Killing Satoshi, an upcoming biopic about the elusive creator of Bitcoin, will reportedly rely heavily on artificial intelligence to generate locations and adjust actors’ performances, Variety reports. The film was announced in 2025 as being directed by Doug Liman (The Bourne Identity, The Edge of Tomorrow) and starring Casey Affleck and Pete Davidson in undisclosed roles, but its connection to overhyped technology was previously understood to begin and end with cryptocurrency.
According to a UK casting notice viewed by Variety, the producers of Killing Satoshi reserve the right to “change, add to, take from, translate, reformat or reprocess” actors’ performances, using “generative artificial intelligence (GAI) and/or machine learning technologies.” No digital replicas will be created of performers, but it sounds like plenty of other AI-driven tweaks are on the table. The production’s use of AI will also extend to the setting of its shoots, per Variety’s source. Killing Satoshi will be shot on a “markerless performative capture stage” and things like backgrounds and locations will be entirely generated by AI.
You guess is as good as mine as to why a film about blockchain technology needs to be filmed this way, but Doug Liman has been connected with plenty of unusual projects in the past, including a rumored Tom Cruise film that was supposed to film on the International Space Station. Killing Satoshi will be far less practical in comparison, and walking a much finer line of what’s acceptable in the entertainment industry.
A major sticking point in SAG-AFTRA’s 2023 contract negotiations was guaranteeing protections for actors who could be replaced by AI. Equity, the union representing actors in the UK, is currently negotiating protections for members that are concerned that AI could be used to reproduce their likenesses and voices and let studios use them without their consent.
Pete Davidson and girlfriend Elsie Hewitt are officially parents.
The Saturday Night Live alum and Hewitt welcomed their baby girl, Scottie Rose Hewitt Davidson, on Dec. 12, they announced on Thursday.
“Our perfect angel girl arrived 12/12/2025,” Hewitt, 29, captioned several photos of the new family. “My best work yet, i am absolutely overflowing with love and gratitude and disbelief.”
Hewitt added a quick message from Davidson, 32, writing: “wu tang forever.”
Davidson’s daughter’s first name appears to honour his late father, Scott Matthew Davidson, a New York City firefighter who died while responding to the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
The post included photos of Davidson and Hewitt with their baby. The couple kept Scottie’s face private by adding a white heart emoji over it in each photo.
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“Who else had to get a wisdom tooth removed directly from hospital the day after they gave birth,” Hewitt wrote in a post on her Instagram stories.
Hewitt confirmed the reports in an Instagram post, which included a picture of a sonogram alongside the jovial caption, “welp now everyone knows we had sex.”
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Shortly after the couple announced the news, Davidson told E! News he felt “very lucky and very, very happy” about becoming a dad. He also noted that he was eager to “take care of something and show it the childhood I didn’t have.”
“I assume you just try to give them what you didn’t have,” he added.
According to People, the couple have been living together in Davidson’s native New York City for a few months.
“They’re splitting their time between Pete’s house in upstate New York and a brownstone they recently started renting in Brooklyn,” a source told the outlet in May. “They’re so happy together and doing great.”
The baby news came two months after the pair made their red carpet debut at the 13th Annual Blossom Ball at the Pierre Hotel in New York City.
Elsie Hewitt and Pete Davidson attend the 13th Annual Blossom Ball at the Pierre Hotel on May 15, 2025 in New York City.
Theo Wargo / Getty Images
The former Saturday Night Live cast member shared his desire to start a family during an appearance on Kevin Hart’s talk show, Hart to Heart, in 2022.
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“My favourite thing ever, which I’ve yet to achieve, is I wanna have a kid,” Davidson said.
“It’s super corny, but it would be so fun to dress up a little dude.
“I’m so excited for that chapter so that’s kind of what I’m just preparing for now, is trying to be, like, good as a dude and develop and get better so when that happens, it’s just easier.”
From whimsical thought to success, the idea developed while stoned is paying off with major sponsorship.
Sometimes those “what if?” ideas starting mid-sesh actually turn into something brilliant. As an example, the idea developed while stoned is paying off for there buddies. Just ask Pete Davidson and Colin Jost. What began as a hazy, half-joking idea while consuming cannabis — to buy an old Staten Island Ferry — has now become one of the best “high-deas” to ever float into reality.
Back in 2022, Davidson and his pal Colin Jost impulsively bought a decommissioned Staten Island ferry for $280,000. At the time, even their Saturday Night Live castmates weren’t sure if it was a punchline or a midlife crisis in motion. Davidson himself admitted it wasn’t exactly a sober moment of inspiration. “It was definitely one of those ideas that seemed genius at the time,” he joked later.
But here’s the twist: the offbeat purchase just turned into a marketing goldmine. The ferry — once destined for scrap — is now being transformed into a floating entertainment venue. And in the latest proof this high-idea turned high-value, Nike just inked a deal to advertise on it. Yes, Nike. The global sports giant saw enough cool factor (and cultural relevance) in Davidson’s drifting dream to climb aboard.
In fiscal year 2025 (ended May 31, 2025), Nike spent $4.689 billion on marketing, which they refer to as “demand creation expense”. In fiscal year 2024, the amount spent was $4.285 billion.
It’s a perfect example of how cannabis-fueled creativity can sometimes spark surprisingly good business instincts. The old ferry, now renamed the Titanic 2 (because of course it is), is set to host comedy shows, concerts, and exclusive events — think floating SNL energy with a downtown edge. Davidson and Jost’s offbeat vision could soon be New York’s most unlikely hotspot.
And while the move might have seemed reckless, it reflects something larger happening in pop culture: the normalization of cannabis and its creative influence. For decades, cannabis users were dismissed as lazy or unrealistic. Yet some of today’s best ideas — from tech startups to entertainment ventures — have emerged from relaxed, imaginative brainstorming sessions.
Pete Davidson’s ferry adventure proves that not every “stoned idea” sinks. Some actually sail — and make money while doing it.
Pete Davidson is predicting that Walton Goggins will be the next on the rise celebrity that the internet will “turn” on, similar to what he says has happened to Pedro Pascal.
The former Saturday Night Live cast member appeared on Theo Von’s This Past Weekend podcast, where they discussed how Hollywood can “build you up,” which can sometimes lead to a fall from grace in the eyes of fans. Davidson specifically cited Pascal as an example of an actor who has endured a sudden shift in public perception.
