![]() Find 10 people that find the modern era of SNL the best era. It can always be debated which era is truly the best, but nostalgia plays into a lot of it as well. ![]() And boy, oh boy, "Fallon and Hamm hilariously perfected the two superheroes," says Kathleen Perricone at the New York Daily News. General rule of thumb for SNL is that most people’s favorite era coincides with when they were in high school. as the voice of Gary in the recurring animated segment The Ambiguously Gay Duo. While not exactly a laugh riot, "give it credit for trying something so conceptual - and packing so many great stars into one sketch," says Adam Markovitz at Entertainment Weekly. When Toor was fifteen, he tried to tell his parents that he was gay. Indeed, this was "the most surreal thing to air on SNL this entire season," says Mike Ryan at Movieline. The reaction: In an otherwise "subpar" episode, this segment, packed with the usual parade of double entendres, was easily the "most attention-grabbing," says Mike Vilensky at New York. (Carell and Colbert voiced the original "Ambiguously Gay" cartoons, which date back to 1996.) ![]() The video: This weekend, Saturday Night Live resurrected Robert Smigel's long-running superhero cartoon, "The Ambiguously Gay Duo." (Watch the clip below.) But in a big twist, the animated short morphed into a star-studded, live-action video when a "flesh ray weapon" turned the the 2D characters into real people - namely Jon Hamm and Jimmy Fallon as the crime-fighting, can-can-dancing title characters, along with Steve Carell, Stephen Colbert, and Ed Helms as villains. ![]()
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