![]() “Don’t speak unless it’s absolutely necessary,” Thompson instructs Glover and the rest of the group. “He says he would have voted for Trump,” Glover goes on. Glover taps away at his phone before looking up, wide-eyed, and telling the group, “Kanye just tweeted.” Bryant shushes him. Somewhere in the brush, monsters lurk, ready to scoop up any human who makes more than the barest whisper. The sketch opens with Donald Glover, Aidy Bryant, Cecily Strong, Kenan Thompson, and Beck Bennett (as John Krasinski) making their way through a cornfield illuminated by bare bulbs hanging from a wire. In “A Kanye Place,” a sketch from Saturday night’s Donald Glover–hosted episode based on the horror film A Quiet Place, the tweets swiftly bring death. Kanye West’s tweets might be a boon for some (or, really, just for Trump), but for others, they represent a distinct peril. And the “chief strategist” position, which Trump created expressly to incorporate Steve Bannon into his cabinet, is currently vacant. After all, the rapper recently went on Twitter and then on TMZ to air such questionable perspectives as “slavery was a choice” and to, once again, offer his endorsement of Trump-which, according to a recent speech Trump gave to the National Rifle Association, was instrumental in improving the president’s approval ratings among black voters. During the Saturday Night Live cold open-which saw the return of Scarlett Johansson as Ivanka Trump, Alec Baldwin as Donald Trump, and Jimmy Fallon as Jared Kushner, and featured Stormy Daniels as herself-Baldwin, as Trump, pondered making Kanye West his new chief strategist. ![]()
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