Since it is broadcast live, the American sketch comedy television series Saturday Night Live has had several infamous events throughout its history, which were either unplanned or provoked sufficient controversy to receive media coverage. Several hosts and musical guests have also been banned from returning due to their actions during the show.
Infamous moments on the show 1970s * October 30, 1976, John Belushi accidentally gashed Buck Henry on the forehead with a sword during one of his samurai sketches . Henry had to wear a bandage for the remainder of the show. The rest of the cast also wore bandages on their foreheads for the rest of the show, as a running gag.
1980s * On November 9, 1985, magicians Penn & Teller appeared on the show, performing their infamous Water Tank Trick for the first time. Unknown to anybody at the time of the act, mechanism had failed, leaving him locked under water for over ten minutes with an almost fatally low air supply. It wasn't until after Marc Garland unlocked the tank that anyone knew that anything had gone wrong.
* On the March 15, 1986 episode hosted by Griffin Dunne, Damon Wayans decided on-air to portray his cop character in the sketch, "Mr. Monopoly" (about a lawyer who uses Monopoly cards to get his clients out of trouble) as a gay character. (The voice he used in the sketch was similar to the voice he would later use for his homosexual movie critic character Blaine Edwards, in the recurring "Men on Film" sketch, on FOX's In Living Color.) According to the book, Live from New York: An Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live, the change was made in response to Lorne Michaels cutting out a sketch from dress rehearsal that Wayans liked. The deviation from the script ultimately resulted in Wayans being fired. Damon Wayans came back on SNL to do stand-up on the last episode of the 1985-1986 season (Anjelica Huston and Billy Martin with musical guest George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic), and return to host SNL during the 1994-1995 season.
* In 1988, a sketch written by Conan O'Brien set in a nudist colony used the word penis a total of 42 times, culminating in a performance of the nudist club anthem, "The Penis Song."
1990s * In 1990, comedian Andrew Dice Clay was chosen to host; cast member Nora Dunn and scheduled musical guest Sinéad O'Connor boycotted the show in protest, due to perceptions that his jokes were misogynistic.
* In 1997 in the second episode of the season, with host Matthew Perry, during the end thank yous, Oasis band member Noel Gallagher scratches his crotch several times while Perry is talking. Several cast and band members laugh about it.
* In 1998, a TV Funhouse segment entitled "Conspiracy Theory Rock" aired. A parody of the public-service ' cartoons of the 1970s, this segment vilified the "media-opoly" (buyouts of media stations by large corporations with whom they may have a conflict of interest) and those corporations' alleged use of corporate welfare to pay off and campaign for congressmen, and why SNL castmember Norm MacDonald was fired from the show. The cartoon aired only in the original broadcast and was edited out of all reruns (except for overseas broadcasts), with Lorne Michaels claiming that the cut was made because he didn't feel the segment "worked comedically." Later, Harry Shearer said in an interview that the move was actually made because Michaels "wanted to keep working at 30 Rock." This sketch is included as a bonus on the Best of TV Funhouse DVD.
2000s * During the buildup to the wedding between Tom Green and Drew Barrymore (who got engaged in July 2000), the two frequently joked with the media about when and where they were going to wed. The most memorable incident came on November 18, 2000 when Green hosted Saturday Night Live. During the monologue, Green brought Barrymore on stage and teased the audience about the couple marrying at the end of the episode. Ultimately, the stage was set for a wedding before Barrymore in the end, got "cold feet." The SNL incident initially left viewers and the media confused about whether the couple had actually planned to marry on live TV, or were simply staging a publicity stunt.
* When Gwyneth Paltrow hosted in 2001, a TV Funhouse cartoon featuring Michael Jackson was aired. The cartoon featured numerous comical attempts by Jackson to come in contact with young boys. It was only shown on the East Coast, while on the West Coast, a cartoon featuring Pat Robertson hosting the 700 Club and showing a fake cartoon called Harry the Embryonic Cell. The reason for the substitution was not announced, but the Michael Jackson cartoon can be seen on the Internet, while most SNL fan sites have no trace of the Pat Robertson cartoon.
* In 2004, musical guest Ashlee Simpson was caught lip syncing during her performance. At the end she claimed her band started playing the wrong song, but two days later said she had acid reflux.
