SNL 40th

Grade seven was a bit of a shock.

On our first day at our new school my friends and I wore crisply pressed overalls and carried Charlie’s Angels or Star Wars lunch boxes, each one containing a meal which a mother had lovingly and thoughtfully prepared. We knew nothing of pessimism, and the kids waiting for us there looked at us like we were a different species, as if emissaries from a past they had never known.

vintage-star-wars-a-new-hope-thermos-lunch-box

Exponentially cooler than we were, these kids all seemed so much more grown up. I was in awe of how independent and worldly they acted, as if totally free from childhood. They hadn’t just hit puberty they’d shot past it. They knew all about sex and drugs and rock n’ roll, and when they fought, blood was drawn. In short, they radiated everything that I, still prepubescent and utterly innocent, was not, but very much wanted to be.

At this time, as teenaged life was accelerating mysteriously toward me, I watched my first episode of Saturday Night Live.  I was probably eleven years old, maybe twelve, and all I knew about the show– mostly gleaned from my sister who was four years older than me– was that it was on late, and was racy and dangerous in the kind of way that adults, or at least parents, didn’t quite approve of.

The first sketch I watched was called Night on Freak Mountain, which was awful in all the ways that are typical of Saturday Night Live. It didn’t matter, though. It was about drugs, and it was late at night, both of which to me seemed inexhaustibly cool. (Later, it was Mr. Bill who ignited my grade seven imagination, probably because I still related to toys.)

mr. bill

No matter, it didn’t spark a love affair. I never became a dedicated fan or made a point of watching the show, and for the most part, like a lot of people, thought it lame. In fact, as far as I was concerned, it was the opposite of cool, but if you’re of Generation X, SNL served as a kind of water cooler around which you invariably orbited, and whether we liked it or not, it was imbued with a gravitational force that ended up bending our lives.

bill murray

Although I had no intention of watching the SNL 40th anniversary special on Sunday, I ended up doing so, and quite simply, it made me happy. It played like a history of the pop culture of my life, and seeing all the people who composed its landscape was touching. Sweet, celebratory and maybe even a little bit sad, the show was like returning to my old high school or university campus, a precinct that really only exists in memory. And so I toured the grounds, marvelling at all the familiar places and feeling refreshed by the faces of all those I had once known, and those that had receded from memory, too, everything once again feeling vivid and limitless.

big fish


Comments

2 responses to “SNL 40th”

  1. 1975.
    I considered myself quite the cultured individual and, at 21, a connoisseur of ‘hip’ comedy. Why, I subscribed to the National Lampoon, memorized Carlin’s ‘Class Clown’ album and laughed out loud to Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryor and the legendary Firesign Theater. I found SNL tame, lame and, mostly, more of the same… that is, a slightly edgier version of the sketch comedy offered up on countless network variety shows.
    I was so very full of my fucking self that I missed much of the brilliance that was SNL in the early days. Over the years, I learned to appreciate the tremendous talents who dared walk the ‘live broadcast’ tightrope every Saturday night, the tremendous courage it must have taken to lay one’s soul on the line and be judged based on one bad performance.
    I did learn and grow. I still think that Chevy Chase is the most overrated, annoying and worthless of the original cast. I also understand that I underrated the talent and bravery of Gilda Radner, Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi and the entire cast. They delivered the best they could on a weekly basis, an insane schedule and a live audience.
    Year after year, the show presents extraordinarily talented kids who live and die with every sketch and I will always appreciate the accomplishments achieved by so many of them.
    The 40th Anniversary Show was a nice reminder of my younger years, the mistakes in judgement and a reminder that one need give time to new acquaintances before dismissing them out of hand.
    Very nicely done, Michael Murray.

  2. Michael Murray Avatar
    Michael Murray

    Jon:

    You’re absolutely right, and you put it beautifully.

    Thanks for that.