Saturday Night Live Now Angering Viewers
Sick Jokes - Slander And Disrespect
Under The Guise Of Comedy
Skits Crossing The Line - Sick Jokes In The Name Of Comedy
Under The Guise Of Comedy
Skits Crossing The Line - Sick Jokes In The Name Of Comedy
Having watched Saturday Night Live off and on for many, many years, I can say I am no prude. As a Palin supporter I could even laugh at at Tina Fey, but there were some personal, mean, disgusting and disrespectful things said about Senator Clinton. Mrs. Clinton is after all, the former first lady and a United States Senator. Then the latest - an incest innuendo in the name of comedy, that Todd Palin is doing his daughters, because he is from Alaska...
Sarah Sullivan writes about the skit:
Then the bomb is dropped when a Times reporter asks, "What about the husband? You know he's doing those daughters. I mean, come on. It's Alaska."
Franco's character responds, "He very well could be. Admittedly, there is no evidence of that, but on the other hand, there is no convincing evidence to the contrary. And these are just some of the lingering questions about Governor Palin."
Needless to say, the laughter wasn't as enthusiastic as it normally is.
The skit ended by describing how one of the New York Times reporters received a Pulitzer Prize in 2009 "for his Times series on unproven, yet un-disproven incest in the Palin family. Sadly, he was to Then the bomb is dropped when a Times reporter asks, "What about the husband? You know he's doing those daughters. I mean, come on. It's Alaska."
Franco's character responds, "He very well could be. Admittedly, there is no evidence of that, but on the other hand, there is no convincing evidence to the contrary. And these are just some of the lingering questions about Governor Palin."
Needless to say, the laughter wasn't as enthusiastic as it normally is.
The skit ended by describing how one of the New York Times reporters received a Pulitzer Prize in 2009 "for his Times series on unproven, yet un-disproven incest in the Palin family. Sadly, he was to die 3 months later, run over by a snow machine, driven by a polar bear."
Read Article...
Franco's character responds, "He very well could be. Admittedly, there is no evidence of that, but on the other hand, there is no convincing evidence to the contrary. And these are just some of the lingering questions about Governor Palin."
Needless to say, the laughter wasn't as enthusiastic as it normally is.
The skit ended by describing how one of the New York Times reporters received a Pulitzer Prize in 2009 "for his Times series on unproven, yet un-disproven incest in the Palin family. Sadly, he was to Then the bomb is dropped when a Times reporter asks, "What about the husband? You know he's doing those daughters. I mean, come on. It's Alaska."
Franco's character responds, "He very well could be. Admittedly, there is no evidence of that, but on the other hand, there is no convincing evidence to the contrary. And these are just some of the lingering questions about Governor Palin."
Needless to say, the laughter wasn't as enthusiastic as it normally is.
The skit ended by describing how one of the New York Times reporters received a Pulitzer Prize in 2009 "for his Times series on unproven, yet un-disproven incest in the Palin family. Sadly, he was to die 3 months later, run over by a snow machine, driven by a polar bear."
Read Article...
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