Saturday Night Live: Louis CK in top form with redeeming monologue

After delivering a controversial opening set in 2015, the comedian returned with some of his finest jokes, as SNL also spoofed Pepsi’s tone-deaf protest commercial

Louis CK’s latest special, 2017, dropped on Netflix this week. It showcased some of his brilliance, but it didn’t quite live up to his finest work.

In his monologue for this week’s episode of Saturday Night Live, he resurrected a string of jokes that he didn’t include on this latest hour – and probably should have.

“Here’s a joke,” he began, unsubtly, launching into a wandering, hit-and-miss bit about a racist chicken crossing the road. He then went into a strangely long bit about animals that seemed, for a moment, like a deliberately PG-rated set in response to his controversial SNL monologue back in 2015.

It wasn’t to be: the chunk ended with CK saying he wanted to get a goat “so I can have a trash can I can make love to”. Then things really kicked in, with a well-developed series of motel and hotel jokes.

Comedians talking about travelling is a well-worn trope, but this material is CK at his finest – clever, self-aware, counterintuitive but instantly relatable. Who else could complain about customer service with a line about institutional racism?

“It’s wrong that white people get better treatment. It’s wrong. But as long as they do, what’s going on in this hotel?”

Louis CK’s SNL monologue.

The other must-see of the night was a pitch-perfect parody of the now-infamous Pepsi commercial, imagining the clueless white guy who created the ad as he realizes why it is not a good idea, one piece at at time. Clever, simple and effective, this pre-tape took full advantage of both SNL’s timeliness and its network budget, able to realistically recreate an expensive commercial set on a moment’s notice.

Other notable sketches included:

  • The cold open, which featured Alec Baldwin’s Donald Trump meeting a group of supporters in Kentucky, who continued to support him despite his life-ruining policies. It had a few good lines – “In Trump’s America, men work in two places: coal mines and Goldman Sachs” – but overall, it was like a somewhat unsophisticated take on current affairs.
  • The first sketch after the monologue saw CK donning the most incredible fake eyelashes while prosecuting a murder case. His lashes charmed everyone in the court, and it ended with a fantastic payoff. It might be the dumbest sketch since David Pumpkins, and it was almost as well done.
  • Bobby Moynihan played a clown arriving for a birthday party, only to discover that CK is a lone 53-year-old who’s hired him for his own enjoyment. It’s awkward and Louie-esque, featuring some sharp lines – “There’s no protocol for whatever this is” – and a supremely dark ending.
  • The final sketch, in which CK and Kate McKinnon played actors at New York’s Tenement Museum pretending to be racist Polish immigrants in the early 20th century. The sketch itself wasn’t quite sure what it was saying, but watching CK slowly realize that he has no business doing an accent was well worth it.

Contributor

Elise Czajkowski

The GuardianTramp

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