(Hill) – The latest cold opening of “Saturday Night Live” recreates President Donald Trump’s speech at Rose Garden, where he wiped out global tariffs and elicited criticism from the show’s one-off host.
In narration for the introduction, the narrator declared that the tariffs “like everything else in his presidency so far, it was a complete home run.”
Trump, played by James Austin Johnson, continued to announce tariffs. He said it was his favorite saying, “It stands for tariff ideas.” It was like a “sequence of random numbers, like numbers on the computer screen of “Severance.”
He also said tariffs are an effort to “against the Great American Presion” or “magda.”
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“What do you know? It’ll be GR – it’ll be better than great,” Johnson’s Trump said. “It’s a great, incredible depression and something you’ve never seen before.”
Skit also referenced Trump’s efforts to collect taxes on unmanned or sparsely populated islands with little or no exports.
“There is no country safe from my customs,” Johnson said. “I have tariffs on islands that are not human inhabited.”
Johnson’s Trump also criticized trade with other countries, including South Africa.
“They didn’t even send us one good thing,” he said before Mike Myers’ Elon Musk was wearing a cheese hat, a reference to Musk’s recent visit to Wisconsin. The tech billionaire flew to Wisconsin on Sunday before the state Supreme Court election to hand out a million-dollar checks to multiple voters who signed a petition against the “activist judge.”
“What do you think of me?” asked Musk of Myers.
“That was from when I was about to buy an election in Wisconsin,” he added. “I’m an idiot. I should have just bought Wisconsin.”
“All of a sudden, no one likes Tesla cars,” he continued. “So I asked myself why. Then I answered myself: for me.” He continued, playing a video introducing the new Tesla, which he described as “the first electric car in history is totally self-wasteful.”
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Reports of vandalism at Tesla dealers have skyrocketed more widely, especially since Musk was in the spotlight alongside Trump, when Government Efficiency (DOGE) began funding federal workers and foreign aid programs.
In response to the skit, Musk wrote on social media platform X that SNL “isn’t funny for a long time.”
“They’re parody of themselves,” the one-off “SNL” host wrote.
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