Saturday Night Live season 32

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Saturday Night Live aired its thirty-second season during the 2006-2007 television season. Tina Fey and Rachel Dratch left after the previous season to work on the NBC sitcom 30 Rock while Chris Parnell, Horatio Sanz, and Finesse Mitchell were fired due to budget cuts. Bill Hader, Andy Samberg, Jason Sudeikis, and Kristen Wiig were immediately moved up to repertory status. Due to budget cuts, no new repertory castmembers or featured players were hired, a phenomenon that hasn't happened on the show since its 23rd season (the 1997-1998 season). After several seasons in a ratings slump, this season's episodes have pulled in big ratings, particularly in episodes hosted by Dane Cook, Alec Baldwin, Jeremy Piven, Rainn Wilson, and Peyton Manning. With Tina Fey's departure, Saturday Night Live returned to having one male and one female anchor on Weekend Update with the inclusion of Seth Meyers as Amy Poehler's co-anchor. Don Roy King was hired as SNL's newest director.

Much like season 31, Andy Samberg created another popular Digital Short that aired around Christmastime; this time, it was the risque, R&B video spoof "Dick in a Box" (on the episode with Justin Timberlake as host and musical guest).

This season began on September 30, 2006 and ended on May 19, 2007 with 20 episodes produced.

Contents

[edit] Cast

[edit] Repertory players

[edit] Featured players

(none)

[edit] Listings

The listings that were during the 2006-2007 season in chronological order, including the summer.

[edit] Episodes

Episode
Number
Date Host(s) Musical Guest(s) Remarks
605 (32.1) September 30, 2006 Dane Cook The Killers
  • According to in-home live-plus-same-day viewership figures from Nielsen Media Research, this episode had a 3.2 rating, 13 share in 18-49 and 6.7 million viewers overall.
  • This is the first episode featuring new director, Don Roy King.
  • Brian Williams made a cameo appearance at the start of Weekend Update.
  • This episode has a different representation of the Saturday Night Live logo and how the host and musical guests appear in the opening credits than what's depicted in the next episode.
  • Lenny Pickett, Earl Gardner, and Steve Turre accompanied the Killers as the horn section during their 2nd song, "Bones".
  • For reasons unknown, NBC reaired this episode just 2 weeks later. This marks the shortest span of time between an episode and its repeat.
606 (32.2) October 7, 2006 Jaime Pressly Corinne Bailey Rae
  • Jaime Pressly was two months pregnant while hosting this episode.
  • Like the previous episode, this episode featured a different logo than either the previous week's or the next live show's. The logo was the same as that used from 1981-85. In repeats, all instances of it were omitted for the logo as seen starting on the 14 October 2006 episode (repeat.) Oddly, the mid-commercial break bumper/teases for all episodes this season and in season 33, in repeats only, feature this 81-85 style logo.
  • In the only rebroadcast of this episode, which was on May 26, 2007, the Jon Bovi sketch was switched with the NasCarettes sketch, and the third edition of the New York Stories was not shown.
607 (32.3) October 21, 2006 John C. Reilly My Chemical Romance
  • This episode was the first live episode to feature the logo as would be used for the rest of season 32 and 33, though the repeat of the Dane Cook/The Killers episode the previous week was the first show ever to feature the new, third logo revision.
608 (32.4) October 28, 2006 Hugh Laurie Beck
  • Hugh Laurie sang an original comedic song.
  • Sacha Baron Cohen made a cameo appearance during the cold opening as Borat. Reports appeared in November that following the show, Laurie and Cohen went out in New York City with Cohen interacting with others in-character. This resulted in a man physically assaulting Cohen after being insulted by the Borat character, until Laurie broke up the fight.
  • Beck performed "Nausea" and "Clap Hands."
609 (32.5) November 11, 2006 Alec Baldwin Christina Aguilera
  • This episode averaged a 3.3 rating, 13 share in 18-49 and 7.4 million viewers overall (SNL's highest since the first time Julia Louis-Dreyfus hosted in season 31). When this episode reran on January 6, it delivered a 3.4 rating, 14 share in adults 18-49 and 7.6 million viewers overall, which was more than the original airing.
  • With this show, Alec Baldwin has hosted 13 times, surpassing John Goodman.
  • In the December 1, 2007 repeat of this episode (when the show was on hiatus due to the Writers' Guild strike), The Awkward Carpool sketch was cut and replaced by the "Urigro" fake commercial and the "First Person in the History of the World To Dance" sketch from the episode hosted by Jeremy Piven.
  • This episode was repeated for a record-making 3 times, not counting syndication.
  • Martin Short mentioned in an interview on Late Night With Conan O'Brien that only he, Steve Martin, and Lorne were aware that McCartney was in the building before he appeared on camera.
  • The NBC rerun on June 9, 2007 cuts the ending of the Carpool sketch where Kristen Wiig's character turns on the radio and Bobby McFerrin's "Don't Worry, Be Happy" plays on the radio (the sketch ends after Alec Baldwin's character says, "Bobby McFerrin raped my grandmother!"); this is also how the sketch ended on the SNL special "The Best of the 2006-2007 Season."
  • Alec Baldwin's episode was credited for the May 5, 2007 version of "The Best of 2006-2007" special because of "Awkward Carpool", but the sketch was cut out of the August 25, 2007 rerun due to the Molly Shannon's Penelope sketch.
610 (32.6) November 18, 2006 Ludacris
  • Mary J. Blige performs with Ludacris during his second performance, "Runaway Love".
611 (32.7) December 2, 2006 Matthew Fox Tenacious D
  • Jason Reed cameos during the performance of "The Metal."
612 (32.8) December 9, 2006 Annette Bening Gwen Stefani

