The dark history behind SNL: The US TV show that launched countless careers
Created by Lorne Michaels in 1975, SNL has also become the place for Hollywood actors and music chart-toppers to showcase their comedy chops, offer political commentary, and – in the case of Scarlett Johansson and Emma Stone – even find love.
Stone met her now husband David McCary while he was a director and writer on the show and she was hosting for the third time, while Johansson – who has served seven stints as host – fell for Weekend Update anchor Colin Jost. The Jurassic World: Rebirth star told Access Hollywood that she relishes the SNL gig because the cast has come to feel like family.
And Stone gushed: 'I have made so many memories here and so many friends, and I even met my husband here at SNL,' as she was hosting for the fifth time in 2023. Even stars who haven't found true love on set line up to do the show.
Melissa McCarthy has been on five times, Tom Hanks 10, Steve Martin has hosted 16 times (plus giving the opening monologue at the recent 50th anniversary special SNL50), while Alec Baldwin is the reigning king of emcees with 17 appearances. And little wonder. With sketches that regularly go viral (think Ariana Grande as an off-key singing bridesmaid, Baldwin's Donald Trump impersonation, and Ryan Gosling as a man with an uncanny resemblance to the cartoon character Beavis, friend of Butt-Head), appearing on SNL is a great way to be part of the zeitgeist. And yet, in addition to being a blessing for those who take part in the weekly silliness, there is also a long-rumoured curse that hangs over the sketch show.
Talk of the so-called SNL curse began with John Belushi's overdose in 1982 at the Chateau Marmont hotel in Los Angeles. He was just 33. An emotional Dan Aykroyd, who worked alongside Belushi on the first seasons of SNL before making their cult movie The Blues Brothers, still thinks about his friend every day, and believes the comic would have gone on to be a successful Broadway director had he not died.
'I learned that when friends reach out to you, you better get back to them quick, because I missed a phone call from John,' he said in an interview with Dan Rather in March.
'He left a message on my answering machine and I was in a period when I didn't really want to speak to him because he was being so uncompliant with what his wife wanted and with what we wanted. So, I let a day go by without responding – and it was too late by the time I heard the message. He was gone. So, when friends reach out to you, get back to them pretty quick. That's the lesson.'
Other members of the original line-up have also died in tragic circumstances. Andy Kaufman (who was portrayed by Jim Carrey in the biopic Man On The Moon) and Gilda Radner both died from aggressive forms of cancer. And Jim Henson, who made regular appearances with his puppets in the inaugural season, died in 1990 when a bad cold escalated into toxic shock syndrome.
Show regular Phil Hartman, who also voiced many popular Simpsons characters, was murdered by his wife in 1998, while Black Sheep comedian Chris Farley overdosed on drugs in 1997. Sandler remains close to Farley's family. During his 2022 stand-up tour, the Happy Gilmore star performed a musical tribute to his old friend for fans. Although it's not easy, Sandler enjoys talking about his late friend.
'I love hearing the crowd go nuts for Farley. Every show I do, by far the biggest applause of the night is talking about Farley,' he told the Happy Sad Confused podcast. Appearing on the SNL50, Sandler became visibly emotional while performing a tribute song about the series that launched his career, pausing to compose himself after mentioning Farley and Hartman. Not all cast members forged firm friendships during their tenure, though.
Chevy Chase and Bill Murray famously came to blows just before the show went to air in 1978, as Chase was set to return as a guest host after departing SNL to make movies. He later blamed his old co-star Belushi for the infamous backstage showdown.
'Billy Murray and I came to fisticuffs, but we never really ended up hitting each other,' Chase told Esquire in a 2010 interview. 'We tried, but Belushi got in the middle and we both ended up hitting John. And if anybody deserved to be slapped in the forehead, it was John for instigating it all.' Chase and Murrary put their differences aside to make Caddy Shack together in 1980, and were both in attendance at this year's 50th anniversary celebrations. Murray even gave props to Chase's contributions to the show during his segment with Jost.
The anniversary special brought back many of the show's most famous alumni from across the decades to perform sketches, along with a who's who of Hollywood stars. Meryl Streep and Woody Harrelson joined Kate McKinnon for a hilarious sketch about alien abduction; Kristen Wiig resurrected her Dooneese character alongside Kim Kardashian; and Rachel Dratch dusted off Debbie Downer for a stand-off with Robert DeNiro. For Eddie Murphy, who joined the series when he was 19 in 1980, the reunion was a happy reminder of having been part of an 'American Institution'.
