches of this troubled season. Since this sketch is a parody of such a topical incident with Sean Penn at that year’s Oscars, I’m curious to see if this sketch will still hold up after all these years.
— The depressing punchline to the “A man so black….” joke that Seth’s Sean Penn tells about Bernie Mac is absolutely hilarious.
— I see what Kenan’s going for with his Bernie Mac impression, but ehhh, I’ve seen much better imitations of Mac’s voice. Kenan’s impression is passable enough for this sketch, though.
— Seth’s doing a solid imitation of Penn’s extremely dour, humorless demeanor from that year’s Oscars.
— Fred’s George Carlin impression is slaying me.
— I remember it being pointed out that the prosthetic nose David’s wearing as Owen Wilson has actually been designed to look like a realistic penis, complete with a penis head and a dorsal vein (screencap below, though you might have to enlarge even the full-sized version of it to see the details of the nose better).

— I absolutely howled at the cutaway to Seth’s Penn staring at the camera with an EXTREMELY un-amused, deadpan facial expression (the ninth above screencap for this sketch) after Darrell’s Clint Eastwood does a spit-take in reaction to a dirty joke from David’s Owen Wilson.
— I love Rob-as-Larry-The-Cable-Guy’s delivery of “For cryin’ out loud, you were Spicoli!”
— Seth-as-Sean-Penn’s sign-off towards viewers: “Goodnight… and how DARE you?”
— Overall, it turns out this sketch definitely still holds up for me, and I definitely still consider this one of the better sketches of this troubled season.
STARS: ****½


UPS GUY
UPS guy (DAS) is shot down after asking receptionist (RAD) out on a date

— I really like the structure to this sketch, as well as the slow build-up throughout this. There’s an old-school-SNL feel to this that I like. Doesn’t feel like a typical season 30 sketch at all (which actually can be said about a lot of tonight’s sketches).
— David getting increasingly unsettling in his flirtations with Rachel with each passing day is great.
— I like the subversion right now, with the “Saturday” scene unexpectedly turning out to just be a cleaning lady (Maya) vacuuming Rachel’s currently-unoccupied office, and how the “Sunday” scene features various cleaning ladies partying in Rachel’s still-unoccupied office.
— An SNL crew member’s voice keeps being heard during the scene transitions throughout this sketch (I heard her distinctly say “Stand by” at one point), especially right after the scene of Maya’s cleaning lady character vacuuming the office.
— I love Rachel aggravatedly revealing to David that her name is actually Mary, after he’s been calling her Erica all throughout this sketch.
— I get the feeling a lot of people don’t care for the ending with the building explosion being represented by a tiny model building, but I really liked it. Then again, I’m often a sucker for whenever SNL uses cheap-looking tiny model toys to represent something happening to a building or house (e.g. the Tales Of The Runaway Boulder sketch from season 15’s Robert Wagner episode).
STARS: ****½


JINGLE SINGERS
repertoire of married singers (DAS) & (MAR) comprises commercial jingles

— Oh, no. This looks to be a specific type of “Maya Rudolph Singing Sketch” that I recall SNL doing a lot around this point of the season, and I recall HATING back when they originally aired. (I remember saying to myself back in 2005 that Maya Rudolph Singing Sketches were to this troubled season what Chris Farley Yelling Sketches were to the troubled season 20.) They’re usually James Anderson-written sketches in which Maya plays a washed-up lounge singer-type of character, sometimes a lounge singer-type duo with her and the host. (That being said, I’m not 100% sure if Anderson wrote the particular sketch that I’m currently reviewing, but it’d put money on it that he did. He would also later write a lounge singer duo sketch with Kristen Wiig and Jon Hamm in 2010, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s written a lounge singer sketch for Cecily Strong in more recent years.)
— The name of Maya’s character in this sketch, C.C., is awfully similar to the name of her character, T.T., in that The Best Of T.T. & Mario sketch from just a few episodes prior, which also just so happened to be a James Anderson-written(I think) Maya Rudolph Singing Sketch. I actually like that sketch, though.
— Blah, I don’t care AT ALL for the comedic conceit of this sketch, with Maya and David’s songs being old commercial jingles of theirs.
— Maya’s “funny” singing in this is annoying to me. I’m starting to think I was correct when I said in my last episode review that we’ve officially entered the point of this season where I recall Maya’s frequent singing in sketches starting to hurt the show.
— Overall, not a single laugh from me during this sketch. Leave it to a damn Maya Rudolph Singing Sketch to break the streak of solid sketches in tonight’s episode.
STARS: *


