Alec Baldwin as Donald Trump in last night's episode of Saturday Night Live.
Alec Baldwin returned to Saturday Night Live this weekend in his first post-election appearance, portraying President-elect Donald Trump as he grapples with his transition from candidate into head of state.
The cold open didn't feature a bombastic Trump, but one slowly coming to terms with the reality of what the presidency entails.
Campaign manager Kellyanne Conway, played by Kate McKinnon, increasingly grows nauseated as she ushers in person after person to meet with the new president.
After Gen. Joseph F Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, tells Trump how excited he is to hear about the "secret" plan to defeat the Islamic State, Trump turns to his laptop.
"Okay, right, here we go. Here we go. Big plan. Big plan. Google, 'What is ISIS?'" Trump says. "Oh my - 59 million results."
He then picks up his phone: "Siri, how do I kill Isis?" Turns out he was talking into a Blackberry.
The episode drew instant criticism from real-life Trump on Twitter, a day after he demanded an apology from the cast of Hamilton, who had recited a short message to audience member Vice President-Elect Mike Pence:
"I watched parts of @nbcsnl Saturday Night Live last night. It is a totally one-sided, biased show - nothing funny at all. Equal time for us?"
In response, Baldwin sent a series of tweets to the President-Elect telling him he should be focused on American lives instead.
The actor told Trump that he doesn't get "equal time" now that he's going to be President and people have a right to respond, and criticised him for his cabinet appointments and his seeming willingness to go to war.
...@realDonaldTrump Equal time? Election is over. There is no more equal time. Now u try 2 b Pres + ppl respond. That's pretty much it.
Trump hosted SNL a year ago this month, in an episode that brought huge ratings, controversy and bad reviews. A year later, the show has drawn his ire.
...@realDonaldTrump I would make appointments that encouraged people, not generate fear and doubt. .
In October, he referred to an episode as a "hit job on me. Time to retire the boring and unfunny show. Alec Baldwin portrayal sinks. Media rigging election!"
I could go on. You want more advice, call me. I'll be at SNL.
SNL treated Trump's victory over Hillary Clinton last week with a somber tribute to Clinton by a teary-eyed McKinnon that featured no jokes at all.
In this weekend's cold open, an out-of-work Virginian tells Trump that if he can build a $25 billion, 2000-mile wall on the Mexican border, he can bring back every single job that's been lost in recent years.
Trump then says, "$25 billion? It can't be that much - Oh God, oh God, don't worry, Donald. It'll be OK. Hillary is still ahead in the polls."
Mitt Romney, played by Jason Sudeikis, even shows up for an extended, awkward handshake. Romney, once a fierce critic of Trump, met with the Trump transition team earlier this week.
Later in the sketch, Pence shows up and says that Hamilton was good. "I got a free lecture." He then runs through all the upcoming agenda items and the roadblocks to getting them done: repealing Obamacare; identifying and deporting 11 million undocumented immigrants; hiring a special prosecutor to go after Clinton.
"Scrap it. Scraaaaped," Trump responds to the plans.
"Sir, being president is not going to be easy," Pence says. "But we'll get through it if we work hard, together."
"Thank you, Mike," Trump responds. "You're going to do everything, right?"
It makes Trump's second attack on the arts this week. Over the weekend he got angry with Broadway musical Hamilton after the cast scolded Pence who was in the audience. His complaints earned him a huge backlash from Hollywood stars on Twitter.
The Theater must always be a safe and special place.The cast of Hamilton was very rude last night to a very good man, Mike Pence. Apologize!