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Rob Schneider says 'SNL' was 'over'

Rob Schneider revealed the exact moment he knew that "Saturday Night Live" had "finished."
"SNL" alumni, who began his career as a writer at the event in 1989, said the song "Hallelujah" from Kate McKinnon from Hallelujah dressed like Hillary Clinton was the death of the hit sketch show.
The 58-year-old player, who later joined as a member of the cast between 1990 and 1994, slammed the famous general elections after 2016.
Rob Schneider was heard at McKinnon Dressing as Clinton for the post-2016 Election Cold Open, which stated when he saw the performance he thought the show "was over."
"I hate nonsense in my own show," said the star "Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo" on "The Glenn Beck Podcast" Saturday.
"When Hillary Clinton lost - to understand. He is not the most preferred person in the room.
And then when Kate McKinnon went there on the 'Saturday Night Live' in the cold opening and all of that, and she began to dress like Hillary Clinton, and she started playing 'Halleluya.'
I really pray, 'please joke at the end. '" Kate McKinnon played Hillary Clinton when she sang Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" during the cold open sketch after "SNL." 
"‘ Don't do this. Please don't go there. 'And there is no joke at the end, and I leave,' it's over. It's over.
It won't come back, '" Schneider added. McKinnon's performance of the Hit Leonard Cohen song has been viewed more than 13 million times on the official YouTube page of the event.
McKinnon, 38, played the Clinton parody version in this series throughout the 2016 election cycle. He left "SNL" earlier this year.
McKinnon told Esquire that he thought "Hallelujah" was "the most beautiful song ever written, one of my top three songs throughout my life."
"I always understand 'Hallelujah' in the context of romantic relationships, like most of us," Mackinnon told outlets.
"And then this verse-at this time at this time was very emotional for everyone in this country when it does not care about which side you are, it is a surprising moment and high-octane emotions-I suddenly understand it in a new light.
It's about love, and how love is a slog but it's commensurate. " Heidi Gardner, Aidy Bryant, Kyle Mooney, Kate McKinnon, and host Natasha Lyonne appeared in the "commercial women" sketch for "SNL." 
"Suddenly I understand it as, like, the love of this idea is America. That everyone was created the same, and that is the most beautiful idea in the world, but the execution of H
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