* **Q: What was the SNL sketch about?
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Entertainment / Television
"Saturday Night Live" returned from hiatus, diving straight into recent political headlines with a cold open sketch lampooning the reported Signal group chat mishap involving Trump administration officials. The sketch featured host Mikey Ma...
The SNL sketch opened with three teenage girls (Madison, Nwodim, Sherman) exchanging typical high school gossip via text, only to be interrupted by unexpected messages from government officials. Andrew Dismukes, as Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, casually dropped "FYI: Green light on Yemen right now" and "Tomahawks airborne 15 minutes ago" into the chat, complete with flag, fire, and eggplant emojis.
The confusion escalated as Bowen Yang's VP JD Vance chimed in from Greenland, sharing sensitive information about CIA agents, and Marcello Hernandez's Marco Rubio offered to share the "real JFK files." The sketch leaned into the real-life blunder where The Atlantic's editor, Jeffrey Goldberg, was mistakenly added to the actual government chat. In the SNL version, after the officials realize they've added teenagers, Yang's Vance remarks, "Could be worse, you could add the editor of the Atlantic again," only for Mikey Day, playing Goldberg, to reply, "You did," before asking Hegseth to "lose my number." The sketch concluded with Hernandez's Rubio attempting to get the girls' details for ICE, adding another layer of absurdity.
The real incident, reported by The Atlantic, involved officials discussing the timing of March 15 airstrikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen. National Security Adviser Mike Waltz reportedly set up the chat and accidentally invited Goldberg, who subsequently published the exchange, causing significant embarrassment for the administration.
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