
Have you noticed how TV shows keep making fun of the same public figures? Well, Saturday Night Live just did exactly that with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and they’re not the first.
The NBC sketch show created a comedy skit called ‘MAHA-Spital’ — a playful jab at Kennedy’s MAHA movement (Make America Healthy Again). They copied the style of a popular HBO Max hospital drama called ‘The Pitt’ to do it. Think of it like someone doing a funny impression of a serious show, but about someone in the news.
Why Is Everyone Joking About the Same Person?
Kennedy has been a big name in American politics and health discussions lately, which is why comedians keep targeting him. When someone becomes that visible in public life, comedy shows can’t resist poking fun. It’s basically what satirists do — they take what’s happening in the real world and turn it into comedy sketches.
What’s interesting here is that Saturday Night Live wasn’t the first to do this. Another famous American comedy show called ‘The Daily Show’ had already created similar jokes about Kennedy months earlier. So SNL basically borrowed the same idea and made their own version of it.
How Does This Comedy Actually Work?
‘The Pitt’ is an Emmy-winning hospital drama — basically a serious show about doctors and patients. When SNL recreates this style but inserts Kennedy and his movement into it, the humor comes from mixing something funny (Kennedy in this context) with something formal and dramatic (a hospital show).
The skit includes a character named Doug Driscoll, played by an SNL cast member. This feels like a direct callback to the original show’s characters. For people who watch both the real drama and SNL, it’s like spotting an inside joke.
Saturday Night Live has been doing this kind of parody for decades. It’s their bread and butter. They take whatever’s trending or whoever’s making headlines and turn it into sketch comedy. When you’re a public figure getting attention, SNL coming after you is almost like a badge of honor in American entertainment.
The fact that two different comedy shows thought Kennedy was worth spoofing within months of each other tells you something — he’s definitely captured public attention, for better or worse. Whether people agree with him or not, he’s become impossible to ignore.
As American politics and entertainment continue to blur together, expect more sketches like this. When you’re a big name, the jokes keep coming.
