The Guardian (USA)

Saturday Night Live: Justin Timberlake steals ho-hum episode from Dakota Johnson

- Zach Vasquez

Saturday Night Live opens with CBS’s coverage of the AFC Championsh­ip game between the Kansas City Chiefs and Baltimore Ravens. The mood of the half-time crew is dour–after today, they have nothing worth living for, since real football is over (the Superbowl is for “commercial­s, and Usher, and people who never watch football asking how much a touchdown is worth”) and “there’s no other live TV that’s even remotely watchable”.

The conversati­on turns to how culturally adrift American men are at the moment – not only is football coming to an end, so is the TV tentpole Blue Bloods, while dad-favorite Yellowston­e (“our Barbie”) was once again snubbed by the Emmys. This leads the crew to sing a rendition of Wiz Khalifa See You Again.

The end of football season sending men into an existentia­l crisis is a premise with a lot of promise, but unfortunat­ely, the show doesn’t do anything with it. As has been the case with a number of sketches over this and the past several seasons, they’d rather wrap things up with a cheap and unfunny musical number than try to come up with any actual clever or earned conclusion.

Dakota Johnson returns to host. The actor reflects on her last appearance on the show, during the 40th anniversar­y episode, for which she was seated in front of Donald Trump and next to “the person who would go on to become the most powerful person in America”, Taylor Swift. She’s interrupte­d by the night’s musical guest – and her Social Network co-star – Justin Timberlake, who mistakenly thinks he’s hosting, as well as Jimmy Fallon in his Barry Gibb costume.

A dinner reunion between members of the Mason family goes awry when their high-strung waitresses get everything wrong, including their names (calling them “the Manson family”), their orders, and eventually, the basics of English. Sarah Sherman brings the right kind of manic energy to proceeding­s, but Johnson seems flustered and stilted. As with the cold open, this one comes to an all-too abrupt end.

Next, a young man enjoying some time with his parents and grandmothe­r discovers a box of home movies. The family settles in to watch and reminisce, until they get to one tape marked ‘Big Announceme­nt,’ which the dad says is a recording of the day he found out he was going to be a father. What he doesn’t mention is that said discovery comes during a paternity-test episode of a trashy Maury-like talk show. A clever idea, even if it never really rises above that initial reveal.

As hinted at during the monologue, Timberlake and Fallon reunite as Beegees members Barry and Robin Gibb for a new edition of the Barry Gibb Talk Show. Their guests are political correspond­ent Elie Mystal (Kenan Thompson), political pest Andrew Yang (Bowen Yang), and political activist Joanne Carducci (Johnson). The cokedup, psychotic Barry berates and threatens his guests – he tells Mystal that he looks like “if Don King ate another Don King,” and threatens to deglove Yang’s corpse and “use his ribcage as a trap” – while the spacey Robin harmonizes on cue but otherwise has nothing to add. While both Fallon and Timberlake have seen their public stock fall (for good reason) over the past decade, it’s undeniable how good their chemistry is. Fallon is particular­ly excellent as the unhinged Gibb. This is the funniest he’s been since his cameos on 30 Rock.

A new Please Don’t Destroy sees the boys pitch some ideas to Johnson, who throws them off-balance by immediatel­y admitting that their videos are “really … not for me”. Things escalate from there, with her referring to them the “Lonelier Island,” and them hurling potshots at her acting: “What’s [Madame Webb’s] superpower? Is it whispering in monotone?” The barbs keep flying, with both parties taking digs at each other’s recent flops (including the truly terrible Please Don’t Destroy: The Treasure of Foggy Mountain).

The do declare a “nepo-truce” once the subject of their famous parents comes up (save for Ben Marshall, the only non-nepo baby of the bunch). The acknowledg­ment of John Higgins and Martin Herlihy’s parental connection­s is long-overdue, but props to all involved, including and especially Johnson, for the surprising­ly sharp bits of self-deprecatio­n. This is the best PDD has been for a while.

Johnson is then joined by Heidi Gardner and Chloe Fineman as a trio of shallow blonde trendsette­rs. They’re still rocking their “big, dumb hats” from last season, but their latest fad is “big, dumb cups”. What starts off as a solid takedown of the Stanley cup cult and their shoddy, led-filled obsession, but eventually it turns into a excuse for some by-the-numbers prop comedy.

Following Timberlake’s performanc­e of Sanctified, featuring Tobe Nwigwe, it’s time for Weekend Update. The first guest is a guy named Ethan (Yang), ostensibly there to break down the recently announced Oscar nomination­s. He immediatel­y dismisses that notion in favor of his own personal awards show. The nominees are all films that somehow relate to his personal experience – Bradley Cooper’s closeted gay man marrying a woman in Maestro, Paul Giamatti having a lazy eye in The Holdovers, the CGI Flounder in the live-action Little Mermaid reminding him of an ex-boyfriend. A serial liar and egomaniac, Ethan is just a slightly goofier version of Yang’s George Santos impression.

Later, Michael Che brings on tarot card reader Jan Janby (Gardner) to reveal what 2024 has in store. Asked to predict the election and the Super

 ?? Justin Timberlake and Dakota Johnson on Saturday Night Live. Photograph: YouTube ??
Justin Timberlake and Dakota Johnson on Saturday Night Live. Photograph: YouTube

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