‘SNL’ Officially Goes Dark Amid Writers Strike, Will Air Repeats For Now

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Pete Davidson won’t have the chance to host Saturday Night Live, just yet.

The network has officially parked the May 6 episode of the series. It will air repeats until further notice, which will likely mean that the venerable NBC show has aired its season finale.

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Davidson, whose Peacock comedy series Bupkis starts this week, was set for his SNL return after leaving last year.

RELATED: Deadline’s Full Strike Coverage

Speaking on The Tonight Show, Davidson joked that he was taking it personally. “It sucks because it just feeds my weird story I have in my head, like, of course that would happen to me,” he said.

One SNL cast member told Deadline: “We have to think about our crew too. I absolutely support the writers, and I want the writers to get what they deserve and need, but I don’t want our crew to be out of work. We can’t make this art without each other.”

RELATED: WGA Strike Explained: The Issues, The Stakes, Movies & TV Shows Affected — And How Long It Might Last 

During the 2007/08 writers strike, SNL only aired 12 episodes instead of the usual 20 or 21 making it the shortest season in the series run and the only season that didn’t feature a Christmas episode.

Dwayne Johnson was scheduled to host the episode on November 10 2007 but it was pulled and wouldn’t return until February 23 when Tina Fey hosted.

RELATED: What Went Wrong? Writers & Studios Reveal What They Couldn’t (And Could) Agree On As Strike Is Set

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