'It was a trip,' Murphy told talk-show host Jennifer Hudson. 'Because everybody was real old.'
Check out these movies featuring SNL alums:
Daddy Day Care (2003): When Charlie (Murphy) and two pals are made redundant, they come up with the unorthodox plan to make some cash and keep their kids happy.
Lost In Translation (2003): While spruiking whisky in Tokyo, an ageing Hollywood star (Murray) strikes up an unlikely friendship with a philosophy graduate (Johansson), bonding over their shared feeling of displacement.
That's My Boy (2012): Sandler and Andy Samberg lead an all-star cast that includes James Caan and Susan Sarandon in this comedy about a deadbeat dad attempting to reunite with his estranged son.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
6 hours ago
- News.com.au
We charged $1500 to attend our wedding. Hundreds paid, but haters called it a scam
When it came to 'for richer or poorer', Marley Jaxx and Steve Larsen definitely chose the former. Ahead of saying 'I do' on August 1, the digital entrepreneurs, based in the American state Idaho, sold $US1,000 ($A1,500) tickets to their $US50,000 ($A76,600) wedding weekend extravaganza, making room for a whopping 270 guests. Most of them were strangers from the internet. But turning their holy matrimony into a money-making display wasn't just about pocketing a tidy profit, the happy honeys insisted, as The New York Post reports. Instead, it was an effort to 'disrupt' the multi-billion dollar wedding industry and, in their view, make the world a better place. 'We broke even and raised $US132,000 ($A202,300) for charity,' Jaxx, 34, told The New York Post, explaining that she'd first casually pitched the idea of selling tickets to her wedding as a joke to her 21,000 Instagram followers. Now, she's laughing. 'Weddings are so expensive, and selling tickets to one is disruptive,' continued Jaxx, who, alongside her new hubby, donated the excess funds from their wedding to Village Impact, an organisation dedicated to building schools in Africa. 'We wanted to [sell tickets] from a place of heart and purpose,' added the millennial. 'Not scammy.' While planning their unusual fete in their hometown of Boise, she and Larsen, 37, were shocked by the 'crazy' costs, such as a $US650 ($A995) 'cake-cutting' fee, at local wedding venues. So, rather than blow the budget, the social media-savvy sweethearts invited their combined 192,000 Instagram and YouTube followers to pay for an in-person seat at their not-so-exclusive soirée. Roughly 30 high rollers purchased $US997 ($A1,527) 'VIP' vouchers, which Jaxx and Larsen ultimately rounded up to $US1,000 ($A1,500), for their marriage celebration marathon. Besides the usual rehearsal dinner, wedding and reception, the price permitted deep-pocketed participants to partake in a range of unusual offerings — from romance counselling sessions led by experts to a Saturday morning 'Biohacking Brunch'. There, party-exhausted attendees enjoyed red-light therapy care, breath work tutorials and a $US20,000 ($A30,645) bio-charger energy rehabilitation. 'Our social media audiences actually came up with the price point,' said Larsen with a laugh. 'We asked them what they'd expect to pay for [these special experiences] and they said, 'A grand!'' The pair's family and friends were granted full, VIP-level access to their three-day fete. More budget-minded fans from cyberspace were given the option of paying a smaller fee for admission to the Friday afternoon ceremony and reception, or $US97 ($A148) to attend both the Thursday night rehearsal dinner and the wedding. Approximately 100 guests opted for those options. But not everyone saw the value in the duo's funky fundraiser. Virtual vultures pecked mercilessly at Jaxx and Larsen for the uncommon move — accusing the twosome of making a 'mockery' of marriage, and labelling them 'nuts'. However, charging a cover at the wedding chapel doors is trending as a unique way to save a few bucks on the big day. Nova and Reemo Styles, of the Bronx in New York, hawked tickets to their swank union at St Patrick's Cathedral. The newlyweds previously told New York Post that charging $US333 ($A510) per person kept their costs low and bank accounts stacked high. Meanwhile, Jaxx and Larsen said they were thrilled to have also recovered the expenses they laid out for their splashy to-do — topped off with live performances by dancing trombonist Jonathan Arons, music from Team Ragoza and DJ Dynamix, and sweets from Stella's Ice Cream, confectioner Michelle Sohan and Mama's Secrets cookies. But the darlings are even more excited for a July 2026 trip to Kenya, where they'll erect classrooms for kids in need, using the excess money raised from their wedding. 'It costs $US15,000 ($A22,980) to build a classroom with Village Impact,' said Jaxx. 'We went with them to Africa two years ago and it was the most beautiful, life-changing experience.' 'As we shared that at our wedding reception, several people donated the full $US15,000 ($A22,980),' she said. 'I had people approach me saying, 'I have no idea who you are, but I'm at your wedding and it's awesome.' 'They came to the wedding as strangers, left as friends and now we're all going on this life-changing trip to Africa next year.' The helpful funds notwithstanding, Larsen says selling tickets to their special occasion also helped him and Jaxx weed out their true supporters from the phony clout-chasers on their guest list. 'When someone chooses to purchase a ticket to a wedding, they are saying 'Yes,' but it's not out of obligation,' he noted. 'Everyone who was there wanted to be there.'