“Look at Pedro Pascal right now. Fucking two years ago he’s a hardworking, great actor … He’s worked so hard and has been a struggling actor, [then] fucking blows up so fucking hard, everyone’s like, ‘Daddy, daddy! Yeah, daddy, daddy,’” he said. “And then a year later, he’s, like, in everything now ’cause he’s hot and big and everyone’s like, ‘Go the fuck away, dude.’”
Davidson continued, arguing that “you got to give someone time to adjust to that new level of fame. He’s been banging at it for 30 years, and now he’s learning how to go get a cup of coffee or deal with someone that taps you on the shoulder while you have your earbuds in and freaks you out. You got to give that guy a fucking second to, like, adjust.”
He then threw out The White Lotus star as the next actor who may endure similar treatment to that of Pascal.
“They’re gonna do it with Walton Goggins, [he] will be next,” he predicted. “It’s like, we build everybody up and now it’s so fast to turn. It’s within months.”
Davidson himself endured a swift rise to acclaim, and he hasn’t shied away from calling the media out for its “sexualization” of him following his relationship with Ariana Grande.
“I brought a lot of pop culture into the show, and I made it sort of a tabloid-y, trendy thing and I was embarrassed by it,” he said of his time on SNL. “Nobody talked about any of the work I was doing, they were like, ‘Oh, that’s the fuck stick.’ That hurt.”
Pete Davidson knows a thing or two about the fickle nature of celebrity. While appearing on Theo Von’s podcast This Past Weekend, the SNL vet opened up about the negative side of being famous, using Eddington star Pedro Pascal as a prime example of the unpredictable nature of fame and how people “can’t wait” to turn on their favorite stars.
Davidson highlighted Pascal’s journey from struggling actor to internet heartthrob, and the public’s subsequent reaction. “Fucking two years ago, he’s a hardworking, great actor,” Davidson said of Pascal. “Everyone was, like, ‘He’s worked so hard and has been a struggling actor.’ Fucking blows up so fucking hard. Everyone’s, like, ‘Daddy, daddy! Yeah, daddy, daddy.’ Then a year later, he’s in everything now because he’s hot and big—and everyone’s, like, ‘Go the fuck away, dude.’”
“You got to give someone time to adjust to that new level of fame,” Davidson continued. “He’s been banging at it for 30 years, and now he’s learning how to go get a cup of coffee or, like, deal with someone that taps you on the shoulder while you have your earbuds in and freaks you out. You got to give that guy a fucking second to, like, adjust.”
It sounds like Davidson is speaking from personal experience. The actor went from unknown comedian to overnight celebrity after being cast on Saturday Night Live and engaging in high-profile relationships with stars like Ariana Grande,Kate Beckinsale, and Kim Kardashian. Now, the 31-year-old is expecting his first child with his partner, model Elsie Hewitt.
“It’s, like, we build everybody up. It’s, like, so fast to turn [on the celebrity],” Davidson said. Von concurred, adding: “The turn is crazy.” The comedian also has an idea of which beloved actor will be next to be put through the gauntlet of the internet. “They’re going to do it with Walton Goggins next,” Davidson said. “It’s, like, within months.”
Pete Davidson has cancelled all of his upcoming comedy shows amid a report that he checked himself into a wellness facility for mental health treatment.
A source told People that the Saturday Night Live alum is focusing on his sobriety and mental wellbeing with the support of his loved ones, who are proud that he’s taking this step to continue taking care of himself.
The source added that Davidson, 30, “will often check himself into rehab to work on these issues.”
Davidson’s Ticketmaster page shows that all eight of his upcoming shows have been cancelled, including one just one week away.
“Unfortunately, the Event Organizer has had to cancel your event,” reads a message on the webpage for each axed show.
“I’ve been having a lot of problems,” he said on Marc Maron’s WTF podcast at the time. “This whole year has been a f**king nightmare. This has been the worst year of my life, getting diagnosed with this and trying to figure out how to learn with this and live with this.”
In 2019, Davidson cracked jokes on SNL about going to rehab, saying he was taking “the kind of vacation where insurance pays for some of it, and they take your phone and shoelaces and you have roommates but it still costs like 100 grand.”
The source told People that Davidson most recently underwent treatment in the summer of 2023 for issues related to post-traumatic stress disorder and borderline personality disorder.
In July 2023, Davidson was ordered to complete 50 hours of community service after he drove his car into a home in Beverly Hills. The Bupkis actor was charged with reckless driving.
Davidson addressed the 2023 stint in rehab during a comedy show with John Mulaney and Jon Stewart in September that year.
“I am fresh out of rehab, everyone,” he told the crowd. “I got that post-rehab glow. Seventh time’s the charm!”
SNL’s Pete Davidson addresses Israel-Gaza conflict in show’s cold open
Ariana Grande’s dating history is quite glam, as the actress was in relationships with the A-listers of the industry. From going public with Graham Philips to marrying Dalton Gomez, the fans have been all in for Grande’s love life. Here’s a look at the list of men Just Like Magic singer has dated over her years in the industry. From dainty love affairs to hurtful breakups and a divorce, the actress has yet again found herself happy with her new boyfriend. Find out who it is.
Graham Phillips
Ariana Grande’s first public relationship after gaining fame was with Graham Phillips. The couple started dating in 2008 after meeting on the sets of a Broadway play. The duo sat down and wrote a love song together, Stick Around. The duo were clicked kissing each other on the sets, and that confirmed the relationship. After dating for almost three years, Grande and Phillips parted ways in December 2011.
Jai Brooks
Ariana Grande dated Jai Brooks for two years, from 2012 to 2014. The duo met online and connected instantly. The actress seemed happy in the relationship until they broke up in 2014. Soon after their breakup, Brooks claimed that Grande cheated on him. He posted a long note that read, “Yes, I was cheated on. Yes, it does suck. Yes, I was left for another man. Once you are cheated on, you should never go back, and I did because I wasn’t ready to give up on love and something that was everything to me.”
Nathan Sykes
Ariana Grande had a crush on Nathan Sykes for a long time. She first saw Sykes on a red carpet at an award ceremony and started gushing about him. The Wicked star collaborated with the British singer in a music video for Almost Is Never Enough. Soon the duo started dating, but ended the relationship in just five months of getting in. The reason for the breakup was stated to be distance.
