Alec Baldwin returned to "SNL" on Saturday's politics-focused cold open, but the former Trump impersonator took on a different figure entirely for this episode: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. The cold open imagined the private meeting between outgoing president Joe Biden (played by Dana Carvey) and incoming president Trump (James Austin Johnson),
Saturday Night Live staged a private Oval Office meeting between James Austin Johnson’s Donald Trump and Dana Carvey’s Joe Biden — a meeting that ultimately got interrupted by two of Trump’s cabinet picks.
Alec Baldwin debuted his Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on this week's 'Saturday Night Live,' as Trump and Biden bond over hating being President.
Doctors are worried Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will tout anti-vaccine views after he was picked to lead the Department of Health and Human Services by Trump.
Trump's HHS pick could reshape public health agencies and usher in a new era for vaccines, food, and medicines.
Just days after scoring a decisive election win, President-elect Trump has moved with lightning speed to put forward a host of cabinet picks, some of which shocked political allies and foes alike
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has some views that physicians have welcomed, including calls to remove processed foods from school lunches.
RFK Jr. said the food Donald Trump eats is "really, like, bad." McDonald's, Diet Coke, Oreos, KFC, chocolate cake, chips, ice cream and more.
Following the decision by the president-elect, many medical professionals were left aghast that a man who has previously been accused of amplifying conspiracy theories—most notably about the COVID vaccine—could potentially be in charge of the health of 350 million Americans from January if he is confirmed by the Senate.
HBO's Bill Maher didn't join the liberal panic over President-elect Trump's decision to nominate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services.
The stocks of companies that make or are developing the new class of weight-loss and diabetes-management drugs were sharply lower Friday, after President-elect Donald Trump named Robert F. Kennedy Jr.