Banned from the show Saturday Night Live's producers, especially Lorne Michaels, have famously and dramatically banned for life several celebrities from ever appearing on the television show. Reasons for these bans vary, as sometimes they can be seen as a rational response to a star's grossly inappropriate on-stage behavior, while at other times the reasons are harder to understand as they stem from far more mild, or even superficial transgressions.
1970s * Louise Lasser, who hosted at the end of the first season on July 24, 1976, was the first host banned by the producers. Lasser was said to be going through personal problems at the time and was reportedly nearly incoherent throughout the broadcast. This episode was such a disappointment to producer Lorne Michaels that it was also not repeated on NBC, although it has appeared in syndication since 1981 and is included on the SNL first season DVD set.
* Charles Grodin has never been asked back to host after he gave a clumsy performance. In 1977, on his one appearance on the show, Grodin missed rehearsal, stumbled his way through the show, and ad-libbed many of his lines.
* On December 17, 1977, Elvis Costello and the Attractions performed as a last-minute replacement for the Sex Pistols, who were unable to obtain passports and visas. NBC and the show's producer Lorne Michaels didn't want the band to perform "Radio Radio", since the song protests the state of the media. The band defied them by beginning to play their song "Less Than Zero", stopping, with Costello telling the audience that there was no reason to do that song, and telling the band to play "Radio Radio" instead. It infuriated Michaels because it put the show off schedule, and the band were barred from performing again. Eventually Lorne Michaels put his grievances aside, lifting the ban, and Elvis Costello would appear as musical guest in 1989 and 1991. He also reprised his performance of "Radio Radio" with the Beastie Boys for a 25th anniversary special aired on September 26, 1999.
* Frank Zappa was banned from the show after his hosting stint on October 21, 1978. His distinct sense of humor made him unpopular with the cast and crew. During his performance, he made a habit of reading cue-cards and making faces for the camera, and many cast members (save for John Belushi and Michael O'Donoghue) deliberately stood far from him during the goodnights.
* The April 14, 1979 episode of the show hosted by Milton Berle resulted in him being banned due to his habit of upstaging other performers, overacting, making faces for the camera, insertion of "classic" comedy bits and his maudlin performance of "September Song." This episode was also barred from rebroadcast for over twenty years until February 2003, when an edited version was shown on E!; it twice aired in full in Canada on The Comedy Network in 2001. Lorne Michaels felt that the broadcast, and Berle in particular, brought the show down. (See also Milton Berle second time around: Late career)
1980s * Fear was banned from playing again, despite the fact that it was audience members and not the band itself which stepped outside of the boundaries of what is and is not acceptable on network television, after the 1981 Halloween episode. With Donald Pleasence as host, the band played that night by request from Fear fan John Belushi, and they proceeded to play offensive songs ("Beef Bologna", "New York's All Right (If You Like Saxophones)" and a version of "Let's Have a War", which is cut short) and bus in "dancers". The situation was seen to have been out of control to the extent that the damage of studio equipment forced Dave Wilson to end the three-song performance by cutting the audio and video to a commercial as they started to play "Let's Have a War". The episode has not been rebroadcast on NBC. Rebroadcasts (as seen on Comedy Central, etc.) have been reedited to delete the moment when an audience member makes his way to the stage as a dancer and says, "Fuck New York".
* On November 13, 1982, host Robert Blake was very dissatisfied with the scripts that he received throughout the week. He was barred from ever performing on the show again after he crumpled up a script presented to him by cast member and writer Gary Kroeger and threw it back in his face.
* A proposed banning of a frequent guest was left in the hands of viewers on November 20, one week later. Andy Kaufman, who had appeared in the very first episode in 1975 and periodically thereafter, was the subject of a viewer poll to decide if Kaufman should be allowed to stay or be banned for life from the show. Viewers had to call a 900 number to cast their vote. They decided to kick him off, and Kaufman never returned to the show. It was actually Kaufman who pitched the idea to Dick Ebersol weeks before with the idea being that Kaufman would then reappear on the show as his alter ego Tony Clifton. However Ebersol used the idea (sans the Clifton debut) after he had a fight with Kaufman.
