Jim Carrey Steals the Show During SNL Parody of the Fly That Landed on Mike Pence's Head

Jim Carrey makes an appearance on Saturday Night Live as Joe Biden, who apparently has a special connection to the fly that landed on Mike Pence's head.

By Kaitlin Reilly Oct 11, 2020 5:04 PM Tags
Watch : Kate McKinnon on What Makes "Saturday Night Live" Work

The much buzzed about debate betweenKamala HarrisandMike Pence was parodied perfectly onSaturday Night Live's Oct. 10 episode.While Maya Rudolph andBeck Bennett got big laughs for their portrayals of the dueling candidates, it was Jim Carrey as Joe Biden  who really stole the show, thanks to his transformation into the fly that landed on Pence's head.

Social media lost it when, during the debate on Oct. 7, a fly landed in Pence's hair, and didn't move for a long, long time. InSNL's version of the event, that fly wasn't just an ordinary bug. Instead, it was Carrey's Biden, who, in a scene cut from the 1986 Jeff Goldblum sci-fi flickThe Fly, used a teleportation machine to land as the insect on Pence's hair.

It's not long before Carrey's Biden is delivering Goldblum's speech fromJurassic Parkas the fly, this time, likening Republicans to dinosaurs.

photos
14 Stars Who Got Their Start on Saturday Night Live

Also appearing on Pence's head is the lateHerman Cain, played by Kenan Thompson. Cain didn't use the teleportation machine, however: He was just reincarnated as a fly.

In an interview with Vulture,Saturday Night LivecreatorLorne Michaels said that Carrey as Biden came about because theLiar, Liaractor pushed for the role.

"Obviously Woody [Harrelson] did Biden on the first show last season and did it brilliantly," Michaels explained to the outlet. "Jason [Sudeikis] has done it in the past. Part of it also is whoever does it has to basically relocate to New York because of quarantine. So, there were a lot of factors involved in that. But I'm thrilled Jim's doing it."

Michaels told Vulture that Carrey "will give the part energy and strength," adding, "hopefully it's funny."

A political parody that somehow weaves in a killer Goldblum impression? Funny, indeed.

(E! and NBC are both part of the NBCUniversal family).