Some Saturday Night Live impressions fade as quickly as they arrive — a single cold open, a few laughs, and then gone by the next news cycle. Others, however, hit differently from the very first second. That’s exactly what happened when Colin Jost stepped into the role of Pete Hegseth during the latest SNL cold open — and unexpectedly delivered something far bigger than a one-off parody.
From the moment he appeared, Jost didn’t play the character like a standard impression. There was no slow build, no careful mimicry. Instead, he exploded into the scene with a loud, swaggering confidence — turning Hegseth into a chaotic, over-the-top persona that instantly felt alive. The now-talked-about kegstand wasn’t just a throwaway gag; it was a statement. This character wasn’t here for one joke — he was built to last.

That’s what separated this performance from countless other political sketches. Jost didn’t aim for technical accuracy — he leaned into exaggeration, crafting a version of Hegseth that felt less like a real person and more like a full-blown comic archetype. Aggressive, unpredictable, and hilariously unfiltered, this was a character audiences could immediately understand — and more importantly, anticipate.
Because the true test of any great SNL character isn’t how well they land in a single sketch — it’s whether viewers can already imagine what happens next. And Jost’s Hegseth passed that test instantly. The humor didn’t come from what he was doing in the moment — it came from the sense that whatever he did next would be even more absurd.
That potential only grew stronger as the sketch expanded. When Ashley Padilla appeared as Kristi Noem, the dynamic shifted. What started as a solo performance suddenly felt like part of a much larger comedic world — one where characters could rotate in and out, but Jost’s chaotic energy remained the center of gravity.

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.

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.
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