The venerable late-night sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live is celebrating its 50th anniversary season this year. NBC will air a special on Sunday evening featuring current and former cast members.
I've long been a big fan of the show, since I was a kid in the late 1980s watching cast members such as Phil Hartman, Dana Carvey, and Jan Hooks. By then, the show was more than a decade old. It had already spawned huge Hollywood stars like Chevy Chase and Eddie Murphy and had gone through some near-death experiences as it struggled to find its footing.
The show most definitely does not appeal to some people. When I asked the Ars editorial team to share their favorite sketches, a few writers told me they had never found Saturday Night Live funny, hadn't watched it in decades, or just did not get the premise of the show. Others, of course, love the show's ability to poke fun at the cultural and political zeitgeist of the moment.
With the rise of the Internet, Saturday Night Live has become much more accessible. If you don't care to watch live on Saturday night or record the show, its sketches are available on YouTube within a day or two. Not all of the show's 10,000-odd sketches from the last five decades are available online, but many of them are.
With that said, here are some of our favorites!
Celebrity Hot Tub Party (Season 9)
Saturday Night Live has a thing for hot tubs, and it starts here, with the greatest of all hot tub parties.
Should you get in the water? Will it make you sweat?
Good god!
—Ken Fisher
Papyrus (Season 43)
Some of SNL's best skits satirize cultural touchstones that seem like they'd be way too niche but actually resonate broadly with its audience—like Font Snobs, i.e., those people who sneer at fonts like Comic-Sans (you know who you are) in favor of more serious options like the all-time favorite Helvetica. (Seriously, Helvetica has its own documentary.)