Skip navigation

McCain joins SNL's Fey to joke about campaign

Would you believe selling campaign products on QVC shopping channel?

Image: Tina Fey and John McCain on Saturday Night Live
Dana Edelson / NBC
Video
  McCain pokes fun at campaign on ‘SNL’
Nov. 2: Sen. John McCain stopped by “Saturday Night Live” to make a late-night appeal to voters’ funny bones.

Today show

Slideshows: The path to presidency
U.S Senator Barack Obama
EPA
  The long road to the White House
Barack Obama’s two-year journey to his historic election encompassed fist bumps and bowling balls, controversies and celebrations.
Image: Barack Obama
The Rise of Barack Obama
  A leader in the making
Witness private and political moments along Barack Obama’s path to the presidency, as seen by official White House photographer Pete Souza.
AP
  Presidential journey
Want to follow the roots of President-elect Barack Obama? Get ready to visit three countries, five time zones and six states.
AP
  World reacts to Obama’s victory
From the U.S. president-elect’s ancestral homes in Kenya and Ireland to his namesake town in Japan, election fever grips the globe.
Gonzales Testifies At Senate Hearing On NSA Surveillance
Getty Images
  A look at Biden
A glimpse over the years at U.S. Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del.
Slideshow
Crazy candidate merchandise
Online entrepreneurs cash in on the heated election with candidate-related toys, finger puppets, comic books — and even condoms.
updated 11:19 a.m. ET Nov. 2, 2008

NEW YORK - Republican John McCain poked fun at his presidential campaign's financial shortcomings and his reputation as a political maverick in an appearance on NBC's "Saturday Night Live."

The presidential hopeful made a cameo appearance at the beginning of the show, with Tina Fey reprising her memorable impersonation of McCain's running mate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin.

McCain, who is trailing Democrat Barack Obama in most battleground state polls, also appeared during the show's "Weekend Update" newscast to announce he would pursue a new campaign strategy in the closing days of the campaign.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

"I thought I might try a strategy called the reverse maverick. That's where I'd do whatever anybody tells me," McCain said.

And if that didn't work, "I'd go to the double maverick. I'd just go totally berserk and freak everybody out," the Arizona senator quipped.

Earlier in the show, McCain and Fey, portraying Palin, said they couldn't afford a half-hour campaign commercial on network television like Democrat Barack Obama aired earlier this week. They said they'd sell campaign products on the QVC shopping channel instead.

Among other things, McCain advertised a set of knives to cut through pork in Washington. His wife, Cindy McCain, briefly appeared to advertise "McCain Fine-Gold" jewelry, a play on the campaign finance law McCain authored with Wisconsin Democratic Sen. Russ Feingold.

Fey, as Palin, advertised a set of "Joe" dolls commemorating Joe the Plumber, Joe Six Pack and her Democratic rival, Joe Biden.

The pretend Palin also pulled out T-shirts saying "Palin 2012" and said she wouldn't be returning to Alaska after the election.

"I'm either running in four years or I'm going to be a white Oprah," she said.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links

Resource guide