* The influential alternative group The Replacements were banned from the show due to their behavior after they appeared on the show on January 18, 1986 to promote their first album with Sire Records, Tim. When it came time for them to perform their first number, "Bastards of Young," they were intoxicated and several cast members were unsure whether they could perform. Lead singer Paul Westerberg would further aggravate circumstances when he yelled fuck to the crowd during "Bastards of Young". The band went on to perform one more song, "Kiss Me on the Bus". In subsequent rebroadcasts of this episode, the fuck is censored out of "Bastards of Young." Westerberg returned as a solo musical guest and bassist Tommy Stinson is featured on a playbill during the opening credits and at some commercial breaks during the most recent season.
1990s * Steven Seagal, who hosted on April 20, 1991, was also banned from hosting because of his difficulty in working with the cast and crew. Note: They made note of the occasion almost a year and a half later, as during Nicolas Cage's monologue on September 26, 1992, Nicolas spoke with Lorne backstage, saying, "...they probably think I'm the biggest jerk who's ever been on the show!" to which Lorne replied, "No, no. That would be Steven Seagal."
*Sinéad O'Connor was banned from appearing on SNL again after her performance on October 3, 1992. In her second set of the show, she performed an a cappella version of Bob Marley's "War". During the word "evil", she picked up a picture of Pope John Paul II, ripped it up, and shouted, "Fight the real enemy!" Dave Wilson immediately turned off the "applause" cue and the audience reacted with complete silence. NBC received many complaints about this within a matter of minutes. At the end of the show, host Tim Robbins, who was raised Catholic, refused to give O'Connor the customary "thanks" for being the musical guest. Note: To this day, NBC refuses to lend out the footage of the performance to any media outlet, and they edited out the incident from the syndicated version of the episode, replacing it with footage from the dress rehearsal taped earlier in the evening. It was finally released in 2003, with an explanation from Lorne Michaels, on Disc 4 of the Saturday Night Live - 25 Years of Music DVD set.
* Cypress Hill were banned from appearing on SNL again after their performance as the musical guest on the October 2, 1993 episode, where DJ Muggs lit up a marijuana joint on-air and the band trashed their instruments after playing their second single "I Ain't Goin' Out Like That."
* Martin Lawrence was banned from the show after his opening monologue on the February 19, 1994 episode included comments about female genitalia. The monologue has been edited out in both the network repeats and syndicated version, and replaced with a graphic describing in general what Lawrence had said. The graphic also told viewers that it was "a frank and lively monologue and it nearly cost us all our jobs."
* Chevy Chase was banned from hosting the show again after the February 15, 1997 episode due to his verbal abuse of the cast and crew during the week. Chase became notorious for his treatment of certain cast members when hosting past episodes, particularly his remarks to openly gay cast member Terry Sweeney. Note: In 1985, according to the book Live from New York: The Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live, Chase made fun of Robert Downey, Jr.'s father for not being famous anymore and harassed Terry Sweeney for being a homosexual, even going as far as suggesting that Sweeney should be in a sketch about an AIDS victim who weighs himself every week before his death. Chase's abusive behavior during the 1985 episode and other episodes are detailed in the book. Although Chase was banned from hosting the show in 1997, he appeared on the 25th anniversary special in 1999, was interviewed for the 2005 special Live From New York: The First Five Years of Saturday Night Live, and cameoed in four episodes (one hosted by Chris Farley in October 1997, one hosted by Bill Murray in 1999, one hosted by Seann William Scott in 2001, where Chase reprised his role as The Land Shark, and most recently another hosted by Seth Rogen in 2007, where Chase returned to Weekend Update as "senior political correspondent").
2000s * Adrien Brody became the latest person banned on May 10, 2003 when he came out to introduce reggae musician Sean Paul, while wearing Rastafarian attire including faux dreadlocks. Without any prior notice, Brody began rambling in a Jamaican accent for close to 45 seconds before finally introducing the act incorrectly, misannouncing "Sean Paul" as "Sean John," with Sean Paul and his entourage playing along and getting rowdy. Lorne Michaels is notorious for his dislike of improvisation and unannounced performances, and was furious with Brody for not obtaining clearance before performing this "monologue."