BEAR CITY
by T. Sean Shannon- an anthropomorphic ursine uses the toilet

— Good gag, especially the funny visual of the non-handicapped bear desperately trying to hide when a handicapped bear is peeking into the handicapped stall that the non-handicapped bear is using.
STARS: ***½


MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest & G. Love [real] perform “Mudfootball”


DIRTBALL AND BURNOUT CONVENTION
redneck (DAS) touts the attractions of the Dirtball & Burnout Convention

— Yet another great role for David tonight, basically playing a variation of Joe Dirt. Some places claim David is playing Joe Dirt in this sketch, but the name of David’s character is never said in the sketch, and the hair is kinda different from Joe Dirt’s hair.
— I love all the redneck convention events David is touting.
— Surprisingly, this is Tina’s FOURTH appearance tonight. Hell, FIFTH if you count the Woomba rerun. Either way, this has got to be an all-time record for most appearances she’s made in a single episode during her tenure as a cast member.
— Such a fun sketch, and a great way to work in almost the entire cast. Even Horatio’s typically-hammy antics made me smile.
— Darrell’s Skeeter character makes another random appearance!
— A funny gaffe where Darrell’s not able to open the beer bottle top like he’s supposed to, then he ad-libs an amused “Some other time!” towards the camera.
STARS: ****


GOODNIGHTS


IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— A solid episode, a lot of strong sketches (some of which are the best of this season), and David Spade’s mere presence seemed to inject this ailing season with a lot of much-needed fun and energy. Not only is this episode a huge turnaround from the dreadful Hilary Swank episode that preceded this, but it’s a breath of fresh air for this season in general. Easily one of the best episodes of this season, and I wouldn’t be surprised if this ends up with the highest rating average out of all my reviews this season, though the Paul Giamatti episode has gotta be up there too.


MY PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


HOW THIS EPISODE STACKS UP AGAINST THE PRECEDING ONE (Hilary Swank)
a huge step up


My full set of screencaps for this episode is here


TOMORROW
Ashton Kutcher

November 7, 1998 – David Spade / Eagle-Eye Cherry (S24 E5)

Segments are rated on a scale of 1-5 stars

THERAPY
DAS complains to his therapist (Brad Pitt) about the curse of fame

— I got a good laugh from how, as an example of how he can’t remember the names of the newer SNL cast members, David says he kept calling Tim Meadows “Jim” all week, and then you remember that Tim was David’s castmate for years.
— Random Brad Pitt cameo. It’s surprising that, to this day in 2019, this is the only time he’s ever appeared on SNL.
— You can tell this cold opening is pre-taped, as the reveal of Pitt’s presence would’ve gotten a bigger audience reaction had he been there live in the studio.
— Lots of pretty funny lines from David throughout this.
— A funny subtle gag with Pitt needing to glance at his pad to remember David’s name, after David went on and on about his own stardom.
STARS: ***½


OPENING MONTAGE
— This season’s ever-changing theme music has been changed back to the one used in the Kelsey Grammer episode from earlier this season.


MONOLOGUE
DAS does stand-up about a polar bear mauling & the archetypal Cops perp

— I love David’s opening line, regarding coming back to SNL as a host: “(in a sly voice) Now the pupil has become the teacher!”
— Funny bit about a drunk guy hallucinating a bear signaling him to come over.
— I love David’s rundown of every redneck stereotype seen in every episode of Cops.
— Surprised this is over already. I wanted more stand-up.
STARS: ****


MERCURY MISTRESS
the Mercury Mistress is the car you can both drive & have sex with

— A fake ad that would end up never being re-aired, as it was deemed too raunchy at the time.
— A very juvenile but hilarious concept, and Parnell is perfect for this. Speaking of which, this is the very first of what would be quite a number of perv roles that SNL would cast Parnell in over the years.
— I love the visual of a blurred-out hole on the car.
— Hilarious bit with Horatio as a car burglar getting busted trying to have sex with Parnell’s car.
— The ending bit felt a little unnecessary, as the visual of Parnell humping the car started to get a little old.
STARS: ****


PRESS JUNKET
Monica Lewinsky (MOS) & publicist (DAS) screen potential interviewers

