He didn’t just parody Pete Hegseth — he may have created SNL’s next great running joke. 🎭🔥 When Colin Jost stepped behind that podium, it felt bigger than a one-night impression. The kegstand got the laugh. The swagger sold the chaos. But the real twist was what came after: this version of Hegseth felt too sharp, too ridiculous, and too instantly recognizable to disappear after one cold open. By the time the sketch spiraled into full meltdown, it already looked like the birth of a character fans will want back again and again. This wasn’t just a funny performance. It felt like the start of SNL’s next recurring disaster.

From one kegstand to SNL’s next possible running gag: Did Colin Jost just create the show’s funniest new political character in years?

How Colin Jost Became a Joke - The Atlantic

Some Saturday Night Live impressions last for one cold open and disappear by the next news cycle. Others instantly feel like they have a future. That is exactly what happened when Colin Jost stepped behind the podium as Pete Hegseth in the latest cold open. The sketch may have started as a parody of a chaotic Iran press conference, but what really stood out was something else: Jost did not just play the character for one joke — he played him like someone who could keep coming back.

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From the moment he appeared, this version of Hegseth felt bigger than a one-off impression. Jost did not go for a subtle political mimic. He leaned into a loud, swaggering, wildly overconfident persona that felt built for repeat appearances. The kegstand opening was not just a visual gag — it was the kind of absurd, instantly memorable moment that gives a character real recurring potential. In one move, Jost turned Hegseth from a political target into a full-blown comic type: aggressive, ridiculous, and completely unfiltered.

Colin Jost's Pete Hegseth Was Upstaged By Trump in SNL's Season Premiere Cold Open

That is what made the performance feel different from a standard cold open impression. The strongest recurring SNL characters usually follow a simple formula: the audience immediately understands the energy the moment they appear, and the comedy comes from watching that energy spiral further each time. Jost’s Hegseth already seems to have that structure. He is not funny because he is accurate in a quiet, technical way. He is funny because he enters like a human disaster — all macho bluster, bad instincts, and chaotic confidence — and the audience can already imagine how much further the show could push him next time.

Ashley Padilla’s appearance as Kristi Noem only made that potential clearer. Once the sketch opened up beyond Jost alone, it stopped feeling like a one-night stunt and started to feel like the beginning of a larger recurring setup. Suddenly, this version of Hegseth was not just a punchline; he looked like the center of a whole political comedy universe, one where different figures could rotate in and out while Jost’s unhinged energy stayed at the center of the storm.

That is usually the sign of a character SNL knows how to use. A good recurring role does not need to be reinvented every time. It just needs a strong comic engine and room to escalate. Jost seems to have found both. His Hegseth is easy to recognize, easy to exaggerate, and flexible enough to fit almost any future sketch involving press briefings, public blunders, or political chaos.

So while the cold open got attention for its shock value, the bigger takeaway may be much simpler: Colin Jost may have accidentally created one of SNL’s best new recurring political characters in years. And if the show is smart, it will not leave that joke behind after just one night.