News.com.au
11 hours ago
- News.com.au
Senior Trump officials struggling to figure out how to deal with South Park mocking them
Top officials in the Trump administration can't quite figure out how to deal with the mockery they're copping from the notoriously ruthless comedy show South Park. President Donald Trump, Vice President J.D. Vance and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem have all been parodied, to quite brutal effect, across the two episodes that have aired so far in the long-running show's newest season. The wisest response might have been to ignore the show entirely, depriving it of oxygen. Instead the White House, Mr Vance and Ms Noem have flitted between at least three distinct and conflicting reactions, seemingly unable to settle on one. In episode one, Mr Trump was portrayed as an echo of the show's Saddam Hussein character, with a high-pitched voice, thin skin, tiny genitalia, and a tendency to threaten lawsuits against anyone who noticed said smallness. He was also in a romantic relationship with Satan, who in South Park's universe is actually quite a nice guy with an unfortunate tendency to fall for toxic boyfriends. The episode ended with an AI generated video of a naked Mr Trump walking through a desert, and yet another joke about his equipment. For whatever reason, Mr Trump's staff chose to engage with it. A spokeswoman for the White House, Taylor Rogers, argued the show had become irrelevant. 'Just like the creators of South Park, the left has no authentic or original content, which is why their popularity continues to hit record lows,' said Ms Rogers. 'This show hasn't been relevant for over 20 years and is hanging on by a thread, with uninspired ideas, in a desperate attempt for attention. 'President Trump has delivered on more promises in just six months than any other president in our country's history, and no fourth-rate show can derail President Trump's hot streak.' A few things made that stance less-than-viable. One: if South Park is so irrelevant, why is the media team for the President of the United States, the most powerful man on the planet, bothering to issue statements about it? There's a glaring contradiction at the heart of the message. Two: the show's creators, Trey Parker and Matt Stone, had just signed a new deal with Paramount, worth well over a billion dollars, to deliver 50 episodes. Hardly sounds like they're 'hanging by a thread'. Three: the show's ratings are strong. Roughly 430,000 Americans viewed the first episode when it aired on the Comedy Central network, and the figures rose to almost six million once viewers who streamed it on Paramount+ were added. We don't have the streaming figures for episode two yet, which aired after the White House's statement, but the initial cohort who watched it live almost doubled to 840,000. So yes. The 'South Park hasn't been relevant for 20 years' thing was never going to fly. Mr Parker and Mr Stone were asked about the White House's response during a Comic-Con panel, held between the two episodes. 'We're terribly sorry,' Mr Parker deadpanned. Anyone who failed to pick up on his sarcasm would have been corrected by the second episode, which shifted its focus to two targets: Mr Trump's crackdown on immigrants, and the influence of right-wing media grifters. Ms Noem, who as the Secretary for Homeland Security oversees America's immigration enforcement agency ICE, featured heavily. She led a couple of ICE raids, one on a Dora the Explorer concert and then another on Heaven, where she instructed agents to only arrest 'brown' angels. In a rather cruel extended dig at her cosmetic overhaul during the MAGA years – you can read a bit about it here, if you care about such things – Mr Parker and Mr Stone showed Ms Noem's face repeatedly drooping and falling off. And the character also kept shooting dogs, about half a dozen throughout the episode, perceiving them as mortal threats. That was a reference to the time the real Ms Noem shot her family's dog in a gravel pit after she grew tired of its behaviour. Yes, true story. It became a problem for her last year, when she was a contender to become Mr Trump's vice presidential nominee. The man who actually went on to become Vice President, Mr Vance, had a brief cameo towards the end of the episode, which took place at Mar-a-Lago. Mr Trump and a miniature Mr Vance were portrayed as parodies of characters from the TV series Fantasy Island. Little J.D. got kicked around a bit by Mr Trump, but the most insulting joke poking at his subservience to the President saw him offer to, ahem, prepare Satan for sex. I shan't get any more descriptive. Mr Vance and right-wing podcaster Charlie Kirk, who was mocked for considering himself a 'master debater' in the episode's B-plot (I'll leave you to interpret the pun), adopted the same approach in their response to the episode. 