Here’s a look at some SNL ex-pats whose found new life both on the screen and off.

SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
One of the American institutions cherished almost as much as watching Saturday Night Live each weekend is the habit of spending the following days complaining about how awful Saturday Night Live was the previous weekend. The American public has a way of l
Trump, who will host on November 7, has hosted before, when he was more reality star and real estate mogul than politician. This time around, he'll officially join the ranks of politicos entrusted with hosting duties over the show's 41-season run.
In 1975, professional basketball player and former Globetrotter Connie Hawkins challenged singer-songwriter Paul Simon to a game of one-on-one.
Belushi threatens a member of the horn section with his samurai sword...in a fun way.
Miskel Spillman won the late night mainstay’s “Anyone Can Host Contest” in part by saying she needed “one more cheap thrill.”
If comedy was like a run for president, then the hallowed halls of Saturday Night Live would be the White House.
“Saturday Night Live” has rejected some pretty notable future stars, but celebrities like Johnny Knoxville and Amy Sedaris actually flipped the script.
Here are a few celebrities who went so far that most of them never appeared in the hallowed halls of 8H again.
Live from New York, it’s … none of these celebrities (though not for lack of trying).
In the pantheon of SNL sketches-turned-feature films, there are good ideas (‘Wayne’s World’), bad ideas (‘It’s Pat’), and batted-about ideas that never made it to the silver screen.
Live from New York … are some surprising facts about ‘Saturday Night Live,’ which made its debut on October 11, 1975.