The longtime friends, Big Sean and Ariana Grande, began dating in mid 2014, after collaborating on one of Grande’s singles, Right There. The duo were seen kissing in a movie theater and later clicked ringing in the new year’s. However, their love story did not get a happy ending as the couple broke up in 2015. In a joint statement that the rapper and the singer released, they stated that they “care deeply for each other and remain close friends.”
Ricky Alvarez
Ariana Grande was involved with a background dancer, Ricky Alvarez, in 2015. While the couple were very tight lipped about their romance, the actress addressed her dating life in an interview with Billboard for her cover story. She said, “We’re happy. I’m a very happy girl. I have a healthy life right now, and I think that’s all anyone cares to know. The end.” Grande composed the song Moonlight for Alvarez. The singer’s friend, Victoria Monet, shared that Alvarez is a great guy. She revealed, “He waited to kiss her for a long time, and she was really impressed. He’s such a gentleman, and the song is a great little bookmark of the start of their relationship.” The duo parted ways in 2016.
Mac Miller
Mac Miller and Ariana Grande collaborated on a song in 2013 and later in 2016. They went public with their relationship in 2016. The singer confirmed her relationship via Instagram, where she posted a picture of the couple hugging on the floor with the caption, “babbyyyy.” However, in May 2018, Grande broke up with Miller, with the reason being unknown.
Pete Davidson
After her breakup with Miller, Ariana Grande dated Pete Davidson. The couple made it official on social media by posting their pictures in the Harry Potter themed robes. Davidson also shared a picture of his new neckline tattoo, which was about the Don’t Look Up actress. The two split in 2018. A source close to them shared that it was all happening way too soon.
Mikey Foster
Mikey Foster and Ariana Grande collaborated on a track, Boyfriend, after which the fans were curious about the two dating each other. The music video also had the two kissing on screen. While the relationship lasted for nine months, an insider revealed, “Ariana and Mikey were a fling that was fun, but it wasn’t ever going to lead into something super serious. Ariana really liked Mikey, but she wasn’t head over heels over him.”
Dalton Gomez
Ariana Grande and Dalton Gomez started dating in March 2020. Gomez is into the real estate business, and the two got engaged a few months later. Ariana and Dalton got married in 2021 in an intimate ceremony with their family and friends present. “It was tiny and intimate—less than 20 people. The room was so happy and full of love. The couple and both families couldn’t be happier,” a member of Grande’s management team confirmed. Within two years of the marriage, the duo filed for divorce in 2023.
He’s Staten Island royalty at this point. Pete Davidson’s net worth is an impressive culmination of his comedy career.
Rising up from the New York City comedy scene, Davidson landed his first big break as a cast member on Saturday Night Live at the young age of 20. He was part of the show for eight seasons, running from 2014 to 2022. Since his departure, he wrote and starred in The King of Staten Island, based off his life growing up in the New York City borough and dealing with the death of his father who died during the 9/11 attacks.
He’s also been part of A24’s Bodies, Bodies, Bodies his own Peacock series Bupkis which is said to be a heightened and exaggerated portrayal of his life.
Pete Davidson’s net worth is reportedly around $8 million, according to Celebrity Net Worth. His Bupkis salary is reported to be around $500,000, according to Variety.
Pete Davidson’s SNL salary varied throughout his time as a castmember. When a cast member joins the cast in their first year as a featured player, they are paid $7,000 per episode according to Celebrity Net Worth. There are 21 episodes per season (excluding when COVID-19 lockdowns were in place in 2020 and during the SAG-AFTRA/Writers’ Guild Strike of 2023), so starter salaries totals to $147,000 per season. Second-year cast members make $8,000 per episode, or $168,000 per season. If a cast member makes it to their fifth season, they make $15,000 per episode, or $315,000 per season. Since he was on for quite a while and definitely one of the most prominent cast members on the show, his salary was definitely up there.
For other sources of income, Davidson sometimes extensively tours. When Jimmy Fallon asked who paid the bill at Kid Cudi’s infamous birthday dinner, Pete admitted that he did and then when Kanye West came around, he told his touring agent to book more shows because the rapper kept ordering the expensive items.
As to some shenanigans he’s been up to with fellow Staten Island-er Colin Jost, the SNL co-stars bought a de-commissioned Staten Island Ferry for $280,000 which they plan to revamp into an entertainment boat.
“I have no idea what’s going on with that thing,” he said when he was asked about it on the red carpet of Transformers: Rise Of The Beasts. “Me and Colin were very stoned a year ago and bought a ferry. And we’re figuring it out.”
Seth Meyers grilled him about his decision and sardonically asked if they thought the whole thing through. “We have to, ’cause we’re in the hole,” Davidson replied. “Colin called me, and he’s like, ‘Hey, can you hop on this call about the ferry?’ I was like, ‘We’re still doing that thing?’ He’s like, ‘Yeah, this is pretty serious.’ And it is! I had no idea, I just saw a link and sent a deposit, and now I’m stuck with a f–kin’ boat.”
Pete also dabbles in some bar ownership is a part owner of the New York City bar Pebble Bar which is close to SNL‘s home at Rockefeller Center. Other celebs who invest and own the bar include Mark Ronson and actors Nicholas Braun, Justin Theroux and fellow SNL alum Jason Sudeikis.
As for real estate, remember when he was living in his mom’s basement? He reportedly bought his mom a $1.3 million house in Staten Island, and late bought himself a $1.2 million condo a few blocks from his mom’s place. He’s since moved on up to the DUMBO neightborhood of Brooklyn where his apartment costs a total of $30K a month.
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Toward the end of 2020, the only thing more pervasive than COVID-19 was “WAP” by Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion. A song whose prowess carried over into early 2021, just as coronavirus did. At that time, TikTok was also blowing up more than ever. In large part thanks to “at-home culture” “thriving.” When corona first hit at the beginning of 2020, Megan Thee Stallion was having a moment all her own thanks to the “Savage” challenge that went viral on the app. A detail that also comes into play during Dumb Money, when a GameStop employee named Marcos Barcia (Anthony Ramos) trolls his boss, Brad (Dane DeHaan), after the latter tells him that while he can’t give him an advance on his paycheck, he can compete to win “ten labor hours” (presumably, that means ten hours’ worth of wages) by participating in a TikTok lip sync contest.
