For his SNL recollections Brown is dealing both with the cognitive effects
of aging and his admitted heavy drug use at the time so I won’t hold him
accountable for getting the details right about that time. Lorne left SNL
in 1980 to take a rest and then produce for prime time TV where he could
become more established and have bigger budgets. By 1985 it was clear that
wasn’t going to happen and he took NBC’s offer to go back to SNL. NBC execs
made it clear to him that he was getting a limited chance to bring the show
back to relevance and that’s why he swung for the fences and brought in
Downey, Cusack, Hall, and the other stars. They weren’t bringing what the
show needed, but Lovitz was. Maybe Lovitz (with Brown writing) didn’t save
the show but at least it bought Lorne another year and having Lovitz bring
in Hartman and Nealon bring in Hooks as well as the other recruits got the
show back on track.

I think Brown’s antipathy to Miller.is personal and not political. Behind
the scenes SNL has its share of rivalries and this was one. Miller has a
specific comedy style and it’s not one that Brown likes.

On Sat, Jun 1, 2024 at 5:09 PM Steve Timko <[email protected]> wrote:

> Marc Maron interviewed A. Whitney Brown on the WTF podcast and it was
> better than I expected. Many good anecdotes. The problem is, I listened a
> couple of weeks ago and delayed posting to the group until now, so I can’t
> remember most of them. Maybe others in the group can add some.
> Brown said he joined Saturday Night Live the first year that Lorne
> returned and it was basically a bad year. The one breakout character was
> Jon Lovitz’s liar guy. Lovitz originated the character and Brown wrote the
> sketches. As Brown told it, Lovitz’s character was enough of a hit that NBC
> brass decided not to cancel the show.
> Dennis Miller was on that season and I recall him as an asset for the
> show. Brown did not like Miller, said he was not funny. I wonder how much
> of that has to do with Miller’s conservative bent. Brown was fairly left
> wing.
> For his second season back, Lorne tried a different approach, Brown said.
> Lorne hired someone he thought was talented and then asked that person who
> he or she worked well with. That worked better.
> I was surprised at Brown’s background. Given his name, A. Whitney Brown, I
> assumed he was an Ivy League product like so many other SNL crew. Turns out
> he was a drop out and an actual criminal. He learned to juggle in prison
> and busked as a juggler. Busking led to telling jokes to help keep crowds
> and that led to his stand-up career. He said he made as much as $500 a day
> busking in San Francisco in the 1970s.
> Brown glumly said he was the person who introduced Chris Farley to heroin.
>
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