>
Hard To See How EU Can Strike A Deal, Without Writing A Check
Trump Set To Sign Exec Order Boosting Domestic Coal To Meet AI Power Demands
The Gold Standard Is Back - Stablecoins Need To Rethink What 'Backing' Really Means
Stocks Erase Early Gains As White House Pulls Trigger On 104% China Tariffs
World's Smallest Pacemaker is Made for Newborns, Activated by Light, and Requires No Surgery
Barrel-rotor flying car prototype begins flight testing
Coin-sized nuclear 3V battery with 50-year lifespan enters mass production
BREAKTHROUGH Testing Soon for Starship's Point-to-Point Flights: The Future of Transportation
Molten salt test loop to advance next-gen nuclear reactors
Quantum Teleportation Achieved Over Internet For The First Time
Watch the Jetson Personal Air Vehicle take flight, then order your own
Microneedles extract harmful cells, deliver drugs into chronic wounds
SpaceX Gigabay Will Help Increase Starship Production to Goal of 365 Ships Per Year
But instead of condemning the attacks or calling out the criminals, the cast of Saturday Night Live decided to point the finger at Elon Musk.
In the latest sketch, Mike Myers played a parody version of Musk and opened with this line:
"Recently, our dealerships have been the target of many attacks. And suddenly no one likes Tesla cars. So I asked myself why? And then I answered myself: 'Because of me.'"
Then, Parody Musk introduced Tesla Model V, "the first electric car in history to be fully self-vandalizing."
The fake ad included features like:
• Self-smashing headlights
• Self-slashing tires
• AI-powered graffiti
"You can choose from [graffiti] penises or swastikas, or my favorite, swastikas made out of penises," Parody Musk announced.
Myers' impression also mocked Musk's autistic traits. This was something many viewers immediately called out as mean-spirited and out of line.
One popular account on X, Autistic Capital, wrote:
"This is in such exceedingly bad taste. Wow. Not even funny, just mean. Born from hate, not from humor."
Musk also took notice of the sketch, firing back at SNL with these words:
"SNL hasn't been funny in a long time. They are their own parody," he wrote.
And he makes a fair point. Remember when the MeToo movement taught us not to blame the victim? That message seemed to vanish the moment Elon Musk entered the political scene. Now, mocking someone for being autistic is apparently considered comedy, too.
Democrats once claimed to stand for decency and principle. But sketches like this prove they've abandoned both. And with more people taking notice, it's no surprise their favorability ratings are at all-time lows.