This, of course, happens after “WAP” soundtracks the intro to Dumb Money, as Gabe Plotkin (Seth Rogen) frantically runs through his multimillion dollar property upon being told to “dial in” by fellow hedge fund CEO Steve Cohen (played by an ever-mutating Vincent D’Onofrio). It is Cohen who informs Plotkin that, “They’re holding” (in other words, they’ve got “diamond hands”). The “they” in this scenario being the proverbial “little guy.” The David to Wall Street’s Goliath. And the representative for all the Davids of the U.S. at large is Keith Gill (Paul Dano) a.k.a. Roaring Kitty a.k.a. Deep Fucking Value. Although a financial analyst at MassMutual by day, Keith’s real passion appears to be his post-work life as a “recreational YouTuber.” And it’s one he ostensibly disappears deeper into after the death of his sister, Sara (the cause of which we’re made to assume was from Covid).
This is what the viewer sees when the film cuts to six months earlier, smack-dab in the middle of 2020. Meeting with his friend and financial colleague, Briggsy (Deniz Akdeniz), Keith tells him about his decision to double down on investing in GameStop stock. Which Briggsy bills as “penny stocks” (but hey, those were good enough to make Jordan Belfort a rich man, n’est-ce pas?). Keith insists 1) GameStop is not that and 2) it’s highly undervalued. The obvious metaphor tying into how the “average joe” is consistently undervalued, too. And what business could be more tailored toward such a demographic than GameStop (apart from, say, Home Depot)? He then lays into Briggsy about how “Wall Street gets it wrong all the time. Look at ‘08. These guys, they have all the money, and the fancy degrees, and the political juice in the world and they get it wrong all the time.” Briggsy still warns, “You never bet against Wall Street.” Wall Street, too, is well-aware of its rigged system. The one that everybody on the inside benefits from, including men like Plotkin, Cohen and Ken Griffin (played to perfection by Nick Offerman), the eerily stoic (like, Dick Cheney-level) CEO of Citadel.
These are the men who refer to people like Keith as “dumb money” (the asterisk given with said title card of the movie being: “*individual investors often derided as ‘dumb money’ by Wall Street”). But Keith, at six months into 2020, is about to show these fucks just who, exactly, is the dumb one. Rallying his ever-burgeoning Reddit following, co-screenwriters Lauren Schuker Blum and Rebecca Angelo easily render Gill into a modern-day Robin Hood (and, to be sure, the app of the same name plays heavily into the narrative), taking money from the rich prematurely offloading their GameStop stocks (i.e., “shorting”) and putting it into the “pockets” of the everyman. Including essential health care workers like Jenny (America Ferrera, who is having her best year ever in the mainstream thanks toBarbie and this film, to boot). Among others like Marcos and college students Riri (Myha’la Herrold) and Harmony (Talia Ryder), these are the “subreddits” of the movie that thread together a larger point/theme. A point/theme that should be fairly overt to everyone by now, especially the rich (*cough cough* Wall Street finance bros). Then again, denial isn’t just a river in a hedge fund manager’s backyard.
And yet, although ignoring the contempt of the poor (read: everyone except the rich at this juncture) was relatively easy to do before 2020, this was a year when the internet became an echo chamber of unprecedented rage (markedly propelled by the filmed murder of George Floyd in late May—itself given a nod to in Dumb Money when Marcos passes a wall of graffiti that reads, “Fuck the Cops,” “Black Lives Matter” and “I Can’t Breathe”). A platform for expressing the extreme dissatisfaction that has been percolating for decades vis-à-vis capitalism and the lie it continues to sell about “everyone” having an “equal” chance to “get ahead” (this, of course, alluding to amassing as much money as possible, because that’s all we’ve been conditioned to believe really matters—and yes, people like Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion only perpetuate that message with their money-worshiping lyrics).
Never had it been made more patently clear that that simply wasn’t the case when coronavirus came to roost, and the accompanying lockdowns that classified the lowest-paid workers as essential compared to the richest “workers” who were told to “stay home, stay safe” made it laughably apparent just how unfair this whole game has been. While the fat cats were allowed to safely shelter in place in their posh homes, those paid in peanuts and balcony applause to risk their lives were made to suffer more than ever. And all without any promise of higher pay. So what is being “essential” really worth to he who controls the market? Because, in the end, no matter what, the Goliaths will be able to get what they want out of the Davids of the world, somehow managing to push them into submission one way or the other. In Gill and his acolytes’ case, that came in the form of shutting off access to the r/WallStreetBets forum under the guise of espousing “hateful and discriminatory content” that “violated Reddit’s code of conduct.” Ha! So it’s okay for the rich to make an entire affluent existence out of discriminating and being hateful toward the have-nots, but when the latter group tries to take a stand only then can it be called what it is? Oh hell no.
And when Keith commences his “thesis” on GameStop, he’s right to say, “The value is overlooked. Wall Street just doesn’t see it. Why?… The hedge funds are overlooking the value of the company just like they overlook the people who shop there.” The same kind of people who will continue to be overlooked now that the GameStop “fiasco” is “over.” And, in effect, it is. For the consequences, as usual, did not fit the crime (the SEC made no charges, not even against Ken Griffin). And people like Marcos, although slightly vindicated, continued to get the fuzzy end of the lollipop. Just as he does in having to ride the bus to work during the pandemic (GameStop found a loophole for staying open by declaring itself a purveyor of “essential products” to keep people connected while “working from home” [read: playing video games]). And when he finally gets off the bus to enter a deserted Detroit mall that houses, among other shops, a GameStop, the viewer can then see the ad on the side of the bus that reads: “Money burning a hole in your pocket? We’ll get you some more.” It’s only too appropriate when applied to the stock market as an American casino. Not to mention the way Americans in general are “incentivized” to operate on credit, to incur a negative balance that will keep them constantly on some lender’s hook. This ceaseless, propagandizing encouragement in the U.S. to borrow money and effectively gamble on yourself (knowing full well the system doesn’t want you to be a winner) is what’s at play in Dumb Money as well. Except the hedge fund fucks “in charge” were never banking on the everyman’s “deluded” self-confidence to actually pay off.