Cursing on the air 1980s * On March 15, 1980, the show's 100th episode, featured player Paul Shaffer starred in a sketch about a medieval rock band who constantly uses the curse word flogging. At one point, Shaffer slips and shouts at drunken drummer Bill Murray that his playing "throws the whole fucking timing off!" The audience reacts with shocked laughter, and Shaffer noticeably breaks character. This incident is not edited from reruns.
* On the infamous February 21, 1981 episode hosted by Charlene Tilton, musical guest Prince performed his song "Partyup", which included the line, "Fightin' war is such a fuckin' bore." However, this incident was allowed to slide as the crew were unable to decide whether he actually said fuckin or friggin.
* Later in that same episode, Charles Rocket, said "I'd like to know who the fuck did it" during the live feed of the "goodnights" segment after the final sketch, where he had portrayed the gunshot victim in a parody of the "Who Shot J.R." plot on the program Dallas. The Comedy Central reruns of this episode edited the beginning from the goodnights to bypass the incident, but the Canadian Comedy Network reruns play the goodnights in their entirety, leaving the fuck intact.
* Fear played on the 1981 Halloween episode by request from Fear fan John Belushi. Dave Wilson ended the three-song performance by cutting the audio and video to a commercial as they started to play "Let's Have a War". The episode has not been rebroadcast on NBC.
* The Replacements appeared on the show on January 18, 1986 to promote their first album with Sire Records, Tim. When it came time for them to perform their first number, "Bastards of Young," they were clearly intoxicated and several cast members were unsure whether they could perform, and lead singer Paul Westerberg would further aggravate circumstances when he yelled "fuck" to the crowd during the song. The "fuck" is edited out of all repeats.
1990s * On the October 20, 1990 episode hosted by George Steinbrenner, musical guest The Time performed "Chocolate" as their second song. In the few seconds of silence before the song's finale, lead singer Morris Day looked at Jerome Benton and says, "Where the fuck this chicken come from? I thought I ordered ribs!" In all reruns of the episode, fuck is muted out.
* In 1995, Cheri Oteri said the word shit during a sketch. Her recurring character, Rita Delvecchio, gets her sleeve caught in a hockey net and mutters, "Look at this shit!" During the goodnights segment, cast and crew poked fun at Oteri's gaffe by making a contrite-looking Oteri deposit a dollar bill into a glass "swear jar." In all reruns of the episode, shit is muted out.
*In 1995, R.E.M. performed their single "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?" unedited, including the line "don't fuck with me." When vocalist Michael Stipe sings the lyric, he turns his back to the camera. This is not edited in repeats.
* In 1997, during his Weekend Update, Norm MacDonald fumbled with his words and then said, "What the fuck was that?" Realizing what he had done, MacDonald ad-libbed that this would be his "farewell performance". He was not fired for this, and in the next new episode, he again fumbled on some words, stopped, looked right at the camera and said, "Oh drat!"
* In 1997, when Metallica was performing their song "Fuel", the song was aired unedited, saying: "Warhorse, warhead, fuck 'em, man, white knuckle tight!" This incident was missed by censors.
2000s * On the January 19, 2002 episode hosted by Jack Black, musical guest The Strokes's lead singer Julian Casablancas yelled "Fuckin' A!" halfway through the song "Hard To Explain."
* In 2004, during the "goodnight" segment at the end of the show, host Colin Farrell thanked the cast and crew for "one of the finest weeks I've ever had, I shit you not." All reruns of this episode bleep out the shit.
* In 2005, musical guests System of a Down performed the song "," which contains the line "Where the fuck are you" repeated several times. At the end of the performance, guitarist Daron Malakian screamed, "Fuck yeah!" which was missed by the censors.
Controversial sketches and performers 1980s * On May 10, 1980, writer Al Franken performed the sketch "A Limo for the Lame-o", which mocked NBC president Fred Silverman's failure to improve the network's ratings. NBC executives were furious, and Franken, who was being considered to replace Lorne Michaels as producer of the show at the end of the season, was forced to issue a written apology.
