New York Daily News

Don: Gotta silence ‘SNL’

COURTS SHOULD EYE ‘REAL’ COLLUSION WITH DEMS

- BY BRIAN NIEMIETZ

President Trump says the justice system should stop investigat­ing his administra­tion and go after the real enemy – “Saturday Night Live.”

During a series of Sunday morning tweets attacking everyone from his former attorney Michael Cohen to Hillary Clinton, the President slipped in the suggestion that NBC’s longrunnin­g comedy skit program should be “tested in courts,” seemingly for its alleged “collusion” with Democratic party interests.

“A REAL scandal is the one sided coverage, hour by hour, of networks like NBC & Democrat spin machines like Saturday Night Live. It is all nothing less than unfair news coverage and Dem commercial­s. Should be tested in courts, can’t be legal? Only defame & belittle! Collusion?” the President tweeted.

Trump has repeatedly slammed investigat­ions into his campaign’s possible involvemen­t in electoral misconduct as “a witch hunt.” He’s insisted the process should be brought to an end.

Hours before Trump’s morning tweet storm, “Saturday Night Live” opened with a segment inspired by the movie “It’s a Wonderful Life” in which the cast wonders what the world might have be like had Trump not been elected president.

“It’s awful, everything is falling apart, sometimes I wish I’d never been President,” Trump says at the beginning of the skit. Then an angel magically transports the President to an alternate-reality holiday party, where everyone around him is happier because Clinton won the election by making one visit to Wisconsin.

In the skit, Alec Baldwin reprised his role as Trump and was joined onstage by Matt Damon, playing Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who never made it to the highest court in the land. The skit also featured Robert De Niro as special counsel Robert Mueller.

It’s unlikely that a U.S. court would hear the President’s case against “Saturday Night Live,” as parody has historical­ly been protected by the First Amendment.

A prime example of courts protecting the media’s right to parody a celebrity came in 1988 when the Supreme Court ruled in favor of pornograph­er Larry Flynt after the Rev. Jerry Falwell sued over a satirical interview in Hustler magazine that joked that Falwell’s first sexual encounter was with his own mother.

A Virginia jury ordered Flynt to pay $150,000 in damages. Flynt appealed, and won his case in the Supreme Court on an 8-to-0 vote. “Despite their sometimes caustic nature, from the early cartoon portraying George Washington as an ass down to the present day, graphic depictions and satirical cartoons have played a prominent role in public and political debate,” Chief Justice William Rehnquist observed in his majority decision. The case was featured in a 1996 movie, “The People vs. Larry Flynt,” with Woody Harrelson, Edward Norton and Courtney Love.

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 ??  ?? This past weekend’s “Saturday Night Live” with Alec Baldwin (far left) as Donald Trump and Kenan Thompson in spoof of “It’s a Wonderful Life.” Below, the “real” Trump with wife Melania and Baldwin at a 2007 party.
This past weekend’s “Saturday Night Live” with Alec Baldwin (far left) as Donald Trump and Kenan Thompson in spoof of “It’s a Wonderful Life.” Below, the “real” Trump with wife Melania and Baldwin at a 2007 party.
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