MacGruber

This article is about a Saturday Night Live sketch. For the film based on the character, see MacGruber (film).
MacGruber

Logo and screenshot during the opening
Created by Jorma Taccone
Written by Will Forte
John Solomon
Jorma Taccone
Directed by Jorma Taccone
John Solomon
Starring Will Forte (2007–2010)
Maya Rudolph (2007)
Kristen Wiig (2008–2010)
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 4
No. of episodes 30
Production
Location(s) Studio 8H,
GE Building,
Rockefeller Center
New York City, New York
Running time Approx. 1 Minute
Production company(s) Broadway Video
SNL Studios
Release
Original network Saturday Night Live (2006–2010)
Super Bowl XLIII (2009)
Picture format 480i (SDTV),
1080i (HDTV)
Original release January 20, 2007 – May 8, 2010
Chronology
Related shows MacGyver

MacGruber was a recurring sketch on the NBC television series Saturday Night Live, first appearing on the show in January 2007. The sketch is a parody of the 1985–1992 adventure series MacGyver. The sketch stars Will Forte as special operations agent MacGruber, who is tasked in each episode with deactivating a ticking bomb but becomes distracted by personal issues, resulting in the bomb's detonation and (presumably) the deaths of his companions and himself.

MacGruber's popularity has led to a film based on the character, which was released on May 21, 2010.

Creation

The character of MacGruber was created by SNL writer Jorma Taccone. The sketches are written by Forte, Taccone and John Solomon and directed by Taccone, except for the March 2008 and May 2008 installments, which were directed by Solomon.

Premise

In the sketch's first appearance of each SNL episode, MacGruber finds himself and his assistants trapped in a control room with a ticking time bomb. MacGruber's female assistant (played in 2007 by Maya Rudolph and later by Kristen Wiig) and another assistant (usually played by that week's SNL host) "recap" their situation, explaining that they are in an abandoned mine, abandoned factory, or other adventure-type setting (it is a running gag that they are always locked in the control room, no matter how illogical the idea of a control room is in the context of the location where they are trapped), and that the bomb will detonate in twenty seconds. As he attempts to deactivate the bomb, MacGruber calls for people to pass him ordinary objects such as rubber bands or bubble gum wrappers (a reference to the sorts of objects typically used by MacGyver in devising a way out of a jam), but MacGruber inevitably loses focus before finishing the job and the bomb explodes, ending the sketch. The replacement of his female assistant from Maya Rudolph's character to Kristen Wiig's is explained in the movie version of the skit.

The sketch typically reappears for a second or third installment later in the episode, with the characters appearing none the worse for wear but MacGruber growing increasingly unhinged and his assistants becoming more disillusioned in his capabilities. Each installment ends with the bomb's detonation.

Family

MacGruber's father is the famed Angus MacGyver (Richard Dean Anderson). His grandmother is portrayed by Betty White, who is also his current fiancee. MacGruber also has an estranged homosexual son (Shia LaBeouf). He also has an older half-brother named Khaluber (The Great Khali) who does not speak English.

Themes

Some of the personal issues that have distracted MacGruber and prevented him from stopping the bomb include alcoholism (Molly Shannon/Linkin Park episode), his son's homosexuality (Shia LaBeouf/My Morning Jacket episode), losing his savings due to the current economic crisis (Josh Brolin/Adele episode), discovering his long-lost father (Dwayne Johnson/Ray LaMontagne episode), his addiction to plastic surgery (Seth Rogen/Spoon episode), accusing his coworkers of talking about him behind his back (Jonah Hill/Mariah Carey episode), his grandmother telling embarrassing stories from his childhood (Betty White/Jay-Z episode), and his racism (Charles Barkley/Alicia Keys episode).

MacGyver/Pepsi cross-over

During the January 31, 2009, episode of SNL, MacGyver star Richard Dean Anderson appeared with Forte in three Pepsi commercials designed to resemble MacGruber sketches.[1] In the commercials, MacGyver complains about the poor job MacGruber is doing and accuses him of being a sellout. The commercials were later included as part of the SNL episode on Hulu.

