Ever lie awake at night wondering what was happening on Saturday Night Live during the year you were born? We got you, boo. Assuming you’re at least 16 years old, here’s a handy guide to your SNL birth year.
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1975
The show premieres! (It’s not even called Saturday Night Live at this point -- just Saturday Night.) George Carlin is the first host on October 11, uttering exactly zero of the seven dirty words you can’t say on television.
Lorne Michaels offers the Beatles a certified check for $3,000 if they’ll reunite on the show. (OK by Lorne if they give Ringo less.) Lennon and McCartney were watching the show in a nearby apartment and nearly stopped by -- but decided they were too tired.
John Belushi claims he’s too sick to do the show and is about to be replaced by an actor from the NBC replacement pool. But when a doctor threatens to cut off Belushi’s drug supply, he jumps back to good health and intros the show. Art imitating life.
Lorne is burnt out and leaves the show, along with what remained of the original cast. New producers hire Denny Dillon, Charles Rocket, and Ann Risley. Not making the cut: Jim Carrey, John Goodman, and Paul “Pee Wee Herman” Reubens.
Home viewers can call a 900-number to vote on whether Andy Kaufman will ever be allowed on the show again. The viewers vote thumbs down and Kaufman is banned for life.
A major influx of comedy talent is injected into the SNL bloodstream, with Billy Crystal, Martin Short, and Christopher Guest dominating the 30 Rock stage. A fun season full of pre-taped bits that feels like a different show.
Lorne is back! Unfortunately, he hires a bunch of comedy movie stars whose talents don’t work well on ensemble TV, including Robert Downey Jr., Joan Cusack, Anthony Michael Hall, and Randy Quaid. None of them last more than one season.
ComedyNerd rated this season’s newcomers as the best rookie class in SNL history. Welcome aboard, Dana Carvey, Phil Hartman, Jan Hooks, Kevin Nealon, and Victoria Jackson. Mercy!
Gilda Radner was scheduled to host but her show was canceled due to a Writers Guild strike. She never got another chance, passing away from cancer the following year. She would have been the first female cast member to return as host. (And no one did until Julia Louis-Dreyfus in 2006.)
No one has hosted Saturday Night Live more than Alec Baldwin. On April 21, he hosted his first show. He’d go on to do it an amazing 17 times … and counting. This was also the year Nora Dunn refused to appear with Andrew Dice Clay -- her contract was not renewed.
The youth movement is on. Adam Sandler and Tim Meadows arrive, joining the recently hired Chris Farley, Chris Rock, and David Spade. Several recurring characters show up for the first time, including the Making Copies guy, the Superfans, Stuart Smalley, Coffee Talk’s Linda Richman, and Deep Thoughts with Jack Handey. For better or worse, the era of the Continually Recurring Character was on.
Chris Rock, frustrated with his role on the show, quits to join the cast of the soon-to-be-canceled In Living Color. That freed him up to become the most successful stand-up of the 1990s, as well as an embattled Academy Award presenter.
Under the category of “Sketches That Would Not Air Today,” Alec Baldwin returns as a Scoutmaster who molests Adam Sandler’s Canteen Boy. Inexplicably, while less troublesome sketches have been scrubbed from online archives, nbc.com still has this one on the roster.
Struggling Jay Mohr finally scores big in March with the sketch Callahan and Sons. Unfortunately, he is soon busted for lifting the bit from stand-up comic Rick Shapiro, a sin he confesses in his SNL tell-all Gasping for Airtime. Not surprisingly, this was Mohr’s last season.
Chevy Chase hosts for the last time before being banned for all-around douchenozzle behavior. “A little snobbish,” says Will Ferrell, “and he’d yell at someone down the hallway— scream and yell— and you would look at him, and he’d see you were looking at him and he would smile like, ‘I’m just joking.’ We’d be like, ‘No, I don’t think you are.’” Check out more of Chevy’s crimes against SNL.
A brave Reese Witherspoon hosts the season premiere at a time when New York (and America) was still terrified of terrorist attacks. Comedy movies were being pulled from theaters as it seemed an inappropriate time for laughter, but SNL decided the show must go on. “Can we be funny?” Lorne asked New York Mayor Rudy Guiliani in the cold open. Guiliani, not yet a national villain, responded: “Why start now?”
In what must have been a down year for professional funny people, both John McCain and Al Gore hosted shows in the fall. Hard to say who was more hilarious, though SNL would come back to bite McCain with its ruthless Sarah Palin sketches a few years later.
Musical guest Ashlee Simpson was set to “sing” “Autobiography,” but someone pushed the wrong button, and the vocals for “Pieces of Me” started before she could open her mouth. It was the lip-syncing disaster heard ‘round the world. Her band tried to carry on but a flustered Simpson left them hanging alone on stage. Watch-o-Meter, set to Full Cringe!
It’s the smallest cast in several years as NBC budget cuts account for the firings of Chris Parnell (again), Horatio Sanz, and Finesse Mitchell. The show still managed an Emmy for Dick in a Box. Your boss forwarded that one too.