Matt MacNabb is a pop culture historian, author and freelance writer that has spent the better part of the past 20 years studying movies, tv, comics, toys and their effects on our culture. I thought he was getting put away for a while.” “His publicist told my publicist that he wants to punch me out, but he can’t because he’s going to be in jail soon, so I’ll be fine. What’s the bid deal? Why can’t I call him names? If I can’t let it out it’s going to build like a cancer.”Īpparently the feud still exists to Steven Seagal, Leguizamo has heard that he still has him Marked For Death: “He’s six-foot-five and he caught me off guard and knocked all of the air out of me and I was like, ‘Why?! Why?!’ I really wanted to say how big and fat he was and that he runs like a girl, but I didn’t because all I could say was, ‘Why?!’ Why’d he slam me against the wall? We were rehearsing. Anybody doesn’t agree?’ I was like, ‘Bwahahaha.’ I started cracking up because he sounded like a retard and he came up and he Taekwondo’ed my ass against the brick and he ,” Leguizamo recalled. I’m playing his Master Sargeant and we come in for rehearsals and he says, ‘I’m in command. “We were in rehearsals for Executive Decision. SNL alumni Julia Sweeney (1990-1994) had this to say about the difficult host in the book: Related: A David Spade Gag Made Eddie Murphy Boycott Saturday Night Live For Decadesĭavid Spade revealed that Steven Seagal didn't want to go along with the plan for the week and that he heard talk at the time about actually replacing him and making it the first ever all-cast episode of SNL. In the new book "Live From New York: The Complete, Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live" by James Andrew Miller and Tom Shales a number of SNL alumni open up about working with Steven Seagal. This isn't the first time that Spade and his castmates have spoken out publicly about the disastrous experience with Seagal. He was actually tough and he was tough to work with. When questioned about who the worst celebrity host to work with was in a recent interview with Watch What Happens Live, David Spade admitted the action star was probably the worst SNL host he worked with, saying of his April 1991 episode appearance: The task of guest hosting Saturday Night Live is a coveted in show business there is no better sign that a celebrity has "made it" than hosting the NBC sketch comedy series.
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