Sorry, Donald, But 'SNL' Is Having Its Biggest Season In Two Decades

Donald Trump has called the show “unwatchable." The ratings say he's wrong.
President Donald Trump might hate Season 42 of "Saturday Night Live," but viewers love it.
President Donald Trump might hate Season 42 of "Saturday Night Live," but viewers love it.
NBC via Getty Images

In the last four months, President Donald Trump has called NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” “boring,” “unfunny,” “one-sided,” “biased,” “unwatchable,” “terrible,” “the worst of NBC” and “a complete hit job.”

But if ratings are any indication, he’s wrong. In fact, NBC told The Huffington Post that Season 42 of “SNL” is the show’s most-watched season in 22 years.

That means “SNL” is doing better right now than it ever did in the Will Ferrell and Tina Fey years, and it hasn’t done so well since Mike Myers was still a part of the cast, during the 1994-1995 season.

Overall this season, the show’s total viewership is up 22 percent compared to this time last year and up 19 percent among 18-to-49-year-olds. Last week’s show was actually the second biggest of the week among 18-to-49-year-olds.

That will no doubt irk Trump, who has been repeatedly impersonated to widespread acclaim by special guest Alec Baldwin this season. Trump, however, can’t stand the unflattering characterization, using Twitter on multiple occasions to say that Baldwin’s “portrayal stinks” and “just can’t get any worse.”

“Sad,” he added.

The impressions on “SNL” have extended beyond Trump and to his team, most famously with Kate McKinnon’s impression of Kellyanne Conway as an always-exhausted talking head weaseling her way out of her latest CNN tongue-twister.

But just last week, Baldwin performed a sketch in which Trump took orders from the so-called actual leader of the United States, a ghoul-like Steve Bannon, whom Time magazine recently called “The Great Manipulator.” Melissa McCarthy also guest-starred as White House press secretary Sean Spicer, much to Trump’s reported chagrin.

Left-leaning Americans particularly started to look to “SNL” after the election as a way to digest the previous week in politics ― it’s no coincidence that the show’s highest-rated episode of the season came immediately after the Nov. 8 election, when comedian Dave Chappelle hosted. “SNL” has obliged them by dedicating many of its cold opens, pre-taped segments and sketches to the administration.

The apparent ratings “Trump bump” isn’t specific to “SNL.” Other political shows and channels have also experienced heightened interest as a result of the near-constant news generated by the president. Stephen Colbert’s “Late Show” beat out the apolitical “Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon” in viewership numbers for the week ending Feb. 3, the first time it’s done so with original episodes since the show’s first week in 2015. CNN and Fox News have both benefited massively as a result of current events, as well.

But “SNL,” in particular, seems to really, really bother the president. Unfortunately for him, it’s the opposite of “unwatchable” right now.

In fact, people just can’t seem to get enough.

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