Akon

  • Alec Baldwin makes a cameo during the monologue. Also, the Valtrex commercial from Baldwin's November episode is repeated in this episode.
  • The "Pep Talk" Digital Short from this episode was cut from last week's episode, this was clear from the appearance of Matthew Fox.
  • The final sketch (the Cat Lawyer fake commercial) was pre-emptively ended when the show displays a title card, cuts audio soon after, and then cuts to commercial early.
  • As of December 2007, this episode has never re-aired on NBC.
613 (32.9) December 16, 2006 Justin Timberlake
  • Timberlake becomes the third in SNL history to simultaneously be a host and musical guest more than once, next to Garth Brooks and Britney Spears.
  • Jimmy Fallon appeared in the Barry Gibb Talk Show sketch, and also introduced "What Goes Around..." Cameron Diaz, Timberlake's girlfriend at the time, introduced "My Love."
  • After the episode, NBC put an uncensored version of the Digital Short "Dick in a Box" on their website and YouTube. The uncensored version is prefaced with a warning stating that the Digital Short has explicit language that was bleeped out on the TV version. It quickly became an internet phenomenon; much like "Lazy Sunday" did a year earlier.
614 (32.10) January 13, 2007 Jake Gyllenhaal The Shins
615 (32.11) January 20, 2007 Jeremy Piven AFI
  • Rapper Common makes a cameo appearance.
  • This episode dominated its time period with a 3.0 rating, 11 share in 18-49 and 6.7 million viewers overall.
616 (32.12) February 3, 2007 Drew Barrymore Lily Allen
  • With this episode, Barrymore becomes the second woman to host five times after Candice Bergen. No other female celebrity has hosted more than five times.
  • Darrell Hammond does not appear live during the episode.
  • Horatio Sanz makes a guest appearance as Elton John during the "Donatella Versace Super Bowl Special."
  • This is the only episode this season to feature Seth Meyers outside of Weekend Update.
617 (32.13) February 10, 2007 Forest Whitaker Keith Urban
618 (32.14) February 24, 2007 Rainn Wilson Arcade Fire
  • In the March 31 and July 14 reruns of the episode, Bill Hader's character mentioning that his father had Down Syndrome was bleeped out during the "Danny's Song Memories" sketch after NBC received complaints over the usage of the phrase.
619 (32.15) March 17, 2007 Julia Louis-Dreyfus Snow Patrol
  • Chris Rock appears in the cold open, giving his insight on the 2008 presidential election; he suggested that there would be no reason that America would not be ready for a black president because we just had a retarded one.
620 (32.16) March 24, 2007 Peyton Manning Carrie Underwood
  • Manning hosted the show on his thirty-first birthday. During the goodnights, a cake was wheeled out by his brothers Eli and Cooper and a rendition of Happy Birthday was performed by the Saturday Night Live band.
  • Darrell Hammond is again absent from the live showing of this episode (his Weekend Update commentary as Rudy Giuliani was cut after dress-rehearsal)
  • The dress rehearsal version of the monologue originally had Amy Poehler as a New England Patriots fan who heckles Manning. Both the dress rehearsal and the live show monologue had the joke about Tom Brady and the circus having two more rings than Manning.
  • This episode dominated its timeslot with a 3.5 rating, 15 share in 18-49 and 7.9 million viewers overall.
621 (32.17) April 14, 2007 Shia LaBeouf Avril Lavigne
  • Alec Baldwin cameos in the filmed commercial parody entitled Hathaway Mustache Ride Company. It was written by James Downey and was filmed during an off week in April. Amy Poehler was busy promoting Blades of Glory and is therefore absent from the commercial.
  • The digital short The Shooting is removed from the iTunes version of the episode due to the Virginia Tech shootings that happened two days after this sketch aired, and was quickly removed from NBC.com and YouTube due to NBC's inability to clear the song "Hide and Seek" used in the short. Despite NBC's inability to clear the rights, the Digital Short aired in its entirety when the episode was rerun on August 4.
622 (32.18) April 21, 2007 Scarlett Johansson Björk
623 (32.19) May 12, 2007 Molly Shannon Linkin Park
  • With this episode, Molly Shannon is the second female former cast member to come back and host (Julia Louis-Dreyfus is the first), and the first who worked under Lorne Michaels as a cast member.
624 (32.20) May 19, 2007 Zach Braff Maroon 5
Preceded by
Season 31
Saturday Night Live
Season 32
Succeeded by
Season 33