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Sean Spicer Fires Back at Melissa McCarthy's 'SNL' Sketch

White House spokesman Sean Spicer advises Melissa McCarthy to 'dial it back' after her epic lampooning of him on Saturday Night LIve. Despite Spicer's embattled image, he's trying to take it in stride.
Image: Melissa McCarthy performs in a Saturday Night Live skit as White House press secretary Sean Spicer
Melissa McCarthy performs in a Saturday Night Live skit as White House press secretary Sean Spicer.NBC

White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer is not well known for his sense of humor, but he tried to find the funny in actress Melissa McCarthy's buzzworthy portrayal of him on this weekend's "Saturday Night Live."

The "Bridesmaids" star made the cameo appearance in a sketch lampooning Spicer's combative press briefings, in which she portrayed him as evasive, petulant, emotionally unstable and a ferocious consumer of chewing gum.

In a interview Monday on Fox News, Spicer described McCarthy's spoof of him as "cute."

"I’d rather us be talking about the issues that the president is so committed to helping Americans on," he said "But you know, it's a part of American culture."

Related: How ‘Saturday Night Live’ Has Shaped American Politics

In an earlier interview with “Extra's” AJ Calloway at the Super Bowl in Houston on Sunday, Spicer also tried to take the skewering in stride, saying that McCarthy's impression was "funny," and that she "needs to slow down on the gum chewing; way too many pieces in there" and she "could dial back" her performance a bit.

Spicer's remarks are the latest salvo in the Trump administration's public dialogue with America's longest running satirical television franchise.

Although President Donald Trump has appeared on the show in the past, and hosted it in November 2015, he's repeatedly lashed out at the program and the unflattering portrayal of him by actor Alec Baldwin, since this new season began.

On Twitter, Trump has called the show "unwatchable," "the worst of NBC," "not funny," and "really bad television."

When pressed on this point by NBC's Matt Lauer in early December of 2016, Trump implied that the show — now in its 42nd season, would likely be canceled soon.

“The way the show is going now and you look at the kind of work they’re doing, who knows how long that show is going to be on,” he said. “It’s a terrible show.”

On Sunday, Spicer echoed his boss's view on the Alec Baldwin portrayal of Trump, telling "Extra": "There’s a streak of meanness that they have kind of crossed over into."

But some critics have argued that the show's recent take-downs of Trump have helped it "reclaim its mojo."

"What makes 'SNL’s' Trump material so brilliant is that, perhaps for the first time, the cast and crew are more than aware that Trump is watching," wrote Salon's Bob Cesca recently. "Rather than being deferential, 'SNL' is deliberately crawling up Trump’s a--, and they know it’s working, thanks to Twitter."

Related: ‘Saturday Night Live’ Tackles Its Trump Problem

Ironically, during the show's inaugural season four decades ago, then White House Press Secretary Ron Nesson appeared to have been a better sport, hosting the show himself in April of 1976. That episode also featured a cameo from the sitting president -- Gerald Ford -- and some infamously risque sketches.