Never seeing the short squeeze on the horizon at all, despite how clear it was becoming throughout 2020. And yes, those reminded of The Big Short by the term “short squeeze” wouldn’t be wrong to make the correlation. After all, said 2015 movie also relates to rigged market fuckery and is based on a book: Michael Lewis’ The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine. Just as Dumb Money is based on Ben Mezrich’s 2021 tome (that’s right, the book came out the same year as the “incident” itself), The Antisocial Network: The GameStop Short Squeeze and the Ragtag Group of Amateur Traders That Brought Wall Street to Its Knees. While The Big Short was released almost a full decade after the debacle it addresses, Dumb Money is yet another prime example not just of the possibilities when “the plebes” are united in a cause, but also of the collective’s more recent obsession with looking back on the immediate past as though enough time has gone by to truly grasp the impact of what happened.
In the directorial care of Craig Gillespie (of Cruella and I, Tonya repute), that “grasp” becomes automatically comedic…even if it isn’t able to fully comprehend, so soon after it happened, the full weight of what occurred. The same goes for coronavirus itself, which most people have opted to sweep under the rug in terms of not wanting to remember “that time.” Preferring, instead, to pretend it never existed. In many respects, the attitude taken is tantamount to the cliche of everyone masturbating on a plane as they think it’s about to crash, only to realize the aircraft has righted itself and life will continue on for the time being. Afterward, everyone pretends that no one whipped it out in what they thought would be their final moments. That’s what coronavirus and its lockdown behavior mirrored.
As 2020 came to a close and corona continued to rage on, the sequestering required of people created an unprecedented online environment. A cauldron, if you will, for something like the subreddit of Wall Street Bets to brew into an entire movement. One that was, needless to say, a movement geared toward taking down the rich. Who had only gotten richer during the pandemic while the rest of the working-class “schmucks” lost their already paltry livelihood.
Perhaps what’s most striking of all about Dumb Money (even more than the hubris of the rich) is how it forces viewers to remember that “period” not so long ago. Capturing a moment when complacency had subsided, in large part, thanks to having so much “free time” to actually rail against the oppressor. And the last thing an oppressor wants is for his serfs to have too much free time to think about what a fucked system this is (glorified feudalism, in case you couldn’t guess). Hence, the urgency with which the masses were ferried back to “normal.” With nobody seeming all that concerned about acknowledging the shellshock of what transpired. Just as no one is with acknowledging the (enduring) lack of fairness in the stock market (“fair market” being an especial oxymoron here). No matter what kind of “movement” Keith may have started.
Per the film’s title card epilogue, that movement is summed up as follows: “Because of the GameStop rally, 85% of hedge funds now scour the internet to see where retail traders are investing. Fearing another short squeeze, funds have dramatically reduced their short positions. Wall Street will never be able to ignore the so-called ‘dumb money’ again.” Though that remains debatable.
And then there is the matter of refusing to acknowledge that what actually needs to change isn’t “leveling the playing field” so that broke asses can become just as cunty as richies, but blowing up the entire system, including its major capitalist trappings. I.e., the stock market.
“Saturday Night Live” returned Saturday for its 49th season after a six-month hiatus spurred by the writers’ strike to harrowing developments in the Israel-Hamas war, beginning with a cold open by comedian and former “SNL” cast member Pete Davidson.
Davidson delivered sobering remarks on “the horrible images and stories from Israel and Gaza,” before the evening moved ahead with scheduled sketch programming and surprise cameo appearances by Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce.
“This week, we saw the horrible images and stories from Israel and Gaza. And, I know what you’re thinking, who better to comment on it than Pete Davidson?” said the host, periodically earning laughter from the live studio audience. He addressed the war in a tone reminiscent of past “SNL” tributes to the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the victims of 9/11.
Davidson spoke about the death of his father, Scott Davison, a New York City firefighter who died in the attacks on the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001.
“I saw so many terrible pictures this week of children suffering – Israeli children and Palestinian children – and it took me back to a really horrible, horrible place. No one in this world deserves to suffer, especially not kids,” he said. Davidson recalled how he found joy watching stand-up comedy while grieving the loss of his dad and concluded with a parting thought that segued into the rest of the show.
“Sometimes comedy is really the only way forward from tragedy,” said Davidson. “My heart is with everyone whose lives have been destroyed this week. But tonight I’m going to do what I’ve always done in the face of tragedy and that’s try to be funny. Remember, I said try. And live from New York, it’s Saturday night.”
A running thread throughout the night’s ensuing comedy sketches was Swift, who appeared briefly on the “SNL” stage, in an unannounced cameo. The pop star introduced the evening’s musical guest, Ice Spice, leading into the rapper’s second performance during the show and made the surprise appearance in time with the theatrical debut of her Eras Tour concert film.
But for the most part, Swift was a focal point of the “SNL” premiere because of her rumored relationship with Kelce, the Kansas City Chiefs tight end who was himself fodder for wisecracks as the cast took on Fox News’ coverage of the National Football League. While in character as a broadcaster, “SNL” veteran Kenan Thompson said during that segment, “When we get back we are going to speak with someone who actually wants to talk football,” to which Kelce — in his own surprise cameo moment — suddenly replied, “Yes, please!”
Pete Davidson’s love life is a little infamous at this point, but the comedian doesn’t really appreciate all the buzz. “I’m in my 20s and I’ve dated people. And for some reason, that’s very crazy and interesting to people,” he said in an interview on the “Real Ones With Jon Bernthal” podcast on March 30, per Entertainment Tonight. “I don’t think it’s interesting. I’ve been in show business for, like, half my life almost — for 14 or 15 years, and on a national TV show. In 12 years I’ve dated 10 people. I don’t think that’s that crazy, but to some people, that’s very interesting. That became all anyone would talk about.”
In the interview, Davidson said most of his relationships have resulted from his time on “Saturday Night Live.” “I’m not, like, flexing, you know what I mean?” he said. “These people that I’ve dated, I met them at work. I wasn’t in anyone’s DMs, no one was in mine. Suddenly you’re in this zeitgeist and that has nothing to do with the work,” Davidson added of the notoriety his relationships have brought him. “And that’s a really sh*tty feeling.”
Still, Davidson’s relationships have seemingly catapulted him from a notable “SNL” cast member to a full-on superstar. The 29-year-old comedian has dated some of the most famous women in the world over the years, including Ariana Grande, Kaia Gerber, Phoebe Dynevor, and Kim Kardashian — whom he parted ways with in August 2022 because their busy schedules reportedly got in the way of their relationship, per E! News.
