How is this show still on television? It's just horrible.
ShotOver said:
How is this show still on television? It's just horrible.
BCG Disciple said:
This is the ageless debate of every single generation. If you're 16-22, SNL is the best during that timespan of your life. Before then it was decent. After that point it is going down hill until you're 35 or older and then you begin to wonder why it is still on television. We'll get a good thread about it every 2-3 years.
So tired of 3 or 4 obsessed sweaty autists trying to own this board and police every single thread. Don't ****ing open it or reply if you're not interested. Really that simple.Quote:
and it definitely deserved its own thread.
Streaming and podcasts have had a diffusion effect on comedy talent. Why struggle through the distillation process of clubs and comedy troupes and working as background players when you can create your own show, or find paying gigs on shows that three people will ever watch? I rarely watch SNL anymore because there are usually other things I'd rather do on Saturday night, and I'm growing too old to get most of the pop culture references. But I've caught it a few times in the last 2 years when I thought the writing was decent, but the actors' delivery was just flat. Staring at a cue card and shouting lines in a staccato voice will ruin most writing.Quote:
Comedy, itself, is dying. SNL is suffering from a lack of truly funny young people, imo.
. How exactly is comedy dying? The platforms have never been more open.Quote:
Comedy, itself, is dying.
Lol. Go put your head back in the sand.TCTTS said:
As best I can recall, last night's episode didn't make a single joke at the expense of the right. Multiple sketches/jokes mocked the left, however. You have a president as prone to unintentional comedy and dumbassery as Trump, the show is going to naturally gravitate that way, and you can't really fault it for that. But now that he's out, and Biden's numbers are dropping/people are tiring of his sh*t, you can feel the comedy beginning to shift more and more "against" him/the left. It's something I specifically noticed last night. Will SNL ever be as blatant in its anti-Trump-ness as it has been/will be for any other president? Almost assuredly not. But they absolutely do dole it out for the other side as well, increasingly so as of late.
DallasTeleAg said:Lol. Go put your head back in the sand.TCTTS said:
As best I can recall, last night's episode didn't make a single joke at the expense of the right. Multiple sketches/jokes mocked the left, however. You have a president as prone to unintentional comedy and dumbassery as Trump, the show is going to naturally gravitate that way, and you can't really fault it for that. But now that he's out, and Biden's numbers are dropping/people are tiring of his sh*t, you can feel the comedy beginning to shift more and more "against" him/the left. It's something I specifically noticed last night. Will SNL ever be as blatant in its anti-Trump-ness as it has been/will be for any other president? Almost assuredly not. But they absolutely do dole it out for the other side as well, increasingly so as of late.
I laughed for years at the greatness of Ferrell as Bush and Hammond as Clinton/Gore. It was comedy gold. Why is it that I can tell the difference in the writing shift from comedy to vitriol and you can't? Idk... perhaps the same reason many of us see the blatant cronyism in everyday Hollywood and you don't.
Also, that was only a piece of my point, not the entire point. The talent is not funny.
I think Harry Lime hit the nail on the head when he mentions all the other avenues. From the 70's through the early 2000's, there weren't nearly as many avenues for young talent to thrive. There was stand-up, possibly getting a sit-com on network TV, or SNL (I understand I'm simplifying, Mr. Hollywood; chillax). Now days, there are many newer channels making quality shows, there are internet platforms where real talent can work for themselves, and there are many new streaming services putting money behind young talent to create.
If you are good enough to be successful with any of these mediums, why would you subject yourself to the grind that is SNL other than the antiquity of the establishment?
Harry Lime said:So tired of 3 or 4 obsessed sweaty autists trying to own this board and police every single thread. Don't ****ing open it or reply if you're not interested. Really that simple.Quote:
and it definitely deserved its own thread.
helloimustbegoing said:
If aliens visited from another planet and wanted to know how the TexAgs entertainment board worked, this thread should be frozen in carbonite and kept for all time. It has all the great features.
1) A recycled opinion as the topics
2) Instant sarcasm to the recycled topic
3) Anger at the sarcasm and the suggestion that this board does not belong to an oligarchy but is in fact a democracy and if you don't like it, SHUT THE FRONT DOOR
4) An immediate politcizing of the issue
5) A counter punch to said political opinion
6) Escalation far beyond what 99% of people would think is normal in a discussion board
7) TC being bashed for his Hollywood naivety
8) The TC counter-punch post that you know is his before you even read it because it's 70% longer than every other post on the thread and had 31 edits
9) An uneasy silence, like the eye of the hurricane, waiting to see who will take the next shot.
ATM9000 said:
I think SNL and comedy in general is way harder now than it used to be. I know all of us think our generation's comedy was the peak and so original but for years most it was based on taking things further than the last guy, taking the piss on a person or group of people or clever vulgarity. All of those things are out the window in today's etiquette environment.
It's also why the Trump stuff Baldwin did stuck out so badly… because they took the piss with him because they kind of could given how much he dished it out. But I also found it all to be really cheap laughs and not all that great of material. It all felt like stuff that could be written in like an hour.
Love Keenanjeffk said:
Keenan cracks me up.