'Well, I've finally made it,' Mr Vance posted on social media, sharing the image of him above, and leaving it at that. Mr Kirk posted a clip of the character Eric Cartman parodying him. 'Not bad, Cartman,' he wrote, adding a couple of laughing emojis. He also changed his profile picture to a shot of Cartman dressed up like him. Not bad, Cartman 😂😂 — Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) August 7, 2025 About as harmless a reaction as you can offer, there, from Mr Vance and Mr Kirk. Ms Noem, however, was not quite so deft. She initially responded by slamming South Park for going after her looks. 'It's lazy to constantly make fun of women for how they look,' she told podcaster Glenn Beck, adding that only 'extremists' and 'liberals' (that means 'progressives' in the United States) 'do that'. Apparently Ms Noem has missed the many, many times Mr Trump has mocked women for their appearance. Many times. 'If they wanted to criticise my job, go ahead and do that, but clearly they can't. They just pick something petty like that,' Ms Noem said. You must acknowledge there is a kernel of a fair point in there, though South Park tends to mock the appearance of everyone, not just women, so it would probably be better to accuse it of being overly rude, rather than sexist. And as for the other part of the quote, the episode's plot involved a heap of implicit criticism of the way Ms Noem is doing her job. But Ms Noem claimed not to have watched it. Anyway, that response apparently didn't land quite as well as the Secretary had hoped, because a day later she reversed course and tried to copy Mr Vance and Mr Kirk. Ms Noem posted a screenshot of her South Park avatar with glowing red eyes – the same thing Joe Biden's staff used to do when they were trying to make 'Dark Brandon' happen – and changed her profile picture to it. — Secretary Kristi Noem (@Sec_Noem) August 8, 2025 The Department of Homeland Security reposted it, declaring in all-caps: 'THE DEPORTATIONS WILL CONTINUE.' Both posts included a link to ICE's online recruitment page. The incoherence of Ms Noem's response – first getting agnry, before doing a 180 and trying to own the joke – summed up the Trump officials' struggles rather nicely. They are genuinely unsure how to handle the situation. They could have just ignored it! But now it's too late for that. And you get the sense South Park is far from done mocking them.


The Advertiser
14 hours ago
- The Advertiser
'I'm not motivated by awards,' Eddie Murphy says
Eddie Murphy isn't motivated by accolades - but he'd still love to win an Oscar. The 64-year-old actor has enjoyed huge success in Hollywood, starring in hit film franchises like Beverly Hills Cop and Shrek, but insists he's not motivated by awards. The comedian-turned-actor told Sky News: "The movies are timeless, and they're special, so for years and years those movies play and the movies have commercial success. "So you make a lot of money and people love it, so you don't even think about 'I didn't win a trophy!' The response from the people and that the movie has legs, that's the trophy. "You know what I've earned over these years? One day, they'll give me one of those honorary Oscars. When I'm really old. And I'll say thank you so much for this wonderful honour. I'll be old like that and I'll have no teeth. I'm cool with getting my honorary Oscar when I'm 90." Murphy stars alongside Pete Davidson in The Pickup, the new action-comedy movie, and the actor recently claimed that he has "a lot in common" with Davidson. Murphy also revealed that he relished the experience of working with Davidson, a former Saturday Night Live star. Speaking to Extra, Murphy explained: "I was looking forward to working with him. "I was a fan already from SNL, and we have a lot in common now. We both started doing stand-up when we were really young, and we both started Saturday Night Live when we were really young, and we both lost our dads when we were really young. So, we had a lot in common, and he's a new-generation SNL. So, it was exciting. "I love working with SNL alumni. I feel like a kinship to all of them." Davidson is expecting his first child with Elsie Hewitt but Murphy hadn't offered him any parenting advice. The comedy star said: "I didn't give him any parenting advice. "You know, being a parent is kind of, you know, every kid is different ... You kinda just have to go in there and figure it out on your own. The