The show boss discussed challenges around music in season 1 while visiting the &34;Saturday Night Live&34; exhibit at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. SNL creator
The show boss discussed challenges around music in season 1 while visiting the "Saturday Night Live" exhibit at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.
SNL creator Lorne Michaels reveals his biggest fight during show's beginning (exclusive)
The show boss discussed challenges around music in season 1 while visiting the "Saturday Night Live" exhibit at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.
By Jillian Sederholm
Jillian Sederholm
Jillian Sederholm is news director at *. *She has worked at EW for more than eight years. Jillian has previously worked as a reporter, social media editor, and homepage producer at NBC News, Digital First Media, Newsday, and *Random Lengths News.*
EW's editorial guidelines
October 11, 2025 12:00 p.m. ET
Leave a Comment
Getting *Saturday Night Live* on the air 50 years ago was no small feat, but creator Lorne Michaels reveals that one of his biggest challenges during season 1 may not be one most fans would expect.
The NBC sketch show has long drawn just as much interest for its musical guests as for its satire and celebrity hosts, and the longtime show boss says bringing those musicians onto the small screen in 1975 was something he had to fight for due to the way music was recorded for television.
"Rock-and-roll people did not do television because they sounded terrible. So we had to figure that out, and that was a big, big fight over the first season," Michaels declares in an interview at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame's "SNL: Ladies & Gentlemen… 50 Years of Music" exhibit, shared exclusively with **.
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/lorne-michaels-100925-6e6510a65d8a423496495c2b055b7291.jpg)
Lorne Michaels on 'Saturday Night Live' in 2017.
Rosalind O'Connor/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty
"If you look at, say, Elvis Presley on *The Ed Sullivan Show* [in 1956], or the Beatles [in 1964] for that matter, it's all on a boom [microphone], you know, and the sound was more than good enough for that period for them to catch fire and all that," he explains. "But by the time we came on, the music was recorded in a completely different way, and television was still using a boom. So that was the biggest sort of fight at the beginning."
The very first episode of *SNL*, hosted by George Carlin on Oct. 11, 1975, featured a total of four musical performances: two each from co-musical guests Billy Preston and Janis Ian. But Michaels was already working to improve the sound by episode 2, which was music-heavy with Paul Simon as the first to do double duty as host and musical guest, and also featured songs from Randy Newman and Phoebe Snow.
"When Paul Simon did the second show, I brought [music producer] Phil Ramone in, who was working with him that summer on *Still Crazy *[*After All These Years*]. And the television audio guy was not thrilled about that," Michaels recalls. "Just the idea that we were gonna mic it differently. Remember, Elvis is him and the Jordanaires, and a boom is covering all their music. And now it was different."
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/lorne-michaels-george-harrison-100925-b8d90abd56a1407f9f5a523e426ecd33.jpg)
George Harrison, Lorne Michaels, and Paul Simon on 'Saturday Night Live' in 1976.
Richard E. Aaron/Redferns
He muses that during prior decades, viewers were just thrilled to be able to watch music on TV at all so "it was all good enough," but by the mid-'70s technology had advanced and the home audience had higher expectations.
"Everything, all of that stuff, is good enough when a miracle comes into your life; you're not fussing about how it sounds," Michaels shares. "But as people got more used to the fact that those sound systems could bring the music alive in a completely different way, television had to keep up."**
Fred Armisen reveals Rock & Roll Hall of Fame 'SNL' display that shocks him
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/SNL-rock-hall-of-fame-72-061925-9c811646c47547f0be1b9fef6a5dbe03.jpg)
Every 'Saturday Night Live' season 51 host and musical guest
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/Bad-Bunny-Amy-Poehler-Sabrina-Carpenter-SNL-100225-a10f85266c3641409eb2b5fd81bd4530.jpg)
The ongoing *SNL* exhibit at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland features an immersive display celebrating the show's five decades of musical history, including legendary musical performances and sketches. It's also the only place to view the entire archives of *SNL*'s* *more than 1,900 musical guest performances, including some never-before-seen footage from dress rehearsals.
"There's little details, the costumes, the wigs, everything," *SNL * alum Fred Armisen previously told EW of visiting the exhibition. "It's just so, so well done. It was emotional for me."**
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/snl-exhibit-100925-6eff39ccf1e148b38a9b73f66487d99e.jpg)
Attendees at the opening of the 'SNL: Ladies & Gentlemen… 50 Years of Music' exhibit at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and Museum.
Duane Prokop/Getty
***Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.***
After much fanfare earlier this year, *Saturday Night* *Live *celebrates its actual 50th anniversary tonight, Oct. 11, with a new episode hosted by show alum Amy Poehler, airing live on NBC at 11:30 p.m. ET/8:30 p.m. PT.**
Watch the video above for more from Michaels. "SNL: Ladies & Gentlemen… 50 Years of Music" is on display now at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Ticket info is available here.
Source: "AOL TV"
Source: VOGUE MAG
Full Article on Source: VOGUE MAG
#LALifestyle #USCelebrities