Nobody but Ryan Gosling gets to laugh through the entire show.
Caitlin Clark made a surprise appearance on “Saturday Night Live” during the show’s ” Weekend Update ” segment.
Host Ryan Gosling's 'Fall Guy' costar Emily Blunt joins him for an 'SNL' opening number to bid Barbenheimer and their characters Ken and Kitty farewell. Plus, Chris Stapleton returns to Studio 8H.
Ryan Gosling could not stop giggling as he took the helm of the U.S.S. Saturday Night Live, while musical guest Christ Stapleton elevated the latest parody music video that takes things way, way too far. Gosling perhaps bid a final farewell to his Ken-ergy era with an unexpected assist from Fall Guy co-star Emily Blunt, while NCAA breakout star Caitlin Clark but Michael Che in his place on "Weekend Update." But the biggest surprise of the night came right at the start with a...
Caitlin Clark shocked audiences by appearing on Saturday Night Live this week. She joined regular cast member Michael Che and paid tribute to WNBA legends. DailyMail.com
After guiding the Iowa women’s basketball team to two victories in Albany during the NCAA Tournament, Caitlin Clark was back in New York this weekend. This time around, the star guard wasn’t on the hardwood, but rather on the set of NBC’s “Saturday Night Live.” Donning a Nike leather jacket, Clark sat alongside comedians Michael
"Saturday Night Live" did a skit about a fictional NewsNation town hall,
Each era of Saturday Night Live has its mega-stars, the ones whose sketch-comedy contributions linger long after those weekly, wistful goodbye segments and that final saxophone blow. There are, of course, those legendary 1975 originals, the Not Ready For Prime-Time Players like John Belushi, Jane Curtin, Chevy Chase, and Gilda Radner. There’s the eighties domination of Eddie Murphy—a bright spot in a turbulent time for the show, which saw both the exit and return of creator Lorne Michaels—as...
He was also in the movie Half Baked!
Remembering the times ‘SNL’ backed far away from the cutting edge
Writer/director Mike Judge was able to use his Milton shorts from Saturday Night Live as the inspiration for his cult comedy classic Office Space.