What Will Happen When Edward Norton Hosts?
A Courtney Love walk-on is probably too much to hope for...or is it?!
Testifying before Congress about the failures of HealthCare.gov, representatives of the Canadian tech firm CGI (Taran Killam and Mike O'Brien) compulsively apologize, in the way of all Canadians, to the point where the American lawmakers presiding (Kenan Thompson and Vanessa Bayer) can't tell if they're being sarcastic.
Host Edward Norton talks about his last and next collaborations with director Wes Anderson, while various cast members appear, playing out increasingly twee situations, to make him feel at home.
Showtime previews its sexy, provocative new period series, Masters Of Beasts.
Jerry (Norton) ruins a Hallowe'en party by showing up in his Miley Cyrus-at-the-VMAs costume and getting a little too into character.
Things get a little awkward when Edward Norton (Beck Bennett) runs into Mark Ruffalo (Norton), and both try to be cool about the fact that Ruffalo replaced Norton as Bruce Banner. When Eric Bana (Brooks Whelan) shows up, the discomfort increases all around.
Comic Steve MacLeive (Norton) joins the "Original Kings Of Catchphrase Comedy" tour with his catchphrase, "Spank you very much, OBAMA."
A pair of employees (Cecily Strong and Bobby Moynihan) let loose all their secret contempt for their colleagues when they think that their boss (Norton) is firing them from their jobs at Crate & Barrel.
Janelle Monáe performs.
Johnny Knoxville (as himself) describes the even more outrageous pranks that got cut from his new Jackass film, Bad Grandpa; Anthony Crispino (Moynihan) gives secondhand reports about "HealthScare.glove" and the forthcoming feature film adaptation of "Nifty Shades Of Hay."
On Hallowe'en, a theatre critic (Norton) refuses candy to trick-or-treaters if he judges their costumes to be sub-par.
Stereotypes abound at the reception for one of New Jersey's first gay weddings, uniting Vinnie (Norton) and Carmine (Killam).
On The Voice, the four judges are too busy goofing around and playing grab-ass to pay any attention to the contestants.
Janelle Monáe performs.
In this Fight Club parody, the story of an erratic office drone (Norton) who keeps coming in looking battered and who may have some kind of mental disease is told primarily through the gossip among his co-workers (Aidy Bryant, Bayer, and Kyle Mooney).
People wave goodbye, hug.