Saturday Night Live
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Sometime around 11 a.m. How to process this kind of information in an afternoon?

Thats where Dave Chappelle comes in.
This time around, hes happy to celebrate Bidens win but prepared to balance things out once again.
As per tradition, this weeks sketches are ranked here from best to worst.
Top to bottom, the players are all having a blast.
Everyone else follows suit, and things go off the rails a bit.
Its a slow, melancholy dirge, delivered like a karaoke in an empty bar at closing time.
Its also the comedic high point of the sketch.
By comparison, Carreys lo-hoo-hoo-ser taunt (resurrected from theAce Venturamovies) just feels like pandering.
This is the sort of uncluttered two-person piece for whichSNLdoesnt usually make much time.
The script is grounded, smart, and the clear premise is steadily elevated throughout.
With McKinnon and Thompson as the focal point, its hard to go wrong.
This sketch attempts to answer the question, by imagining Trump fleeing Washington in a white Ford Bronco.
Yes, itsthatwhite Ford Bronco, and the sketch uses the famous footage of O.J.
Simpson and Al Cowlings fleeing down the Southern California freeway.
Its possible he had a hand in the inception of the Uncle Ben and D.C.
Morning sketches, but it seems almost all of his energy went into shaping his stand-up.
Politics rule the night, of course.
This is the end of a six-show run forSNL.