In the second commercial, later re-aired during Super Bowl XLIII, MacGruber and MacGyver are locked in the control room of an "illegal supply ship", where MacGruber becomes distracted by the temptation of Pepsi and announces he has changed his name to "Pepsuber." In the third commercial, the MacGruber theme song lyrics and MacGruber's dialogue have been replaced by the single word "Pepsi" repeated over and over. When his companions finally get fed up with this and ask if he can say anything but Pepsi, MacGruber holds up a Diet Pepsi, but is only able to say "Diet Pep-" before the control room explodes, and the commercial ends.

Anderson returned to SNL on the March 7, 2009, episode, in which it was revealed that MacGyver is actually MacGruber's long-lost father (making the latter's full name "MacGruber MacGyver"), who left his mother (Abby Elliott) for a stripper when MacGruber was a baby.

List of MacGruber sketches and characters

Recurring characters
Character Played By First Appearance Notes
MacGruber MacGyver Will Forte January 20, 2007 The main character; a spoof of MacGyver.
Casey Sullivan Maya Rudolph January 20, 2007 MacGruber's assistant.
Vicki St. Elmo Kristen Wiig March 15, 2008 MacGruber's assistant; replaced Casey.
Episode list
Original Airdate Guest Star Character Distraction
January 20, 2007 Jeremy Piven Jojo Assistants refuse to pick up disgusting things that MacGruber needs like dog feces, pubic hair, and sperm. The last sketch simply features MacGruber trying to mention their limited time only for the bomb to go off.
May 12, 2007 Molly Shannon April Alcoholism
October 6, 2007 Seth Rogen Caleb Fear of aging1
March 15, 2008 Jonah Hill Isaac Co-worker gossip2
May 10, 2008 Shia LaBeouf Merrill, MacGruber's son Son's homosexuality3
October 18, 2008 Josh Brolin Kyle Loss of stock market investments
January 31, 2009 Richard Dean Anderson MacGyver Bickering with MacGyver / Pepsi obsession. Skits aired as commercials for Pepsi during the Super Bowl
March 7, 2009 Richard Dean Anderson MacGyver MacGyver is revealed to be MacGruber's long lost father. Deals with father issues when MacGruber finds out why MacGyver abandoned him as a baby.4
January 10, 2010 Charles Barkley Darrel MacGruber's racist attitude towards Darrel and his clumsy attempts at being politically correct around him.
May 8, 2010 Betty White Nana, MacGruber's grandmother Embarrassing stories about MacGruber's childhood. In the second sketch, MacGruber proposes marriage to his grandmother.

^1 The second part of installment also featured cast member Kristen Wiig as Taylor, MacGruber's new girlfriend.
^2 This installment also featured cast member Bill Hader as MacGruber's life coach (though the third part of this "MacGruber" installment never aired on TV and was, instead, put on NBC.com's Saturday Night Live video page).
^3 The third part of this installment also featured cast member Andy Samberg as Scott, Merrill's secret boyfriend.
^4 The first and second parts of this installment also featured cast member Abby Elliott as MacGruber's mother.

Feature film

Main article: MacGruber (film)

On the June 1, 2009 episode of Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, Forte confirmed that a MacGruber film was being written by him, Taccone, and Solomon. The film was to star Forte, Wiig, Val Kilmer, and Ryan Phillippe. The film was released on May 21, 2010, after being pushed back from April 23, 2010.

The film has stirred up controversy with Lee Zlotoff, creator of the TV series MacGyver, whose contract stipulates he retained the right to a film version of the TV series. His lawyer has sent several cease-and-desist letters and is currently meeting with litigators to determine a course of action. So far no suit has been brought.[2]

References

  1. Sumner, Darren (February 1, 2009). "MacGruber! RDA does Saturday Night Live". GateWorld. Retrieved 2009-03-12.
  2. Belloni, Matthew (2010-02-03). "'MacGyver' creator wants to stop 'MacGruber' film". THR, Esq.
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