View Full Version : Saturday Night Live vs. Mad TV


ckrtpametulia
06-05-2001, 10:53 PM
whos better

Madness
06-06-2001, 01:47 AM
SNL...but honestly, it's not that funny anymore. The only thing I really like now on SNL is the Weekend Update. Tina Fey and Jimmy Fallon are a lot better than Colin Quinn, I think. The Howard Stern show ain't too bad either at times.

SatansOffspring
06-06-2001, 02:11 AM
Mad Tv is soooooo much funnier than SNL. all of the characters on Mad are funny ( ALL OF THEM) but only some of them are funny on SNL id say about 2%. Cheri Oteri and The woman who plays Celene Dion. they are the funniest and the black guy who plays Opera and Star Jones. But Aries Spears ( Madtv) does Oprah way better. Sorry SNL but you suck!!!!!

callmetootie
06-06-2001, 07:35 AM
I think that SNL is kind of better, but MAD TV had gotten better and better by each show.

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Andrew Carden

Meg07945
06-06-2001, 06:51 PM
Mad TV is soo funny!! But I like SNL better..Weekend update is my fave part too! I like that and all they musical guests...

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~Meg~
*Opportunity does not knock, and then ring the doorbell, and then knock again, and then leave a note that says, "Sorry I missed you" and then call you on the phone.*
+Life's not a garden, so stop acting like a ho+

factsoflife
06-06-2001, 08:08 PM
The reason why MAD TV is better, is because it is newer, and fresher with younger cast members, whereas SNL has been on for some 30ish years. plus when Cheri Oteri left that did away with half the shows characters, EI- Simmer Down lady, Cheerleaders, The couple that makes out and gets their friends to, and of course the always funny, Morning Laete ( with Will Farelle) . And the depaturer of Molly Shannon is going to kill the series, i will always miss MARY KATHERIEN GALLAGHER.

TMC
05-18-2016, 05:32 PM
http://www.avclub.com/article/read-inside-story-madtv-foxs-rowdy-lowbrow-snl-kno-236978

For a while in the mid-1990s, NBC’s Saturday Night Live was slumping badly, and Fox sensed an opportunity. The upstart fourth network green-lit a weekly, hour-long sketch comedy show vaguely based on Mad, the venerable humor magazine that had been running since 1952. The publication’s founder, William M. Gaines, hated television and never approved a small-screen adaptation, but after he died in 1992, music mogul Quincy Jones swooped in and bought the rights. The resulting series, MadTV (http://www.avclub.com/article/imadtvi-to-stop-bringing-laughs-8336), spent 14 years on the Fox late-night schedule from 1995 to 2009 as a cheaper, raunchier alternative to SNL without ever really changing the game as Fox had hoped. Now, as The CW prepares to launch its reboot (http://www.avclub.com/article/cw-reviving-madtv-sketch-players-old-and-new-235116) of the series, Vulture’s Tim Greiving presents an engaging oral history of MadTV (http://www.vulture.com/2016/05/oral-history-madtv.html) with quotes from the people who made the show happen, including cast member Keegan-Michael Key and writer Patton Oswalt. Other interviewees include long-time cast members Mo Collins, Nicole Sullivan, Will Sasso, Michael McDonald, and Alex Borstein, best known for her “Ms. Swan” character.

From the start, MadTV was more diverse than the traditionally waspy SNL, and its humor was broader, ruder, and less intellectual. And MadTV had its sights set firmly on SNL and its large, enviable audience. Pretty much everyone interviewed for the article agrees on those particular facts. But from there on, opinions differ as to the show’s tone and content. Blaine Capatch, a writer for the series, maintains that the producers of MadTV “weren’t trying to offend anyone.” Sullivan, on the other hand, contends that “MadTV was not afraid to be mean. That was our goal.” As evidence, she cites a particularly vicious Caroline In The City spoof that definitely did offend actress Lea Thompson, who was portrayed as a vacuous ninny.

So was the show edgy or not? In this article, it depends who is talking. And sometimes, it depends which era of MadTV is being discussed. As with any long-running comedy, different regimes of writers and cast members came through, each with its own agenda and its own idea of what’s funny. Fox never owned the show, so after after a successful launch in 1995, the network bosses largely gave up on promoting the series. The show survived for years with very little support from Fox. What the show did have, however, was a very busy and hands-on censor who wanted to ensure that the comedy didn’t get too raunchy. There is an amusing anecdote involving Kids In The Hall veteran Scott Thompson and the term “butt plug.” By and large, however, MadTV was intended as a comedy show for working-class viewers who just wanted to laugh and not have to think too much about what they were watching. If that meant silly accents and sillier costumes, so be it. Most of the show’s veterans seem comfortable with that legacy.

AMackII
06-22-2019, 01:20 AM
SNL, It was more funnier during the 1990s

MA
06-22-2019, 06:05 AM
SNL

OH Nuts!
06-22-2019, 06:32 AM
SNL, esp. in the early years, when it was pure genius

MA
06-22-2019, 07:15 AM
SNL, esp. in the early years, when it was pure genius

I agree with you on that.

OH Nuts!
06-22-2019, 07:39 AM
Yes, some of those early sketches were a real hoot!

tlc38tlc38
06-22-2019, 10:24 AM
MADtv

Love Ms Swan!

Little_stinker
06-22-2019, 02:29 PM
What about Fridays, late night on ABC?