Lkeller said:
justpassingthough said:
I've always wondered what part of this is generational. I started watching in the 90s when I was a teenager, mostly after the departures of the early 90s cast like Mike Myers and during the tenures of Will Ferrell, Cheri Oteri, etc and still watch to this day, now that I'm in my early 30s. Could be that being the same age as the comedians and their worldview and their takes on current events and politics influence how funny one finds topical humor shows like SNL?
I'm not saying there aren't horribly written sketches that drag on and on and on, but I would have to think that a part of you finds humor from your generation more endearing than I would and vice versa.
I'll give that some thought, but my immediate response is to say that's not a factor. I watch a lot of current comedy (stand-up and sketch comedy) and find it funnier, if anything, than comedy from my generation as a young adult - the 70s and 80s.
I'm a big fan of the Daily Show and Colbert - and I'm finding Amy Schumer's new show pretty funny.
"Inside Amy Schumer" is hysterical, even if I feel bad for laughing at 80% of what gets said, but a certain part of comedy is shock value and you have to follow down the rabbit hole seeing as we live in a world where the envelope for what is appropriate continues to get pushed farther and farther.
Back to SNL, though, perhaps part of what I've said above also applies to SNL. I imagine it was more groundbreaking in terms of what they got away with in the earlier days than it is today. Sure, its also been on broadcast but it probably pushed the envelope more back then than it does today, so its viewed as somewhat staid and safe. Could that be another factor that influences how people reflect fondly on the bygone era of SNL?