— A fun excuse to bring in a lot of celebrity impressions.
— Our first time seeing Darrell’s Phil Donahue impression in a few seasons.
— I love Ana’s Diane Sawyer saying, in regards to Barbara Walters, “That whore” and “Walters, I will KICK YOUR ASS!”
— Very funny bit with Cheri’s Barbara Walters coming back in while badly disguised as Sally Jessy Raphael.
— David is perfectly cast in this role.
— Jimmy displays yet another solid celebrity impression, though I recall him later saying that he feels his Howard Stern sounds more like Alan Alda.
— I love Molly-as-Monica’s childlike gleeful reaction to receiving a box of Snackwells.
— Great bit with Tim’s Oprah being carried in by a group of worshipers chanting her name.
— A good laugh from Tim’s Oprah mentioning how her movie Beloved is “eating it hard at the box office”.
STARS: ****


MACK NORTH
Mack North (WIF) relishes victory in exorbitant post-election attack ad

— Hilarious how Will’s politician is taking out a mean-spirited post-election ad to obnoxiously brag about his victory over his opponent. A perfect Will Ferrell role.
— I probably shouldn’t share this, but I remember when I first saw this, in a Comedy Central rerun, Will’s delivery of “Hey, you ate it! Now eat me!” made me laugh so uncontrollably hard that I seriously almost went to the bathroom on myself.
STARS: ****


ACCRUING EQUITY AND MAKING HOT, SWEET LOVE
finance & fornication mingle

— A very unconventional and creative concept.
— David looks very funny in that wig and mustache.
— I love the use of sensual lighting and soft background music when each panelist is describing their love-making.
— Ana’s love-making story has a lot of hilarious details and word choices.
— David’s love-making story about sex on a Wendy’s rooftop has a lot of funny bizarre turns.
STARS: ****


MACK NORTH
Mack North accosts vanquished opponent Fred Peete (CHP) in a parking lot

— Again, Will’s obnoxious demeanor in this is slaying me.
— A big laugh from Will’s particularly harsh line to his opponent: “Your kids are that extra kind of chubby that you just KNOW that they’re gonna grow up fat.”
— I love the scene with Will confronting his opponent (Parnell) in a Target parking lot and childishly harassing him.
— Good ending with Will saying to his camera crew “Let’s get ‘im! Let’s GET ‘im!” when his opponent drives away in a hurry.
STARS: ****


DRILL SERGEANT
drill sergeant (WIF) aggressively solicits love-life advice from recruits

— Man, tonight’s episode is on a roll.
— Will is perfect as a typical loudmouthed drill sergeant.
— Will’s insults towards the soldiers are hilarious.
— Will is great at mixing sensitive requests for relationship advice and abusively screaming at his soldiers.
— A classic example of Will trying to make a scene partner break during a sketch, as he tries to make David crack up by repeatedly bumping his own hat against David while David is giving a long speech to him.
STARS: ****½


MANGO & KIWI
new dancer Kiwi (DAS) seems to have stolen Mango’s magic; CSR cameo

— I guess I spoke too soon about tonight’s episode being on a roll. Here comes Mango.
— Mango gets an obligatory “recurring character meets a character with similar traits, played by the host” sketch.
— Chris Rock cameo!
— Fun seeing Rock, Tim, and David appearing in a sketch together for the first time since the early 90s when they were castmates.
— Rock’s mesmerized reaction to David’s Kiwi character is cracking me up.
— A laugh from how the only admirer Mango has left is an old homeless man.
— Overall, a bit more fun than usual Mango sketches, though I still wasn’t too crazy about this as a whole.
STARS: **½


MACK NORTH
Mack North uses a Fred Peete mask to further rub in the election results

— A somewhat funny concept of Will’s politician using a cardboard cut-out of his opponent’s face to speak as him, but this third ad feels a little unnecessary and they should’ve just left these Mack North ads at two.
STARS: **½


HAPPY BIRTHDAY GRANDMA
kids’ attempts to wish grandma “Happy Birthday” via phone displease (WIF)

— Wow, is tonight The Will Ferrell Show? He’s had a lead role in almost EVERY SINGLE SEGMENT so far tonight. I’m certainly not complaining, though I’m sure that some viewers back then who didn’t like Will were complaining when this episode originally aired (I can just picture them saying “Ugh, ANOTHER sketch tonight with Will Ferrell screaming his way through?”).
— I love Will interrupting the kids’ first singing of “Happy Birthday” to tell them calmly with a smile “Don’t half-ass it, okay?”
— Sketches with Will playing an angry father berating children never fail to crack me up. I’d like to think that the dad he’s playing in this particular sketch is the same dad from the “Get off the shed!” sketches.
— Kid: “Is grandma gonna die?” Will: “She is if you don’t nail it this time!”
— Odd how this is the second sketch tonight with Will using “horses ass” as an insult.
— Great turn with Will now directing his anger towards his mother on the phone, telling her “You can go straight to hell! I’m a lawyer! I go to court… and… talk with big words! You’re the devil!”
STARS: ****


