What Will Happen When Josh Hutcherson Hosts?
One is that you might learn who he is. Might.
At Toronto City Hall, advisors to embattled mayor Rob Ford (Bobby Moynihan) try to suggest ways he can improve his public image, but he systematically alienates and/or physically overpowers them.
Host Josh Hutcherson compares the cutthroat atmosphere at SNL to his film franchise, The Hunger Games.
A spot for a new Richard Curtis movie features so much buoyant holiday music and scenes of cute young people skipping along snowy London streets that it's not immediately clear that it's actually about an unbalanced stalker.
In the offices of People magazine, various male celebrities directly make their cases to the editorial board — an extremely serious Supreme Court-like body — for why they should be named this year's Sexiest Man Alive, but no one can improve the argument presented by Adam Levine (Taran Killam).
On the set of Catching Fire, Josh Hutcherson (as himself) is put in the awkward position of having to ask his co-star Jennifer Lawrence (Cecily Strong) whether she may have soiled herself.
HAIM performs.
George Zimmerman (Moynihan) and his new lawyer (Vanessa Bayer) try to do damage control on his latest legal troubles; Kevin Spacey (Kyle Mooney) and Woody Allen (John Milhiser) discuss the former's gift of a Netflix subscription to the latter, and specifically the films and other programming that Woody has especially been enjoying.
Backstage, the cast of Spider-Man: The Musical — all of whom are still nursing various injuries — react to the news that the show they've given so much to is closing.
Given the recent public battle between Senate candidate Liz Cheney (Noel Wells) and her sister Mary (McKinnon) over Mary's stance on gay marriage — including her sister's — Thanksgiving dinner with Dick (Beck Bennett) is uncomfortable for everyone.
Editors at Oxford Dictionaries celebrate naming "selfie" word of the year by taking lots of selfies, ending with the word selfie itself taking a selfie.
HAIM performs.
An ER doctor (Hutcherson) has a hard time earning the respect of his staff because he is so tiny.
In 2063, art gallery patrons react to a show of works by retired U.S. Presidents, from George W. Bush to Hillary Cyber-Clinton.
People wave goodbye, hug.