Rob Schneider: Kate McKinnon killed SNL as Hillary Clinton

Rob Schneider said during a recent interview (via media) that “Saturday Night Live” was finally killed off when Kate McKinnon sang Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” as Hillary Clinton during the cold opening of the first episode of the stand-up comedy show after the 2016 presidential election. McKinnon ridiculed Clinton throughout the 2016 election cycle, But the show took a somber and earnest approach to Clinton’s loss to Donald Trump by kicking off the post-2016 election episode with Hillary McKinnon performing “Hallelujah” on piano.

“I hate to go head-to-head with my old show,” Schneider said. “I literally prayed, ‘Please, have a joke at the end. Do not do this. Please don’t go there. And there was no joke at the end, and she went, ‘It’s over. is over. will not return. ”

Schneider also criticized “Saturday Night Live” and other late-night talk shows for “indoctrinating” viewers, adding: “You can take the comedic indoctrination that happens with every late-night host, and you can exchange it with each other. .that’s how you know it’s not fun anymore.”

McKinnon, who won two Emmys for supporting an actress in a comedy series thanks to her work on “SNL” and is in competition for third place this year, spoke to Esquire magazine Earlier this year on the cover of “Alleluia”. The comedian described the track as “the most beautiful song ever written, and one of the three best songs of my entire life.” McKinnon said performing Leonard Cohen’s song as Hillary Clinton gave her a new perspective on the songwriter’s lyrics.

“I’ve always understood the word ‘Hallelujah’ in the context of romantic relationships, as most of us have done,” McKinnon said. “And then this verse — at this moment in which it was so emotional for everyone in the country, when it was a moment of surprise and high emotion no matter which side it was on. I was in it – I suddenly understood it in a new light. It’s about love, and how hard love is but it’s worth it. I suddenly understood it as, like loving this idea that is America. That all people are created equal, and this is the most beautiful idea in the world, but the implementation has been long and difficult and we are still trying to do it right. But it’s worth it, and it will always be worth it.”

Schneider got his start on “Saturday Night Live” as a writer in 1988 before becoming a cast member in 1990. The actor remained with the sketch comedy show for four seasons.



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