Sherri Shepherd urges 'SNL' to cast a Black woman: 'I don't like hearing ... "We can't find anyone"'
Published in Entertainment News
LOS ANGELES — Sherri Shepherd used her platform to ask "Saturday Night Live" to hire another Black woman after the cast lost its only representation in Ego Nwodim.
"When I watched 'Saturday Night Live' this weekend, I did notice something was missing: Ego Nwodim left the show," Shepherd said on a recent episode of her daytime show. "She was their only Black female cast member, so now there are no Black women on 'SNL."
"Ya'll gotta hurry up and you gotta find somebody, this is a 'break glass in case of emergency.' It is an emergency," she added.
During its 50 years on the air, "SNL" has had only eight Black female cast members: Yvonne Hudson, Danitra Vance, Ellen Cleghorne, Maya Rudolph, Sasheer Zamata, Leslie Jones, Punkie Johnson and Ego Nwodim.
After the show announced its newest cast members in early September and before the start of Season 51, which began Oct. 4, Nwodim announced her departure. It is the first time since 2013 that "SNL" premiered without a Black woman in its cast.
Between Rudolph, who left in 2007, and Zamata, who was in the cast from 2014 to 2017, there was a seven-year gap without a Black woman in the cast.
From 2020 to 2024, the cast included two black women in Nwodim and Johnson, but the latter left the show in 2024.
The show is infamous for being one of the toughest stages to dominate in comedy and previous cast members have expressed their feelings about it. During a celebration of the cast members leaving the show on the eve of its premiere, Johnson spoke to People about her pressure-laden experience.
"I feel like I could go out in Hollywood and handle anything because I handled every piece of adversity that went on in that building," Johnson said. "I don't think nothing could really break me no more because they honestly really built me up and made me strong mentally."
Despite the IBS that the famed sketch-comedy show allegedly gives its cast members, "SNL" has lifted the careers of comedians like Rudolph and Jones. Shepherd pointed out a few options of people who she believes deserve a chance and should be considered by producer Lorne Michaels.
"What I don't like hearing is 'We can't find anyone,'" she said before putting her stamp of approval on a few comedians, including one of her staff members:
Tacarra Williams, B-Phlat and Yamaneika Saunders.
"And those are just three women who came on my show and were hysterical. So many more including my comedy producer Robin Montague, she is a comedy legend who keeps us laughing all day long," she added.
Your move, Michaels.
----------------
©2025 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Comments