“Norm Was the Wildest”: Kenan Thompson and Pete Davidson Revisit Norm Macdonald’s Legacy on Netflix

Published 04/04/2026, 4:48 PM EDT

“‘Live from New York, it’s Saturday Night Live…” the most confident sentence on television, delivered by people who, by that point, have probably been running on caffeine and panic since Wednesday at 30 Rockefeller Plaza. For Kenan Thompson, those early days were about outlasting sketches that bombed harder than dress rehearsals; for Pete Davidson, it was turning awkward honesty into a recurring character trait.

But before both of them, there was a guy who would shrug at the rules, light a cigarette indoors, and dare the building to stop him: Norm Macdonald.

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On Pete Davidson’s Netflix-backed podcast, casually dubbed The Pete Davidson Show, Kenan Thompson delivered a story that sounds exaggerated until you realize that is exactly why it is true.

“Norm was the wildest,”Thompson recalls.

“He’d just light up in the office, put it out on the carpet. Like, ‘What are you gonna do? Fire me?’”

When Norm Macdonald joined SNL in 1993 and took over Weekend Update, he reshaped the desk into something colder, sharper, and far less eager to please. His jokes did not chase laughs; they waited for them, sometimes uncomfortably. By 1998, he was out, officially due to ratings, unofficially because his humor had a habit of stepping on powerful toes.

Though Kenan Thompson joined in 2003, after Norm MacDonald’s departure, the influence lingered like smoke in a room you cannot quite air out. After leaving Saturday Night Live in 1998, Norm Macdonald headlined The Norm Show from 1999 to 2001, then spent the next two decades with roles in films like Dirty Work and Grown Ups, and voice work as Death on Family Guy.

His later years cemented his cult status with the deeply unconventional interview series Norm Macdonald Live (2013-2018), and the Netflix experiment Norm Macdonald Has a Show (2018). He continued performing stand-up selectively until his death in September 2021, following a decade-long battle with cancer.

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But if Norm MacDonald was the guy who would burn the carpet just to see if anyone noticed, Pete Davidson is the guy quietly replacing it

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In April 2026, Pete Davidson made a series of real estate moves. He sold his Staten Island condo, purchased in 2020 for $1.2 million, for $850,000, absorbing a loss after multiple price adjustments. At the same time, he listed his Westchester County home, a 1930s North Salem property he once described as “living in paradise,” for $2.28 million.

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The property itself is peak-comedian surrealism: six acres, a guesthouse, a private theater, a 150-gallon fish tank, even a hidden speakeasy tucked behind a sliding wall. With partner Elsie Hewitt and their daughter, Scottie Rose, now at the center of his life, Davidson appears to be streamlining, trading square footage for stability. It is a quiet pivot from chaos to clarity.

Maybe that is what Saturday Night Live really leaves you with: a sense of timing you cannot quite unlearn. Norm Macdonald trusted the silence, Kenan Thompson mastered the room, and Pete Davidson is still figuring out which parts to keep. 

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So where do you stand? Was Norm Macdonald the blueprint for breaking comedy, or the exception that proved it could be broken? Share your take in the comments.

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Sarah Ansari

427 articles

Sarah Ansari is an entertainment writer at Netflix Junkie, transitioning from four years in marketing and automotive journalism to storytelling-driven pop culture coverage. With a background in English Literature and experience writing across NFL, NASCAR, and NBA verticals, she brings a research-led, narrative-focused lens to film and television. Passionate about exploring how stories are crafted and why they resonate, Sarah unwinds through sketching, swimming, motorsports—and yearly winter Harry Potter marathons.

Edited By: Adiba Nizami

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