‘Saturday Night Live’ plays its trump card

TV show earns highest ratings since 2012 with contentious appearance of Donald Trump


News Desk November 09, 2015
The Republican presidential frontrunner took a dig at himself on the show. PHOTO: FILE

Donald Trump’s appearance as a guest host on Saturday Night Live (SNL) helped the TV comedy sketch show earn its highest viewership ratings since 2012, the NBC television network said on Sunday.

The show, which came under fire from Latino groups for inviting the blunt Republican presidential frontrunner to host, garnered a 6.6 rating in the 56 US markets measured by Nielsen Media Research, NBC said in a statement. The Trump show was the highest rating for SNL since January 7, 2012, when an episode hosted by retired basketball star Charles Barkley pulled in a 7.0 rating, said the Comcast Corp-owned network.

Saturday’s rating was about 50% higher than the season premiere on October 3 when Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton made a cameo appearance. Trump’s stint received an avalanche of advance publicity when Hispanic groups objected to NBC’s decision to invite the billionaire developer, saying it was legitimising his ‘racist’ views on immigration.

'Nice guy' Trump hosts 'Saturday Night Live'

Even so, many critics say the SNL skits featuring Trump didn’t quite live up to all the hype. “Viewers tuned in to see a joyless, nearly unfunny show, which ended in a curtain call with Mr Trump and the cast that played like a hostage video,” wrote New York Times television critic James Poniewozik.

Before the show, Latino activists demonstrated outside NBC’s New York studios at 30 Rockefeller Plaza. The former star of reality TV show The Apprentice outraged many Americans in June when he described Mexican immigrants as rapists and drug smugglers. While he made a crackdown on illegal immigration a main campaign theme, he has also said many of his employees are Hispanics and that they love him.

The show made reference to the controversy when comedian Larry David, in an obvious send-up, called out “Donald Trump is a racist” to an apparently unfazed Trump. David then told the host that he was seeking a $5,000 bounty that a website called ‘DeportRacism.com’ promised to pay for on-air heckling.

Donald Trump — breaking free of political correctness

Trump told CNN on Sunday that he vetoed some of the more risqué skits and, earlier in the week, told Fox News it was because he didn’t want to alienate voters in Iowa, home of the first event in the 2016 presidential nominating contest. REUTERS

Published in The Express Tribune, November 10th, 2015.

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