In the past, Davidson has been transparent about his romantic woes, explaining that they’ve all taught him how to better handle his relationships. In a May 2021 interview with “The Breakfast Club,” the comedian said he’s “just very, very honest” with the women he dates and doesn’t like “playing any of the games.”
Ahead, take a look at all of Davidson’s past partners, as well as what we know about their relationships.
Do you feel that? That….certain something in the air? The universe seems to be one point off its usual tilt: Congress is talking about UFOs, we have overlapping retrogrades of Venus and Mercury, a former president’s mugshot is floating around and it looks like a Kubrick still, all that—but that’s not it. No, this vibe shift is purely due to the fact that Pete Davidson is single once more. This calls for constant vigilance.
Davidson and Chase Sui Wonders, who met while co-starring in Bodies Bodies Bodies and went on to work together again in Davidson’s semi-autobiographical comedy show Bupkis, have called it quits after eight months of dating, according to People.
Apparently, Davidson is chill about it. The 29-year-old Saturday Night Live alum and once and future King of Staten Island (official royal conveyance: impulse purchase ferry boat that even Colin Jost couldn’t resist, natch) is “out and about and doing really well,” an unnamed source told the magazine.
In late June, Davidson reportedly voluntarily checked himself into rehab, with a source saying at the time that he “should be getting out pretty soon.”
The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office filed one misdemeanour count of reckless driving against the actor and writer but did not release details about the March 4 collision in Beverly Hills.
“We believe that Mr. Davidson engaged in reckless driving, which ultimately resulted in his involvement in a serious collision into a home,” the DA’s office wrote. “Luckily, no one was seriously injured as a result of this collision.”
“In 2022, traffic fatalities in Los Angeles have reached the highest levels seen in 20 years,” the office wrote in its statement. “This is an alarming trend that we cannot ignore. As a result, it’s crucial that we take all allegations of reckless driving seriously and hold those responsible accountable.”
Davidson’s latest show, “Bupkis”, debuted on Peacock last month.
“Saturday Night Live” star Pete Davidson has been charged with one misdemeanor count of reckless driving after authorities said he crashed a car into a Beverly Hills home earlier this year.
The Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office confirmed the charge to CBS News in a statement Friday, but did not provide details on this incident.
“We believe that Mr. Davidson engaged in reckless driving, which ultimately resulted in his involvement in a serious collision into a home,” the statement read. “Luckily, no one was seriously injured as a result of this collision.”
According to CBS Los Angeles, the crash occurred in the late night hours of March 4 in a residential neighborhood.
Entertainment Tonight reported that Davidson’s girlfriend, Chase Sui Wonders, was also in the vehicle. Beverly Hills police told ET back in March that Davidson had struck a fire hydrant in the crash.
In L.A., a reckless driving charge can carry a sentence of up to 90 days in jail and a $1,000 fine.
“In 2022, traffic fatalities in Los Angeles have reached the highest levels seen in 20 years,” the DA’s office said in its statement. “This is an alarming trend that we cannot ignore. As a result, it’s crucial that we take all allegations of reckless driving seriously and hold those responsible accountable.”
CBS News reached out to Davidson’s representatives, but did not immediately get a response. He is scheduled to be arraigned July 27.
Everyone has had a questionable online shopping moment: It’s late at night, you’re having fun with your friends, things go a little too far, and before you know if you’re calling up Cameron Crowe to see if he’s ever considered following up We Bought a Zoo with a sequel called We Bought a Decommissioned Staten Island Ferry Boat and Oh My God Now What?
Pete Davidson has (kind of) explained the purchase he and Colin Jost made with comedy club owner Paul Italia by saying that “we were very stoned” when they bought the allegedly roach-and-asbestos-infested boat for $280,100 back in January 2022.
Speak for yourself, Jost recently added, with what we imagine was the deepest of sighs.
“Is it worse that I was actually stone-cold sober when we bought the ferry?” he asked in an Instagram post on Wednesday that featured a headline referencing Davidson’s explanation.
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Honestly, the vibe is that in his heart of hearts, he knows the answer to the question. Colin, do you need a hug? A nice glass of cold seltzer and a quiet place to sit for a few minutes?
While Davidson seems to be actively praying for someone to sink the behemoth boat he and Jost bought and then christened Titanic 2, Jost, in his caption, said, “We’re excited to prove the non-believers wrong. You’re going to be BEGGING to get on this ferry in two years. Mark my words.” In the past, the pals, who worked together on Saturday Night Live, have mentioned plans to turn the ferry into a floating comedy venue. They have also mentioned that this would be very expensive, to say the least.
So it makes sense that Jost’s third item on the Instagram caption agenda reads, “UNRELATED I’m going on a Ferry Money Tour this week and next week.” He helpfully designed a poster for the mini-tour, featuring the bright-orange boat in the same carousel, then later shared a more tasteful fan-made poster for the shows. Graphic design does appear to be his passion. Sorry, comedy, and big ups to “izzy whoever you are.”
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Since our last coverage of the only ship more delightful than friendship, where Davidson admitted he had no idea where the ferry was currently moored, multiple Staten Island locals have reached out to offer boat intel, telling us that it is at a boat repair place along the island’s Kill Van Kull, and it has not yet sunk. A big thank you to our ferry godparents: Pete may not know where his boat is, but now we do.
Due to the continued film and TV writers’ strike, “Saturday Night Live” will not air a new episode on Saturday evening, as originally planned.
Former cast member Pete Davidson was set to return as host for the long-running NBC comedy sketch show, along with musical guest Lil Uzi Vert.
Davidson was seen on Saturday morning in a video on social media handing out pizza to striking writers in Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
“Gotta support the writers, man!” Davidson is heard saying in the brief clip. “No writers, no shows without the writers.”
NBC announced the cancellation of new episodes going forward on Tuesday. A rerun from March 11, featuring Jenna Ortega as host and The 1975 as musical guest, will air on Saturday instead.
Preparation for the new episode featuring Davidson was halted when the Writers Guild of America called for a strike on Monday, after failing to reach an agreement with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers when the WGA’s current contract expired just before midnight.
A writers’ strike could shut down production on most television shows and cause a domino effect in the wider realm of the entertainment industry, pushing back the return of many programs set for the fall.