* A battle raged over several sketches to be included in the 1980 episode hosted by Ellen Burstyn. The three pieces were "Our Front Door", a sketch about a clean-cut family who takes in a heroin addict (Charles Rocket) who sells potholders to pay for his next fix; a sketch centered on recurring characters Valley Girls Vicky and Debbie (played by Gail Matthius and Denny Dillon) visiting a Planned Parenthood clinic; and, "The Virgin Search", a short film about NBC talent scouts searching for a female who has never had sex to be their newest castmember. Producer Jean Doumanian fought viciously to include the sketches in the live show (and was almost fired for wanting to air the "Virgin Search" short film because the censors at the time were offended by the scene where the talent scouts go to recruit a nun , but discover that she's not a virgin), and in the end, two out of the three pieces ("Our Front Door" and the Valley Girls at Planned Parenthood) were performed in that episode. The short film, "The Virgin Search" would emerge two weeks later in the Christmas episode hosted by David Carradine.
* In the premiere episode of the 1985-1986 season (hosted by Madonna with musical guest Simple Minds), the original opening where the new castmembers at the time (Joan Cusack, Robert Downey Jr., Nora Dunn, Anthony Michael Hall, Jon Lovitz, Dennis Miller, Randy Quaid, Terry Sweeney, and Danitra Vance) are all issued urine tests to check for drug use only aired once because the censors and network executives saw it to be "in bad taste." All reruns and syndicated versions cut out the opening and go straight to the opening sequence.
1990s * In 1994, SNL aired a sketch called "Canteen Boy Goes Camping", in which host Alec Baldwin played a pedophile scoutmaster who made sexual advances toward Adam Sandler's Canteen Boy character. This moment generated more hostile letters than any other sketch in the show's history due to audiences believing the sketch to be about pedophilia (despite that SNL once performed a recurring sketch called "Uncle Roy" about a pedophilic male babysitter in the 1970s and didn't receive the same reaction as the "Canteen Boy Goes Camping" sketch). Baldwin later returned to the show and explained that the sketch was done in innocence, as the Canteen Boy character was never intended to be a child. In fact, at the beginning of the sketch it says that Canteen Boy was 27 years old. That night, Baldwin invited Sandler out to "redo" the sketch. Sandler (in Canteen Boy character) said he was flattered by the scoutmaster's advances. However, again stressing he was of legal age, Canteen Boy, using his right to assert himself, stressed he was not interested in that kind of relations with the scoutmaster. Sandler and Baldwin bowed, and the audience laughed and applauded.
* In 1996, Rage Against the Machine planned to perform "Bulls on Parade," hanging inverted American flags from their amplifiers in protest of, then Republican presidential candidate, Steve Forbes, who was the host that night. However, the stage crew took the flags off, and cut the band's performance down to only one song instead of the normal two.
2000s * In 2006, the TV Funhouse Special aired several infamous animated sketches, though combined they only generated a handful of complaints on their original broadcast dates. They included: **A Hanna-Barbera-esque Michael Jackson cartoon where Michael Jackson is fitted with glasses to make his sham girlfriend Tara Reid look like Emmanuel Lewis from Webster (originally aired on the Cameron Diaz/Green Day episode from Season 30). **Shazzang: Another Hanna-Barbera-esque parody based on a little-known cartoon called Shazzan where a powerful genie brutally tortures and murders a jewel thief and his mother just to please his father (originally aired on the Will Ferrell/Queens of the Stone Age episode from Season 30). **Divertor: a superhero cartoon where the superhero diverts the media's attention away from political crises and economical issues in favor of celebrity scandals (aired on the Lindsay Lohan/Coldplay episode from Season 30). **The X-Presidents Fight The Constitution: The X-Presidents battle a sentient Constitution that comes to life after partisan rhetoric over what to do about Bill Clinton (this was during his impeachment trial for lying under oath about his affair with intern Monica Lewinsky), buggers former President Jimmy Carter, burns The Emancipation Proclamation (after which a white Senator (Strom Thurmond) breaks out a pair of shackles and attacks a black Senator, shouting, "Hoo-wee! You're mine, boy!") and shreds the Constitution to bits (originally aired on the Gwyneth Paltrow/Barenaked Ladies episode from Season 24). **Inside the Disney Vault: A faux Disney movie promo about two children who wish they could live in the Disney vault with all the classic Disney films. Mickey Mouse guides them through the vault as the children make several disturbing discoveries. Among them are: the cryogenically frozen heads of Walt Disney and Vivien Leigh; a kidnapped Jim Henson is bound and gagged for not selling the rights to his Muppets to the Disney corporation; records showing Walt Disney blacklisted some of his animators as communists during the 1950s; a scene from Who Framed Roger Rabbit where Jessica Rabbit's billowing skirt reveals she's wearing no underwear; and a director's cut version of Song of the South where Uncle Remus sings a version of "Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah" defaming blacks (originally aired on the Lindsay Lohan/Pearl Jam episode from Season 31). **Saddam and Osama: an anime-esque cartoon about the terrorist leaders defeating American forces. The skit contains many American pop culture references and unrelated segments featuring an Afghani man delighting over his heavenly gifts, including 72 Olsen twin virgins. Another unrelated segment is an announcement of Batman fighting "the Jew," "the Other Jew," and "the Little Old Jew" (The Joker, The Riddler, and The Penguin, respectively, all portrayed with big noses). (Originally aired on the Adrien Brody/Sean Paul and Wayne Wonder episode from Season 28.)