good thing is that nature has wired us to do the right thing. I think it takes more effort to be a bad parent. "If you love your child, you gotta go out of your way to be a bad parent. And doing the right thing just comes natural. So, I didn't give him any advice." Eddie Murphy isn't motivated by accolades - but he'd still love to win an Oscar. The 64-year-old actor has enjoyed huge success in Hollywood, starring in hit film franchises like Beverly Hills Cop and Shrek, but insists he's not motivated by awards. The comedian-turned-actor told Sky News: "The movies are timeless, and they're special, so for years and years those movies play and the movies have commercial success. "So you make a lot of money and people love it, so you don't even think about 'I didn't win a trophy!' The response from the people and that the movie has legs, that's the trophy. "You know what I've earned over these years? One day, they'll give me one of those honorary Oscars. When I'm really old. And I'll say thank you so much for this wonderful honour. I'll be old like that and I'll have no teeth. I'm cool with getting my honorary Oscar when I'm 90." Murphy stars alongside Pete Davidson in The Pickup, the new action-comedy movie, and the actor recently claimed that he has "a lot in common" with Davidson. Murphy also revealed that he relished the experience of working with Davidson, a former Saturday Night Live star. Speaking to Extra, Murphy explained: "I was looking forward to working with him. "I was a fan already from SNL, and we have a lot in common now. We both started doing stand-up when we were really young, and we both started Saturday Night Live when we were really young, and we both lost our dads when we were really young. So, we had a lot in common, and he's a new-generation SNL. So, it was exciting. "I love working with SNL alumni. I feel like a kinship to all of them." Davidson is expecting his first child with Elsie Hewitt but Murphy hadn't offered him any parenting advice. The comedy star said: "I didn't give him any parenting advice. "You know, being a parent is kind of, you know, every kid is different ... You kinda just have to go in there and figure it out on your own. The good thing is that nature has wired us to do the right thing. I think it takes more effort to be a bad parent. "If you love your child, you gotta go out of your way to be a bad parent. And doing the right thing just comes natural. So, I didn't give him any advice." Eddie Murphy isn't motivated by accolades - but he'd still love to win an Oscar. The 64-year-old actor has enjoyed huge success in Hollywood, starring in hit film franchises like Beverly Hills Cop and Shrek, but insists he's not motivated by awards. The comedian-turned-actor told Sky News: "The movies are timeless, and they're special, so for years and years those movies play and the movies have commercial success. "So you make a lot of money and people love it, so you don't even think about 'I didn't win a trophy!' The response from the people and that the movie has legs, that's the trophy. "You know what I've earned over these years? One day, they'll give me one of those honorary Oscars. When I'm really old. And I'll say thank you so much for this wonderful honour. I'll be old like that and I'll have no teeth. I'm cool with getting my honorary Oscar when I'm 90." Murphy stars alongside Pete Davidson in The Pickup, the new action-comedy movie, and the actor recently claimed that he has "a lot in common" with Davidson. Murphy also revealed that he relished the experience of working with Davidson, a former Saturday Night Live star. Speaking to Extra, Murphy explained: "I was looking forward to working with him. "I was a fan already from SNL, and we have a lot in common now. We both started doing stand-up when we were really young, and we both started Saturday Night Live when we were really young, and we both lost our dads when we were really young. So, we had a lot in common, and he's a new-generation SNL. So, it was exciting. "I love working with SNL alumni. I feel like a kinship to all of them." Davidson is expecting his first child with Elsie Hewitt but Murphy hadn't offered him any parenting advice. The comedy star said: "I didn't give him any parenting advice. "You know, being a parent is kind of, you know, every kid is different ... You kinda just have to go in there and figure it out on your own. The good thing is that nature has wired us to do the right thing. I think it takes more effort to be a bad parent. "If you love your child, you gotta go out of your way to be a bad parent. And doing the right thing just comes natural. So, I didn't give him any advice."