Watch The 4 Best ‘SNL’ Skits From Last Night
Chance the Rapper hosted “SNL” last night, and he proved that his skills go far beyond just rapping. He made audiences laugh all night, and he was in some of the funniest skits from Season 43, episode 6. Watch the best sketches from the Nov. 18 episode:
“Come Back, Barack” Chance the Rapper was only hosting “Saturday Night Live,” but that didn’t stop him from finding a way to perform some music. De-Von-Tré (Chance the Rapper, Kenan Thompson, Chris Redd) sang this tune that sounds like a ‘90s Boyz II Men ballad, but this isn’t about a girl. This song is about wanting Barack Obama back in the White House. After the skit, Twitter couldn’t stop talking about the musical number.
“Family Feud: Harvey Family Thanksgiving” Steve Harvey (Keenan Thompson) brings his family to the show to play against their friends, the Didricksons. Harvey reveals that they he hasn’t been back to visit Carol (Aidy Bryant) in Arizona for about 17 years, roughly the age of her son Cecil (Chance the Rapper). Steve realizes that Cecil loves bright suits and shiny shoes, and he has even had a full mustache since he was 11. Cecil is his son — and Steve’s wife (Leslie Jones) isn’t happy about that.
Thompson’s Harvey impression is funny as usual, and Jones and Bryant have the best reactions. However, Chance barely keeps his giggles in check during the scene.
“Wayne Manor Thanksgiving” Bruce Wayne (Beck Bennett) — whose secret identity is Batman — has a holiday food drive for the poor in this “SNL” skit from last night. That’s when he finds out that some people think Batman is being a bit too aggressive towards the lower income neighborhood. He broke someone’s jaw for littering and keeps hanging people up by their underwear on gargoyles that are 30 stories high. It seems the locals have actually started rooting for the Joker to take out the superhero.
“Sports Announcer” Chance plays a basktetball sportscaster who knows nothing about hockey but must cover for the hockey reporter. He can’t pronounce the names or discuss what’s happening on the ice. When they replay footage, Chance’s character points out someone in the stands: the one other black man he has seen tonight. “He doesn’t look cold at all, so I will be talking to him at the post-game show and find out what’s going on there,” Chance says.
“Saturday Night Live” airs Saturdays on NBC. The show will be on hiatus on Nov. 25 for Thanksgiving.
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