Live from New York, it's Saturday Night!

"Live from New York, it's Saturday Night!" is a famous phrase typically featured on the American sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live, which runs on the NBC broadcast network. It is generally used as a way to end a cold opening sketch and lead into the opening titles/montage and cast introductions for the program.

Origin

During the show's first season, the show was known simply as NBC's Saturday Night, due to the existence of an ABC show titled Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell. This is how the phrase received its wording. The phrase was kept intact even after ABC's SNL was canceled and NBC's Saturday Night adopted the SNL name for itself.

Instances used

Chevy Chase said the line on the first show that aired, October 11, 1975.

The phrase is typically spoken by a host, cast member(s), and/or musical guest, and has been used in every season except one (the 1981-1982 season, the first full season with Dick Ebersol as producer). It was first said live on air by Chevy Chase, on SNL's first show on October 11, 1975. For all but two of the first season's 24 episodes, Chase delivered the phrase after a pratfall of some kind. Even when the show is not aired on a Saturday—such as the eight Saturday Night Live Weekend Update Thursday specials aired from 2008 to 2012—the traditional line is used.

Readings by special guests

In recent years, the line has occasionally been given to a non-host/non-cast member for cameo purposes. This could be for stars like Brad Pitt and Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, or for more unusual celebrities like Monica Lewinsky, Who Wants to Be a Millionaire winner John Carpenter, WWE chairman Vince McMahon (on March 18, 2000), Carolyn Kepcher (on April 3, 2004), and Al Sharpton (on November 2, 2013).

Presidents and Presidential hopefuls

A series of Presidential and Vice Presidential hopefuls have announced the phrase on their appearances on the program, beginning with Bob Dole on November 16, 1996 (coming after the 1996 election). It was announced by Barack Obama on November 3, 2007, by Hillary Clinton on March 1, 2008, by Sarah Palin on October 18, 2008, and by John McCain on November 1, 2008. Gerald Ford also opened the show with the phrase, which he did when Ron Nessen hosted.

Variations

There have been multiple variations on the line.

In popular culture

In the second part of The Golden Girls episode "Home Again, Rose", when Rose asks to whisper something important in her daughter Kirsten's ear, she instead yells the famous SNL opening line.

In The Simpsons episode "'Scuse Me While I Miss the Sky", Marge Simpson yells the phrase while sleep-deprived.

In the Friends episode entitled, "The One with Joey's Award", Phoebe Buffay is giving a mock acceptance speech (receiving a Nobel Prize for a massage) when she suddenly stops and shouts, "Live from New York, it's Saturday Night!". Lisa Kudrow, who played Phoebe, actually auditioned for a spot on SNL, and did host the show.

In the 2015 film Goosebumps, based on the children's book series of the same name, Jillian Bell's character walks into the kitchen of her sister and nephew's new house, who have just moved to Delaware from New York, and greets them "Live from New York, it's my sister Gale with special guest my nephew Zach!". Bell had previously auditioned for SNL and though she did not join the cast, she became a writer for the show for the thirty-fifth season.

In the 2015 film Ted 2, when news of Ted's (voiced by Seth McFarlane) court loss about him not being a "real person" appears on multiple news programs, one of the shows he was searching through was SNL where a cold open was parodying his court case, after which the three main cast members shouted the phrase. Cast members Taran Killam, Kate McKinnon, and Bobby Moynihan made cameo appearances.

On the July 19, 2016 episode of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, Laura Benanti (the impersonator of Melania Trump) finished her "un-plagiarized" "defense" speech, starting to say "Live from New York, it's Saturday..." before Colbert interrupted, shouting "no!" and the title card of the show appearing on the screen.

References

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