In another universe, Pete Davidson would have spent Friday night in the writers’ offices at 30 Rockefeller Center, making last-minute adjustments ahead of his planned first time hosting Saturday Night Live. The comedian was a cast member of the show for eight seasons, officially leaving the show just last May. Instead of taking his victory lap on the show as a graduated senior with a brand new sitcom of his own, the Bupkis star spent last night handing out pizza to striking Writer’s Guild members on the picket line in Brooklyn.
“Gotta support the writers,” Davidson said in a clip captured from the drizzly scene, precious pies in hand. “No shows without the writers, man.”
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Davidson arrived in a dark hoodie with the hood up bearing stacks of pies from L&B Spumoni Gardens, an 80-plus-year-old Brooklyn institution in the Gravesend neighborhood. It’s a jaunt, but well worth it—Sbarro could never. Spumoni Gardens’ square grandma pies are a slice that demands respect.
Saturday Night Live is among the shows that have halted production amidst the writers’ strike, and will air a rerun tonight instead of Davidson’s show as planned. The strike has halted nearly 12,000 writers’ work as they stand with their union, the Writers Guild of America, in the group’s first strike in nearly 15 years.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK – MAY 5: Pete Davidson joins members of the Writers Guild of America (WGA) and its supporters to picket outside Silvercup Studios on May 5, 2023 in New York City. Writers Guild of America members have gone on strike in a contract dispute with studios and streaming services over lowering wages, residuals and the future of AI in entertainment. (Photo by Bruce Glikas/Getty Images)Bruce Glikas/Getty Images
Earlier this week, Davidson was spotted with signs showing SAG-AFTRA union solidarity with the WGA.
Last week, in an appearance on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon before the strike was authorized, Davidson told host Jimmy Fallon that he’d been working on his episode for two or three months, and that if a strike led to the cancellation of his hosting debut, “it just feeds my weird story I have in my head, like, ‘Of course that would happen to me.’”
Kim Kardashian and Pete Davidson reunited at the Met Gala on Monday for what seemed like friendly conversation. The former lovebirds were photographed chatting with Usher in a series of images. One featured the ex-“Saturday Night Live” star gazing at Kardashian, perhaps longingly, as she makes a point.
It was just a year ago that Davidson and Kardashian were the “it” couple at the 2022 gala at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. The reality queen also grabbed headlines for wearing Marilyn Monroe’s dress that year. They split in August after a nine-month fling, E News reported.
This year, they were seemingly amiable exes talking with Usher, whom Kardashian cheered on at some of his recent Las Vegas concerts, Entertainment Tonight reported.
Sure, there were smiles all around. But is anyone else getting a little weepy at big celebrity love lost?
“I don’t understand,” Davidson told co-host Charlamagne tha God. “It’s really not that special. It’s just [a] very normal-sized penis. It’s like, you know, not too big or too small. It’s just like, you know. Yeah, I don’t understand that.”
“It’s just like, big enough to enjoy and not big enough for it to hurt,” he added. “Is what I was told.”
Davidson was formerly engaged to pop star Ariana Grande, who arguably spawned the narrative about him being well-endowed. In 2018, when a fan on Twitter asked “how long is pete” (referring to a track on Grande’s album “Sweetener”), Grande reportedly replied: “like 10 inches? ….oh fuck….I mean … like a lil over a minute.”
“You sit back and you’re like, ‘Why?’ Why would [a] girl who knows this information break up with a guy, set him loose, make him kind of famous and then be like, ‘He has a huge dick’?” Davidson said at the time. “It’s so that every girl who fucks me for the rest of my life is disappointed.”
“It’s a phrase I’d used with friends to refer to guys who aren’t that great but for whatever reason you still find attractive,” he wrote in The Guardian. “The tweet got a normal amount of attention and as it was a phrase I’d used before, I didn’t think about it again.”
Davidson might wish he could put it out of his mind too.
By Zach Seemayer, ETOnline.com. Published: Last updated:
“Saturday Night Live”‘s season 48 is still going strong! The NBC mainstay recently announced the latest round of celebs they’ve tapped to host the celebrated sketch comedy series.
“Ghosted” star Ana de Armas will be joined by musical guest Karol G as she heads up the April 15 episode.
Pete Davidson, who left the late-night sketch series at the end of season 47 in 2022, will make his return to Studio 8H on May 6. He’ll be promoting his new semi-autobiographical comedy series, “Bupkis”, which launches on Peacock just a few days earlier.
This season, the new cast has looked quite a bit different, with four fresh new faces after a surprising exodus of long-time cast members — including veteran cast member Cecily Strong, who departed the show mid-season during the last episode of 2022. However, the new group have been coming together for a strong series of episodes over the past few months.
Check out the full list of the hosts and musical guests who have lent their talent to Season 48, and who are set to take the stage in the weeks to come. Check back as the season progresses, as the list will be updated regularly as new hosts and musical guests are announced.
“SNL” Episode 1 — Oct. 1, 2022
Musical guest Kendrick Lamar, host Miles Teller, and Bowen Yang during “SNL” Promos in Studio 8H on Friday, September 30, 2022.
— Photo by: Will Heath/NBC via Getty Images
“Top Gun: Maverick” star Miles Teller hosted the season 48 debut — and appeared in the “cold open” sketch, which is rare for a first-time host — while Kendrick Lamar hit the stage as a musical guest.
“SNL” Episode 2 — Oct. 8, 2022
Musical guest Willow, host Brendan Gleeson, and Chloe Fineman during “SNL” Promos in Studio 8H on Thursday, October 6, 2022.
— Photo by: Rosalind OConnor/NBC via Getty Images
Celebrated Irish actor Brendan Gleeson made his SNL debut and was joined in his monologue by his “The Banshees of Inisherin” co-star Colin Farrell. Meanwhile, Willow served as the night’s musical guest.
“SNL” Episode 3 — Oct. 15, 2022
Host Megan Thee Stallion during the “SNL” Monologue on Saturday, October 15, 2022.
— Photo by: Will Heath/NBC via Getty Images
Megan Thee Stallion pulled double duty, making her debut as an “SNL” host, and her triumphant return as a musical guest.
Musical guest Jack Harlow performs on “SNL” on Saturday, March 27, 2021.
— Photo By: Will Heath/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images
After previously serving as a musical guest, Jack Harlow took the stage for “SNL”‘s Halloween episode, and, like Megan Thee Stallion, also performed.
“SNL” Episode 5 — Nov. 5, 2022
Host Amy Schumer during a “SNL” promo in Studio 8H — Episode 1745.