WEEKEND UPDATE
COQ analyzes the gifts given by Bill Clinton to Monica Lewinsky
Hollywood Minute- DAS & lookalike hand puppet engage in celebrity gossip

— Colin’s opening straight-to-camera rant tonight is funnier than usual.
— I believe this is SNL’s very first mention of Osama Bin Laden (who Colin calls “Osam Bin Laden”). Little did they know at the time what a frequently-uttered name that would become on their show a few years later…
— I love the exuberant German accent Colin uses to pronounce “Der Spiegel” (and throwing in an obligatory utterance of the word “folks” after it, for good measure).
— Colin’s “Gucci knock-off” joke was excellent, and is one of his best Update jokes ever.
— Spade returns with the Hollywood Minute!
— Interesting concept with David using a hand puppet of his early 90s-era self to do tonight’s Hollywood Minute.
— The use of the hand puppet is helping save some of the weaker jokes in tonight’s Hollywood Minute and allows for David to make lots of fun ad-libs towards his puppet.
— Uh-oh! An Eddie Murphy photo has now popped up during the Hollywood Minute commentary.
— Ha, after David’s hand puppet’s Holy Man/holy crap joke about Eddie, David references the controversy over his own Eddie slam from an earlier Hollywood Minute by telling the puppet “Don’t say that. We’re friends now” (which the puppet responds to with “That’s not what I heard!”).
— Funny blooper with David briefly forgetting to change his voice when speaking as the hand puppet.
— A random but funny gag with the camera doing a cutaway to SNL’s cue-card guy holding up tiny cue cards for the hand puppet.
STARS: ***½


MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
musical guest performs “Save Tonight”


FELICITY
(DAS) ruins Felicity scene by also speaking Keri Russell’s (MOS) part

— Tim, as the Felicity director: “I have a good feeling this could be the episode that makes people turn on the TV and say ‘Hey, there’s a show on TV called Felicity.’”
— Another good line from Tim, after David ruins the filming of a scene: “That was perfect, and yet, not good at all.”
— The concept with David’s character speaking Molly-as-Keri-Russell’s lines is getting really one-joke, one joke that isn’t all that funny and is having no escalation in humor as it goes on.
— Tim continues to provide most of my only laughs in this sketch, though his delivery of his lines is now starting to get a little stumbly.
STARS: **


DR. LAURA
Dr. Laura Schlessinger (ANG) berates callers to her radio program

— Ana’s bitchy, unlikable portrayal of Dr. Laura is good. I have no familiarity with the real Dr. Laura, but from what I remember reading in old 1998 SNL reviews of this episode, SNL’s parody is pretty spot-on.
— I love the dark humor with Ana’s Dr. Laura driving an emotional caller to suicide, complete with a loud gunshot being heard.
— Hilarious line from Will as a caller talking about going online and ordering up Dr. Laura’s “Steamed clam special”, referring to her nude photos that were recently leaked online.
— David is well-cast as an obnoxious child.
— Surprised that the sketch is over already. This was pretty short, and I kinda wish David had more to do. Seemed like kind of a waste to bring the host on for just the last minute of a sketch, and not give him much to say or do.
STARS: ***½


BACHELOR PARTY
chaperone (DAS) lays down the ground rules for bachelor party attendees

— The shirt that David’s wearing is the same one Tim wore in a season 22 sketch where he played a character named Jerry Steve Dave, The Magic Man (side-by-side comparison below).

— Yet another role tonight that David is perfect for. And there are some laughs from him telling the guys what nasty things they’re allowed to do to the strippers while also urging them to treat the strippers with class. I doubt these lines would be as funny if any host besides David Spade were delivering them.
— The fun performances from all the guys are elevating the material. And the various statements that Tim’s shouting out in excitement throughout the sketch are hilarious.
STARS: ***


GOODNIGHTS


IMMEDIATE POST-SHOW THOUGHTS
— A mostly consistently solid episode. The first half had an impressive long string of great pieces, though the quality slowed down a little in the post-Update half. David Spade fit back into the show perfectly and, as I kept stating throughout the review, was cast into roles that fit him to a T.


MY PERSONAL CHOICE OF “BEST OF” MOMENTS FOR THIS EPISODE, REPRESENTED WITH SCREENCAPS


HOW THIS EPISODE STACKS UP AGAINST THE PRECEDING ONE (Ben Stiller)
a slight step up


My full set of screencaps for this episode is here


TOMORROW
Joan Allen