* Several Ambiguously Gay Duo cartoon clips (including Blow Hot, Blow Cold from Britney Spears' first hosting gig in Season 25 and Safety Tips from The Ambiguously Gay Duo from the Pamela Anderson/Rollins Band episode from Season 22).
* A pre-shot commercial segment parodies a model car called the "Mercury Mistress". The announcer in the short skit said it was the first car to have sex with and it showed numerous scenes with a man (Chris Parnell) penetrating his car with his pants down. It is never aired on reruns and it is the only skit to feature simulated sexual penetration and a blurred rubber opening vagina in the place where the lock on the center of the vehicle's trunk would normally be.
* A sketch aired on February 24, 2007 where Rainn Wilson (the host), Bill Hader, Jason Sudeikis, and Will Forte play four armed robbers who bring up shocking and disturbing memories while listening to the Kenny Loggins's tune "Danny's Song". Bill Hader's character remembers hearing the song when he spent a day in the park with his father and thought for the first time, "I have a dad" and not, "I have a dad with Down's Syndrome". Despite being the less shocking than the other three stories (Jason's character hearing the song when he came home from the emergency room after his uncle bit him in the crotch at a petting zoo, Will's character first hearing the song as he burns down the grade school he teaches at, and Rainn's character hearing the song as he's having anonymous sex in the restroom of a Bennigan's at the Newark Airport and laughing so hard, the urine from his partner came out of his nose), the March 31 and July 14 reruns of this episode censors out Bill Hader saying "Down's Syndrome" with a deep, screeching bleep after NBC received complaints over the use of the phrase.
* On April 14, 2007, an SNL Digital Short titled "The Shooting," which parodied the second season finale of The O.C., was aired, in which several characters (most notably Kristen Wiig's character) shot each other. This short gained some notoriety two days after it aired, in the wake of the Virginia Tech massacre and got into more trouble when it was revealed that the song (Imogen Heap's "Hide and Seek") was used in the sketch without permission. Despite these controversies, this sketch aired intact when the Shia LaBeouf/Avril Lavigne episode reaired in August 2007 and on the Best of 2006/2007 DVD for Saturday Night Live.
Miscues and mistakes 1970s
*In one of Candice Bergen's sketches from 1976, she plays a character named Fern and Gilda Radner plays a character named Lisa. The sketch is supposed to be a paid announcement for a group advocating the right to extreme stupidity. Midway through the sketch, Bergen goofs and calls Radner "Fern". Realizing she's made a mistake, she says "I mean...", begins to laugh, and finishes with "...whatever your name is." Radner then turns to deliver her scripted monologue to the audience, ad-libbing in the beginning, "You know, we all can't be brainy like Fern here". Later in the monologue, Radner ad-libs "and I should know—and so should Fern—because we are extremely stupid people," causing Bergen to collapse in hysterical laughter.
*In 1978, host Milton Berle delivered an over-long, rapid-fire monologue and, to cut him off, castmember Bill Murray claims he dropped a pipe loudly backstage to distract Berle and give the director an opening to go to commercial. This can be heard clearly on-air, and Berle was clearly thrown, though he did ad-lib, "NBC just dropped another show." The director flashed the "applause" sign for the audience and cut off Berle's mic to go to commercial. However, Berle can still be seen and heard yelling to someone off-stage, "What the hell is this...?" According to both the Saturday Night: A Backstage History and Live From New York books as well as a September 2006, Lorne Michaels interview by Michael Eisner on Eisner's Conversations program, Berle asked for the clang, to allow him an ad-lib.
