SNL: Joe Biden Goes Rogue
By Heather Sunday Nov 15, 2009 1:00pm
SNL portrays Joe Biden "going rogue" on President Obama while he's away on his trip to Asia this week.
SNL portrays Joe Biden "going rogue" on President Obama while he's away on his trip to Asia this week.
SNL spoofs Fox News for their coverage of the Virginia and New Jersey governors’ races and the NY-23 Congressional race. Jason Sudeikis' Glenn Beck impersonation is eerily close to the mark.
From Saturday Night Live Oct. 3, 2009.
"Operation Scare Grandma" from SNL, via Rumproast.
Open Thread below....
Since I'm a very serious person, the above headline should seriously tell you a lot about how the traditional media goes about their business. They must see it also so what they are doing is refusing to get honest with the public.
Really, you can't make this stuff up. Only in Greater Wingnuttia, such as Bill O'Reilly's show last night, talking about that web-only SNL skit lampooning Ann Coulter. Amanda Carpenter has her pearls twisted into a knot:
Bill O'Reilly: We have to be fair to Saturday Night Live. They lampoon Barack Obama and other people on the left. They do. But this crossed the line for you, Amanda, when it got into specifically what?
Amanda Carpenter: Yeah, specifically, when they make her out to be this alien, unhuman-like figure. There are jokes about her being only a husk of a person, and you know, how she's going to become a man-serpent. They do it to conservative women. It is a theme. They make them seem like they're not human. And of course, in Ann Coulter's case, they take it to a whole nother level.
Um, Amanda? SNL didn't create Coulter's image as an alien, unhuman-like figure. Her own words did that.
SNL spoofs Dick Cheney's complete and utter lack of regret for anything that's happened for the last eight years and his willingness to basically stick his middle finger in the eye of the American public during the Bush administration's revisionist history legacy tour.
SNL spoofs Joe Biden and John Murtha for doing what Democrats do best: snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.
Next on Road to the White House, earlier today, Democratic Vice Presidential Candidate Joe Biden and Congressman John Murtha spoke in a rally in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, where they tried to blwo the election for Barack Obama.
Hammond's Murtha is way too much like Tweety, but pretty funny nonetheless. It does like Murtha is having a tough time of it in his race.

Saturday Night Live offers yet another instant classic with their take on last week's Vice Presidential Debate:
IFILL: Now, tonight’s discussion will cover a wide range of topics, including domestic and foreign policy matters. Each candidate will have 90 seconds to respond to a direct question and then an additional two minutes to for rebuttal and follow up. As moderator, I will not ask any follow up questions beyond, “Do you agree?” or “Your response?” So as to not appear biased for Barack Obama in light of my new book, The Breakthrough: Politics of Race in the Age of Obama, coming out on Inauguration Day and available for pre-order on Amazon.com. And finally, we would like to remind our audience that , due to the historically low expectations for Gov. Palin, were she simply to do an adequate job tonight, and at no point cry, faint, run out of the building or vomit, you should consider the debate a tie. All right, let’s begin. Sen. Biden, how as Vice President would you work to shrink the gap of polarization that has sprung up in Washington?
BIDEN: Well, I would do what I’ve done my whole career , whether it’s been dealing with violence against women or putting 100,000 police officers on the streets. I would reach across the aisle. Like I’ve done with so many members of the other party. Members like John McCain. Because look, I love John McCain. He is one of my dearest friends. But at the same time, he is also dangerously unbalanced. I mean, let’s be frank. John McCain – and again, this is a man I would take a bullet for – is bad at his job and mentally unstable. As my mother would say, God love him, but he’s a raging maniac. And a dear, dear friend.
IFILL: Gov. Palin, how would your administration deal with the current financial crisis?
PALIN: Well, first of all , let me say how nice it is to meet Joe Biden. And may I say, up close, your hair plugs don’t look nearly as bad as everyone says. You know, John McCain and I, we’re a couple of mavericks, and gosh darn it, we’re gonna take that maverick energy right to Washington and we’re gonna use it to fix this financial crisis and everything else that’s plaguin’ this great country of ours.
IFILL: How would you solve the financial crisis by being a maverick?
PALIN: You know, we’re gonna take every aspect of the crisis and look at it and then we’re gonna ask ourselves, “what would a maverick do in this situation?” and then, you know, we’ll do that.
It's becoming increasingly difficult to tell the difference between Sarah Palin and Tina Fey. Not even joking. Her parody is that spot on. See original Palin interview video here.
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Download | play (h/t Heather)
"PALIN": "Like every American I'm speaking with, we are ill about this. We're saying, 'Hey, why bail out Fanny and Freddie and not me?' But ultimately, what the bailout does is, help those that are concerned about the health care reform that is needed to help shore up our economy to help, uhhh, it's gotta be all about job creation too. Also, too, shoring up our economy and putting Fannie and Freddie back on the right track, and so health care reform and reducing taxes and reigning in spending...'cause Barack Obama, ya know, has got to accompany tax reductions and tax relief for Americans, also, having a dollar value meal at restaurants. That's gonna help. But 1 in 5 jobs being created today under the umbrella of job creation. That, you know. Also....."
The blog Orange Crate Art compares Palin, Orwell and the English language. Truly scary.
As George Orwell points out in "Politics and the English Language," one need not take on the responsibility of thinking when composing sentences:
You can shirk it by simply throwing your mind open and letting the ready-made phrases come crowding in. They will construct your sentences for you — even think your thoughts for you, to a certain extent — and at need they will perform the important service of partially concealing your meaning even from yourself. It is at this point that the special connexion between politics and the debasement of language becomes clear.
Saturday Night Live was back at it last night, this time nailing McCain for sacrificing his principles and reneging on his promise to run an honorable campaign.
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Announcer: Barack Obama plays basketball. Charles Barkley plays basketball. Is Charles Barkley qualified to lead our economy? He gambled millions away in Las Vegas. Don't let Barack Obama gamble with our economy. No Way. No How. No Charack Obarkley."
McCain: Excuse me, are those facts accurate?
Campaign Aide: Yes, the Senator does play basketball. Charles Barkley also plays. Charles Barkley lost money in Vegas.
McCain: Can't argue facts. I'm John McCain and I approve this message.
Looks like Al Franken has a hand in writing the bit:
Al Franken, the former "Saturday Night Live" star now running in a high-profile Senate race in Minnesota, helped craft the opening sketch mocking John McCain that is slated to kick off the NBC comedy show tonight, according to two well-placed sources inside the network.
Franken, who hasn't been a staff writer on the show for 13 years, "phoned in" a spoof of McCain recording campaign ads in an edit booth, said an NBC source. Seth Meyers, the show's current head writer, wrote it, but the sketch was hatched by Franken, a longtime liberal satirist and comedian.
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Kathleen Parker has written a book on poor, put upon men (they suffer so much in this country), and for reasons obvious to only Chris Matthews' psyche, it put him in mind of this 2002 Saturday Night Live skit where John McCain plays a sensitive, giving husband.
You know, he can’t read a teleprompter and he can do that? That is good stuff.
(h/t of BillW)
Saturday Night's Darrell Hammond offers up his newest impression: Hollywood Fred Dalton Thompson, who is unafraid to invoke his Law & Order gravitas to ask for your vote.
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Some people say it's because I'm lazy. Others say my heart's not in it. But I assure you the role I most want to play is the role of this nation's president. How badly do I want to be your president? On a scale of one to ten, I'm about a six.
Matt Taibbi followed Fred around Iowa and reported back on the the absurdity of the campaign trail.