Ashley Padilla, Jane Wickline, and the future of Saturday Night Live
One of the most creative recurring bits in current seasons of Saturday Night Live takes the level of view of somebody endlessly scrolling through TikTok. Through their eyes (and in between textual content messages of growing urgency that the scroller ignores), we see quick-hit impressions, spoofs of actual viral movies, and assorted absurdities impressed by web tradition. It’s the uncommon sketch that may usually embrace each member of even an outsized ensemble, or near it, alongside the host and typically even the musical visitor, too. That’s virtually half of the recreation, figuring out that the sketch most likely cannot finish till everybody has turned up.
This sketch did not air in the first 19 episodes of SNL‘s 51st season, which makes it unlikely to show up on this Saturday’s Will Ferrell/Paul McCartney finale. But possibly the present’s newest transition has rendered a TikTok sketch redundant, irrespective of how a lot enjoyable it’s. The season after a landmark anniversary was certain to look extra like a rebuilding 12 months, particularly after a sequence of solid departures: long-time faves Heidi Gardner, Ego Nwodim, and Bowen Yang are all gone, whereas a whopping 5 new solid members have been added to the featured-player roster, along with season 50 newbies Ashley Padilla and Jane Wickline. The present had simply marched by means of that season with a giant, veteran-heavy solid (plus some election-season common singers); it felt each triumphant and slightly stagnant, as if eyes and minds have been half-occupied by the planning of that midseason celebration. Without any extra of that on the horizon, SNL set out once more to determine what its subsequent configuration would possibly appear to be.
Many would say that it seems extra like Ashley Padilla than some added TikTok feed (or the solid members who hail at the very least partly from that world). Padilla really blossomed in her sophomore 12 months, shortly ascending (with out promotion to the fundamental solid) to ranges of screentime beforehand loved by the dominating likes of Kate McKinnon or Kristen Wiig. She additionally resembles these powers in her capability to wring a completely useful comedy sketch out of seemingly easy behavioral observations: a mother confessingwith maddening deliberateness, that she might have misplaced her religion in Donald Trump. a lady paralyzed with embarrassment by her personal shocked flatulence. A good friend smiling by means of a horrific new haircut.
Padilla has plain appearing abilities, a refreshing change from the quantity of stand-up comics the present has employed lately with the assumption that they’re going to energy their approach into sketch comedy by sheer pressure of persona. That assumption is not at all times incorrect, however for somebody who watches and writes about SNL On a weekly foundation, it has been a pleasure to observe Padilla rating surprisingly large laughs by means of pure timing and intonation, moderately than studying on the fly to translate his solo, onstage sensitivity into sketches. Her capability to carry for amusing is especially gorgeous in a area that prioritizes the fast kill.
Yet Padilla would not strike me as the future of the present, per se. In reality, it looks like half of the purpose she resonates a lot with the SNL fandom is that she’s so straight reminiscent of the previous: the barely hid neuroses of Wiig, the showmanship of McKinnon, the flustered-mom vitality that Aidy Bryant or Cecily Strong might convey to any quantity of characters, the brassiness of Jan Hooks—I might go on, all the approach again to the straight-woman deadpan of Jane Curtin. In different phrases, Ashley Padilla is strictly what individuals suppose a very good SNL participant ought to look and act like.
In a approach, although, the future of the present might look extra like Jane Wickline. This line of considering might trigger some followers to hurl their telephones throughout the room in shocked disgust (though not anybody following together with The AV Club‘s weekly recaps, who will probably be passingly conversant in this reasoning if not essentially comfortable about it). I do not imply that Wickline is secretly holding the present collectively—though she is humorous, and her hit price for her Weekend Update songs, occasional pretapesand supporting sketch roles rivals most of her castmates. I imply that the TikTok-trained strategy of Wickline and Veronika Slowikowska, in addition to the conventional (using that term relatively here) stand-up path of Sarah Sherman, most likely augurs extra about the place the present goes (or ought to go) than the rock strong fundamentals of somebody like Padilla.
