'Saturday Night Live' Review: Tina Fey's Finale Addresses the Season's Issues but Also Doesn't Care
The thing to understand about Tina Fey as an “SNL” host is that while she has her fingerprints on some truly brilliant comedy (both in the TV and film realms), her tenure on the show as a cast member wasn’t about being the star of the show. She’s not a Kate McKinnon or a Cecily Strong or an Aidy Bryant, she wasn’t a Kristen Wiig or an Amy Poehler or a Maya Rudolph. In fact, back when she hosted “SNL” in 2013, her monologue joked about the fact that she had no recurring characters. (Though, when it comes to lasting legacies, Mom Jeans is a sketch that might just endure longer than a lot of recurring characters.) She, of course, became the face of Weekend Update with Jimmy Fallon and then Amy Poehler, but Fey’s existence as a talent was never as the star until her host/guest appearances (like as Bedelia’s mother or especially as Sarah Palin). Because she’s “just… pleasant.”
So the expectation, unlike with other hosts, should have never been that Fey would be the focus of the finale’s sketches. Because that was never going to be the case. Unfortunately though, it still kind of was the expectation, because she’s Tina Fey, the name. Also, because it’s the season finale of “SNL.” Really, there’s a whole thing with logical expectations and general expectations going on in this episode… and unfortunately, the latter is the one that needs to be met and simply isn’t.