— Photo by: Rosalind O’Connor/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images
Comedian and Oscars co-host Amy Schumer took the reins in her third go as host. Meanwhile, she was joined by Steve Lacy as the night’s musical guest.
“SNL” Episode 6 — Nov. 12, 2022
Dave Chappelle during the monologue on “SNL” Episode 1710 on November 12, 2016.
— Photo by: Will Heath/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images
Stand-up comic and returning host Dave Chappelle took the stage once again, alongside the night’s musical guest, hip hop duo Black Star.
“SNL” Episode 7 — Dec. 3, 2022
Host Keke Palmer during the “SNL” Monologue on Saturday, December 3, 2022.
— Photo by: Will Heath/NBC via Getty Images
Keke Palmer made her “Saturday Night Live” hosting debut, shocking viewers when she revealed her baby bump, announcing her first pregnancy with boyfriend Darius Jackson. She was joined by musical guest SZA.
“SNL” Episode 8 — Dec. 10, 2022
Hosts Steve Martin and Martin Short during the “SNL” Monologue on Saturday, December 10, 2022.
— Photo by: Will Heath/NBC via Getty Images
“Only Murders in the Building” co-stars Steve Martin and Martin Short returned to their familiar old stomping grounds as joint co-hosts, and were joined by musical guest Brandi Carlile.
Host Austin Butler during the “SNL” Monologue on Saturday, December 17, 2022.
— Photo by: Will Heath/NBC via Getty Images
“Elvis” star and Oscar nominee Austin Butler basked in the spotlight during his hosting debut. Meanwhile, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs were originally set to serve as musical guests. However, the band’s guitarist, Nick Zinner, was battling pneumonia, and they were forced to pull out. In their place, Lizzo stepped up to serve as musical guest. This marked Lizzo’s second time as musical guest in 2022, after she performed and also hosted “SNL” back in April.
“SNL” Episode 10 — Jan. 21, 2023
Musical guest Sam Smith, host Aubrey Plaza, and Kenan Thompson during “SNL” Promos in Studio 8H on Thursday, January 19, 2023.
— Photo by: Rosalind OConnor/NBC via Getty Images
For the show’s first episode of the new year, “SNL” tapped “White Lotus” star, and queen of deadpan, Aubrey Plaza to host. She was joined by musical guest Sam Smith, who returned to the Studio 8H stage for the fourth time.
“SNL” Episode 11 — Jan. 28, 2023
Michael B. Jordan
— Photo by: Rosalind O’Connor/NBC
“Creed” and “Black Panther” star Michael B. Jordan made his “SNL” hosting debut, alongside first-time musical guest Lil Baby — who previously made an uncredited appearance during an episode back in 2019.
“SNL” Episode 12 — Feb. 4, 2023
Pedro Pascal
— Photo by: Will Heath/NBC
Pedro Pascal, who stars in the HBO drama “The Last of Us” and Disney+’s “The Mandalorian”, made his “SNL”hosting debut, alongside musical guest Coldplay. The British band performed for the seventh time.
“SNL” Episode 13 — Feb. 25, 2023
Musical guest Jack White, host Woody Harrelson, and special guest Scarlett Johansson during Goodnights & Credits
— Photo by: Will Heath/NBC
Woody Harrelson, who next been seen as CIA officer E. Howard Hunt in the HBO limited series “White House Plumbers”, joined the five-timers club when he returned to Studio 8H. Jack White was the musical guest, with the singer also making his fifth appearance on the show — once with The White Stripes and three previous times solo. During the episode, Scarlett Johansson made a surprise appearance.
Musical guest Kelsea Ballerini, host Travis Kelce, and Heidi Gardner in Studio 8H during “SNL” Promos on Thursday, March 2, 2023.
— Photo by: Rosalind OConnor/NBC via Getty Images
NFL star Travis Kelce — hot off his Super Bowl LVII victory — made his “SNL” debut, making him the first athlete to host since J.J. Watts took on the challenge in Feb. 2020. Kelce was joined by first-time musical guest Kelsea Ballerini.
“SNL” Episode 15 — Mar. 11, 2023
Jenna Ortega hosting “Saturday Night Live”
— Photo: Rosalind O’Connor/NBC via Getty Images
“Wednesday” star Jenna Ortega took the Studio 8H stage as a first time host, and was joined by musical guest The 1975. This marked the band’s second turn as “SNL” musical guests.
“SNL” Episode 16 — Apr. 1, 2023
Quinta Brunson
— Photo by: Will Heath/NBC
“Abbott Elementary” creator and star Quinta Brunson — who has won an Emmy, a Golden Globe and a Screen Actors Guild Award just in the past few months — made her “Saturday Night Live” debut, alongside musical guest Lil Yachty.
“SNL” Episode 17 — Apr. 8, 2023
Kevin Jonas, Nick Jonas, and Joe Jonas of musical guest Jonas Bothers, host Molly Shannon, and Ego Nwodim
— Photo by: Rosalind O’Connor/NBC
“SNL” alum Molly Shannon returned to Studio 8H as a first-time solo host. (She and many of her female co-stars returned for Betty White’s Mother’s Day show in 2010.) Shannon was accompanied by musical guest Jonas Brothers, who returned to the show for the first time since 2019.
Ana de Armas
— Photo: Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Netflix
Ana de Armas will promote her upcoming rom-com thriller, “Ghosted”, with an “SNL”–hosting turn on April 15, and will be joined by another Latina performing powerhouse in musical guest Karol G.
“SNL” Episode 18 — May 6, 2023
Pete Davidson and anchor Colin Jost during “SNL” Weekend Update on Saturday, May 21, 2022.
— Photo by: Will Heath/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images
Pete Davidson makes his return to Studio 8H for the May 6 episode, one year after departing “SNL” following the 47th season, ET can confirm. It will mark Davidson’s hosting debut. He will be promoting his new Peacock series, “Bupkis”. A source close to the show tells ET everyone is excited for him to come back. “SNL is my home. I’m so happy and sad about tonight’s show. For so many reasons I can’t explain,” Davidson wrote ahead of his last episode as a “SNL” cast member last year. “Can’t wait to be back next year in a Mulaney musical number.”
“Saturday Night Live” airs lives, coast to coast, at 11:30 p.m. ET, 8:30 p.m. PT on NBC.