USA TODAY US Edition

We sketch out the best from ‘SNL’ this season

- Kelly Lawler USA TODAY

What makes a classic “SNL” sketch? ⬤ Well, first you need the right subject material paired with the right jokes, performed by the best cast and helped by an adept host, and then it all needs to happen at the right cultural moment. ⬤ So suffice it to say, it’s not easy to bring a whole show “live from New York” every Saturday night. We took a look at the sketches from this Season 48 of “SNL” (Saturdays, 11:30 EST/8:30 PST) and picked the very best of them. From Mario Kart to Charles Dickens to COVID-19, the writers, cast and hosts are sometimes able to make comedy gold. (”SNL” returns this week, with Woody Harrelson as host.)

10. ‘A Christmas Carol’

Some of the best “SNL” sketches simply take a delightful­ly unhinged concept and run with it until it can’t get any more chaotic. That’s exactly what happens in this riff on Charles Dickens’ classic “A Christmas Carol,” from Steve Martin and Martin Short’s jointly hosted episode Dec. 10, with plenty of screaming from Mikey Day to add to the hysteria.

9. ‘Chelsea’

Videos from comedy trio Please Don’t Destroy have become a fixture on “SNL” over the past couple of seasons, with its speedy, absurdist humor. “Chelsea,” from the Dec. 10 episode, leans in on the trio’s strengths as an escalating series of dire social mistakes ends with a cute cameo by cast member Sarah Sherman’s father.

8. ‘A Christmas Epiphany’

Another riff on holiday-themed pop culture, this “It’s A Wonderful Life”-style sketch from the Dec. 17 episode stars host Austin Butler as a drunk who realizes he should have prioritize­d love and family when he passes by a happy Christmas Eve dinner. But that family thinks he’s a psycho killer who’s stalking them. The

sketch works well because of Butler’s excellent Jimmy Stewart affect and the commitment of the cast, including Heidi Gardner, Andrew Dismukes, Sherman and Marcello Hernandez, playing the family.

7. ‘Send Something Normal’

The sketch that got the most attention from the Oct. 1 season premiere of “SNL” was the self-referentia­l cold open, but this game show parodyreal­ly stole the Miles Teller-hosted episode. Sure, “Send Something Normal,” which made fun of male celebritie­s involved in direct-messaging scandals, was a one-joke pony, but it was an extremely funny and relevant one, with a great Neil deGrasse Tyson impression from Kenan Thompson.

6. ‘COVID Commercial’

Few TV shows have incorporat­ed what the state of the pandemic is really like into their scripts, but “SNL” nailed one aspect of our societal relationsh­ip with COVID-19 in this commercial parody from Amy Schumer’s Nov. 5 episode.

5. ‘AA Meeting’

Anytime the host is outside the world of comedy and acting, “SNL” runs the risk of a slow and shaky episode. But rapper Jack Harlow made a solid game effort in his Oct. 29 episode. His best performanc­e was this silly but fun sketch about an AA member more concerned with his idea for a Pixar movie than his recovery. Cecily Strong comes in with a song at the end to really tie it all together. *

4. ‘Hello Kitty’

First-time host Keke Palmer proved an adept sketch comedian in her Dec. 3 episode, and she had a blast in this sketch with Bowen Yang: They played the only two employees at a Hello Kitty store who are (righteousl­y) disturbed by the character’s backstory. The hilarious sketch doesn’t even need the Natasha Lyonne cameo at the end.

3. ‘HBO Mario Kart Trailer’

“The Last of Us” star Pedro Pascal is the best host “SNL” has booked this season, a secret comedy king who has been working in serious genre TV for years. Playing on his strengths and the success of “Us,” an adaptation of a popular dystopian video game, “SNL” suggested in the Feb. 4 episode that HBO adapt another game, “Mario Kart.” Full of specific and very funny references to prestige TV and the Nintendo racing games, you can tell the writers and performers had the time and money to make it soar. Or drive, if you will.

2. ‘Male Confidence Seminar’

Right behind Pascal in the list of the best hostsis Michael B. Jordan. The “Creed III” actor/director made the most of his natural charisma during his Jan. 28 episode but was more than just eye candy in this sketch about a male confidence seminar run by Dismukes that goes off the rails when Jordan comes to deliver a water-cooler jug.

1. ‘Waking Up’

“SNL” should really consider offering Pascal a full-time gig. In this understate­d Feb. 4 sketch, the actor makes every joke work on the strength of his commitment to a ridiculous voice and silly dialogue as a coma patient who wakes up sounding like a Valley Girl from Los Angeles. It’s simple, it’s well-written and superbly performed by Pascal, Gardner, Sherman and Thompson, and that’s all “SNL” has to be.

 ?? PROVIDED BY KYLE DUBIEL/NBC ?? Pedro Pascal is Mario in one of the best “SNL” sketches this season.
PROVIDED BY KYLE DUBIEL/NBC Pedro Pascal is Mario in one of the best “SNL” sketches this season.
 ?? PROVIDED BY WILL HEATH/NBC ?? From left, Marcello Hernández, Sarah Sherman, host Keke Palmer, Bowen Yang and Molly Kearney star in the “Hello Kitty” sketch on Dec. 3, 2022.
PROVIDED BY WILL HEATH/NBC From left, Marcello Hernández, Sarah Sherman, host Keke Palmer, Bowen Yang and Molly Kearney star in the “Hello Kitty” sketch on Dec. 3, 2022.
 ?? PROVIDED BY NBC ?? From left, Heidi Gardner, Pedro Pascal, Sarah Sherman and Kenan Thompson during the “Waking Up” sketch on Feb. 4.
PROVIDED BY NBC From left, Heidi Gardner, Pedro Pascal, Sarah Sherman and Kenan Thompson during the “Waking Up” sketch on Feb. 4.
 ?? PROVIDED BY WILL HEATH/NBC ?? Heidi Gardner is featured in the “COVID Commercial” sketch Nov. 5, 2022.
PROVIDED BY WILL HEATH/NBC Heidi Gardner is featured in the “COVID Commercial” sketch Nov. 5, 2022.
 ?? PROVIDED BY NBC ?? Andrew Dismukes and host Michael B. Jordan star in the “Confidence Seminar” sketch.
PROVIDED BY NBC Andrew Dismukes and host Michael B. Jordan star in the “Confidence Seminar” sketch.

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