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SNL season 51 finale: Will Ferrell plays Jeffrey Epstein’s ghost, Chad Smith crashes the monologue and Paul McCartney delivers a surprise third song


Saturday Night Live wrapped its 51st season on May 16 with Will Ferrell hosting for the sixth time and Paul McCartney serving as musical guest. It was the former Beatle’s fifth appearance on the show and Ferrell’s first hosting stint since 2019.

The finale leaned heavily on Ferrell’s comedy DNA and McCartney’s catalog, with the night’s biggest moments split between a Trump-focused cold open, a monologue prank built around Ferrell’s longstanding lookalike feud with Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith and a surprise third performance from McCartney .

The cold open: Will Ferrell as the ghost of Jeffrey Epstein

The episode opened with James Austin Johnson reprising his recurring President Donald Trump impression, dozing off in the Oval Office after a recent China trip. Trump is then jolted awake by Ferrell, in a gray prison uniform and chains, playing the ghost of Jeffrey Epstein. The chain-wrapped specter offered Trump visions of the future, evoking Jacob Marley from “A Christmas Carol.”

“Wow, I’m surprised there is one,” Trump deadpanned about the future.

Among the visions Epstein conjured: Pete Hegseth (Colin Jost) pouring beer into “a giant beer bong” while FBI Director Kash Patel (Aziz Ansari) drank from the connected tube. Another vision showed former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on the Home Shopping Network. The cold open also featured a brief musical duet between Ferrell and Johnson.

The monologue: Chad Smith pretends to be the host

Ferrell opened with a thank-you to the audience and a comment that hosting for the sixth time “really feels like coming home” — only for Smith to walk on stage and claim the hosting gig was his.

“What the hell are you doing? I’m the host,” Smith said, prompting Ferrell to spell out the bit for the audience: “You’re Chad Smith of the Red Hot Chili Peppers.” The two have famously been confused for one another for years, a running gag dating to Ferrell’s drum battle with Smith on “The Tonight Show” in 2014.

After getting Smith off the stage, Ferrell pivoted to taking audience questions — and called on McCartney, seated in the crowd. McCartney joined Ferrell on stage and immediately insisted that he was, in fact, the host of the show.

Ferrell then mocked McCartney’s case by sarcastically acknowledging his catalog. “I know you’ve written a lot of good songs,” Ferrell said, before reeling off a string of McCartney-penned hits, including “Let It Be,” “Hey Jude,” and “Eleanor Rigby.”

But then Ferrell pivoted: “There’s some great songs you didn’t write,” he said, listing “the alphabet song,” Pitbull’s “Timber” and “all the Smash Mouth stuff.”

Will Ferrell and Chad Smith attend Game Three of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs between the Colorado Avalanche and the Los Angeles Kings at Crypto.com Arena on April 23, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ryan Hadji/NHLI via Getty Images)

(NHL Images via Getty Images)

A mechanic sketch and a Molly Shannon cameo

McCartney resurfaced later in a sketch about what it feels like to talk to a car mechanic, playing a chief mechanic named Nigel alongside Ferrell, Marcello Hernández, Mikey Day and Ashley Padilla. The sketch leaned on increasingly nonsensical industry jargon.

“Your tipsy-wipsy’s all dangly-doodly, and the spiggly-wiggly’s gone crumpet. The whole car is knackered,” McCartney told the visiting couple. He added: “Plus, the steering wheel’s on the wrong bloody side.” At another point, Ferrell explained that the customer was “going to need a new transperson.”

Paul McCartney’s three performances

McCartney performed “Days We Left Behind,” a new track from his forthcoming 21st solo studio album, “The Boys of Dungeon Lane,” which arrives May 29. His second performance was “Band on the Run,” the 1973 Wings classic.

Then, as the cast gathered for goodnights and the credits began to roll, McCartney walked back to his band and led an unplanned third performance “Coming Up,” the lead single from his 1980 album “McCartney II.”

What’s next

Season 51 ends with the finale. “SNL” returns for its 52nd season in the fall on NBC and Peacock.

Ferrell’s next on-screen project is “The Hawk,” a Netflix golf comedy he co-created with Harper Steele and Chris Henchy, premiering July 16. McCartney’s new album, “The Boys of Dungeon Lane,” is out May 29.



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