1980s *In a sketch from Eddie Murphy's tenure as cast member (Louis Gossett Jr. as host), The two of them are going through their lines when Murphy stops, looks at the camera, and says "This scene bites!" At that point, he and Gossett Jr. exit the stage, and the show goes to confused commercial. It was the last sketch before the goodnights, so it's not surprising that the "scene bit".
*In a sketch from Eddie Murphy's second hosting stint in 1984 called "Black History Minute", Eddie Murphy plays a militant professor who is delivering a monologue about George Washington Carver. Upon flubbing the line "soil rotation" (saying instead "soul rotation") and hearing some muffled laughter in the audience, Murphy said in a mock-threatening shout "So I messed up. Shut up!" The audience then roared with laughter to which Murphy (still in character) said "stop laughin' before y'all make me smile". He later in the same sketch misspoke the line, "This tastes pretty good, man"; he immediately then said to the audience, "Yep, keep on smilin'."
1990s *In 1990, host Tom Hanks plays a character who always repeats everything he hears, i.e. saying it twice. After receiving psychiatric help from Phil Hartman's character, he returns home and, with some effort manages to only say things once. However, when his wife (played by Victoria Jackson) tells him that their house is made out of exploding wood, Hanks demonstrates his character's effort required to not repeat this by contorting his mouth and face for several seconds. During this time, Victoria Jackson loses control and begins laughing hysterically, lowering her head and covering her face with her hands as the audience applauds.
*In one of Chris Farley's Motivational Speaker Sketches, he is speaking to two children, played by David Spade and Christina Applegate. After talking to Spade's character about his wanting to be a writer, Applegate is seen to be resisting laughter. Farley asks her what she wants to do when she grows up, in which she responds with "...I want to live in a van down by the river!" Going with the flow, Farley replies "Well, you'll have plenty ot time to think about living in a van down by the river, when you... livin' in a van down by the river! ", which is met with grand laughter by the audience. Later on, Farley falls through the coffee table, which was not intended to break. The rest of the cast makes a sudden move towards Farley as if to assist; however, he is unhurt. Spade is seen covering the look of shock on his face with his hands and later to contain his laughter.
2000s *In the famous "More Cowbell" skit, Jimmy Fallon is seen cracking up and cannot deliver one of his lines correctly due to laughter (one of many example's of Fallon's inability to keep a straight face in multiple skits)
*The May 1, 2004 episode hosted by Lindsay Lohan housed what is one of the most well-known instances of SNL actors breaking character. A sketch centering around a depressing woman named Debbie Downer (portrayed by Rachel Dratch) had several miscues and flubbed lines, and, by the end of the sketch, nearly every cast member involved, as well as Lohan herself, was unable to properly deliver their lines due to laughing hysterically.
* In 2004, musical guest Ashlee Simpson became the first SNL musical guest to walk offstage when a pre-recorded backing track for the wrong song was accidentally played. To many it appeared that Simpson had been lip synching; the singer later claimed she was using a backing track due to acid reflux. The incident was the subject of widespread coverage in the news and was mentioned several times again on SNL, such as in the cold opening of the Kate Winslet/Eminem episode where Osama bin Laden (played by Seth Meyers) complains about how Americans are so immoral that they hire lip-synching pop singers to perform on live television and in a Weekend Update joke told by Tina Fey, "This Tuesday in Japan, Ashlee Simpson collapsed, and was not able to perform at her concert. However, the show went on as planned." Simpson returned as a musical guest in October 2005, mentioning that she wrote the song she was performing based on her previous SNL experience. She performed without incident.
* On December 3, 2005, host Dane Cook purposely threw himself onto a break-away table after it failed to break the first time.
* One week later on December 10, 2005, host Alec Baldwin performed a sketch spoofing his famous monologue from Glengarry Glen Ross, in which he explained to a group of toy-making elves the need to "Always Be Cobbling". He instead mistakenly spoke the true line of his monologue, "Always Be Closing", twice before catching his mistake. The audience roared with laughter and fellow performers (especially Seth Meyers) noticeably laughed aloud.