Amid tariff chaos, 'SNL' mocks 'The White Potus' Donald Trump and his Cabinet
From the cold open to a spoof of 'The White Lotus' to 'Weekend Update,' Trump's trade war figured prominently in the latest episode, hosted by Jon Hamm.
For some âSaturday Night Liveâ episodes, the promise of a first-time host brings excitement and anticipation, as it did a few weeks ago with Oscar-winner Mikey Madison.
Other times, itâs nice to expect a comfort-food episode where you know youâll probably like whatâs being served. In his fourth outing as host, âMad Menâ star Jon Hamm (promoting his new Apple TV+ show âYour Friends & Neighborsâ) didnât have to prove anything; he just had to be as solid as heâs been in past stints, not to mention the 14 (!) cameos heâs made since he last hosted in 2010, as he discussed in the monologue before being joined by Oscar winner Kieran Culkin.
The show started strong with a game-show sketch featuring a family man and successful dentist (Hamm) who is terrified of embarrassing himself, which of course he does in short order. Hamm also played the co-host in a piece about a financial news channel for those of us who are broke; a police officer who just wants pizza in a Please Donât Destroy video; one half of a gay couple who wonât explain how they got a newborn daughter overnight (or why she has the face of Lizzo); a new employee whose parents were on âJackassâ; and a spokesperson for a herpes medication.
But the standout of the episode was one in which Hamm featured only briefly: a lengthy video parody of âThe White Lotus.â
Although Hamm was solid as ever, much of the material past the midpoint of the show didnât rise to meet his talents.
Musical guest Lizzo made statements with two T-shirts: one read âTarrified,â the other âBlack women were right.â She performed a medley of âLove in Real Life / Still Badâ and âDonât Make Me Love You.â
This weekâs cold open was a callback to a Last Supper sketch from two years ago in which President Trump stopped a Biblical sketch featuring Mikey Day as Jesus to deliver a rambling monologue while the rest of the cast remained frozen. This time, Trump (James Austin Johnson) discussed the state of the economy while comparing himself to the messiah, âBecause of the mess-I-a made out of the economy.â Trump said the stock market died, rose from the dead on the third day, and on the fourth died again. âJesus Christ is a name weâve been saying a lot lately,â Trump said, ââLook at my 401k, Jesus Christ, where did it all go!?ââ As in the earlier Easter sketch, he chided frozen cast members individually, including Day, Emil Wakim, Sarah Sherman, Ego Nwodim and Kenan Thompson, the latter of whom said, âYeah, Iâm leaving,â and did so before receiving any of Trumpâs ridicule.
In his monologue, Hamm played a self-obsessed version of himself who brought up his own Wikipedia entry, which cites 14 cameos on âSNLâ since 2010. A brief clip played of those appearances, and Hamm said, âAnytime they call me to come on the show, I do it. I love watching myself.â Hamm said that cameos can liven up a sketch or prop up a flatlining monologue, and at that moment he was joined by Kieren Culkin, who recently won an Oscar for âA Real Pain.â They sparred about whether âMad Menâ is better than âSuccession,â Hamm asked Culkin to give him his Oscar and Culkin referred to paparazzi photos of Hamm in sweatpants, which was a whole thing more than a decade ago.
Best sketch of the night: Cameos aplenty on âThe White Potusâ
âSNLâsâ pre-taped take on the third season of HBOâs âThe White Lotusâ included former cast members and another dose of Trump, with Johnson as the president taking on the role of the Ratliff patriarch (spiraling thanks to a self-inflicted economic crisis) and Chloe Fineman as Melania Trump doing a thick North Carolina accent like Parker Poseyâs.Trumpâs sons, Don Jr. (Day) and Eric (Alex Moffat) make a blended shake out of a Rolex (Eric: âYou said itâs about timeâ), and â in an apparent nod to the golferâs recently announced relationship with Don Jr.âs ex-wife Vanessa â the sketch ends with Tiger Woods (Thompson) getting a sexual hand in bed. Other stars in the sketch included Scarlett Johansson,former cast members Punkee Johnson and Beck Bennett (who returned as a shirtless Vladimir Putin) and Hamm, playing a crazed Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. The sketchâs best surprise? A cameo from actual âWhite Lotusâ cast member Jon Gries, who played Greg Hunt on the show. Did the sketch have much of a point? Not really, but it did a nice job capturing the visual vocabulary and tone of the show.
Also good: In this economy, candy bars went from âSure, baby,â to âput that backâ
On the Check-to-Check Business News Channel, two hosts (Hamm and Nwodim), one of whom is wearing a suit from Kohlâs, analyze news about the worldâs financial crisis, but they really donât understand it. âSounds like gibberish to me,â Nwodim says of S&P 500 stats. Instead, they discuss the rising price of boxed Mac & Cheese, a âbig-ass box of Bisquickâ and candy bars, which are no longer viable to buy for kids. Thompson appears as a correspondent discussing ways to replace foreign imports like Perrier with American versions like âUncle Bubble,â made from Tennessee tap water. And Andrew Dismukes is a Funko Pop figure collector whoâs holding out for a big payday. Best joke of the sketch: the hosts cracking up with laughter at the thought of paying back student loans. âNever gonna get it, never gonna get it,â they sing in unison.
âWeekend Updateâ winner: Chen Biao is back with âPeasant Elegyâ
This weekâs âUpdateâ had three guest segments, including Wakim discussing whether Americans should feel some guilt about their privilege and Sherman playing Colin Jostâs wacky accountant. But it was Bowen Yangâs return as Chinese trade minister Chen Biao that won the night, chiding Americans over Trumpâs ongoing trade war. â145%, cool number, bro,â he said. âWhich side is more willing to endure hardship for the glory of their nation? The one thatâs been around thousands of years or the one thatâs sending Katy Perry to space?â Biao said Americans canât live without Chinese technology but China will be fine without American exports like Newmanâs Own salad dressing. Biao concluded by congratulating Glenn Close for winning a âChinese Oscarâ for âPleasant Elegy,â a dig at vice-president JD Vanceâs book, âHillbilly Elegyâ (and recent comments about the Chinese people).