A Queer History of SNL, Part Three: The “Not Ready for Prime Time” Era
Added 2023-12-01 03:49:08 +0000 UTCRE-EDIT: The ending got chopped off somehow, but the last 15 minutes are now back. Apologies for the back-and-forth with this.
EDIT: Whoops, the file I uploaded was missing the intro and the extra "secret" bit at the end. Have re-uploaded the correct version.
Welcome to the first of our in-depth looks at LGBTQ humor in specific eras of Saturday Night Live. Of course, we’re starting at the beginning, in the classic era, and yeah, some of them are better than you’d guess and some of them are so much worse. It’s a real grab bag, but there are lessons to be learned about how SNL came to be what it is today and how American humor has evolved since 1975.
Watch all the sketches featured in this episode here.
Here are the sketches, in order:
- Jamitol (S1E1: George Carlin, Oct. 11 1975)
- Long Distance (S1E4: Candice Bergen, Nov. 8 1975)
- Latent Elf (S1E8: Candice Bergen, Dec. 20 1975)
- Household Hints (S1E16: Anthony Perkins, March 13, 1976)
- The Snake-Handling O’Sheas (S2E2: Norman Lear, Sep. 25, 1976)
- Monologue (S4E11: Cicely Tyson, Feb. 10, 1979)
- The Ex-Police (S4E11: Cicely Tyson, Feb. 10, 1979)
- Miles Cowperthwaite (S4E18: Michael Palin, May 12, 1979)
- Not for Transexuals Only (S4E20: Buck Henry, May 26, 1979)
- The Continuing Correspondences of Eleanor Roosevelt (S5E3: Bill Russell, Oct. 20 1979)
Comments
Did I say he was something else?
Drew Mackie
2023-12-06 00:29:47 +0000 UTCAlan Cumming is bisexual, by the way.
Joshua Sisco
2023-12-06 00:26:49 +0000 UTCFellow Travelers is on Paramount+ via Showtime not Starz. It's really good, but kind of sad in many ways. I definitely recommend it.
Bobby Joe Christensen
2023-12-05 03:41:13 +0000 UTC