James Cameron Says It's 'Horrifying to Me' that AI Can 'Make Up an Actor': It Creates a 'Performance From Scratch With a Text Prompt'

Safe to say James Cameron will never cast Tilly Norwood in a movie.

During a recent interview withCBS' Sunday Morning, the director of "The Terminator" explained that even before the invention of generative AI, some Hollywood insiders thought he would use computer graphics to replace actors as he was developing the first "Avatar" film in 2005.

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He recalled, "For years, there was this sense that, 'Oh, they're doing something strange with computers and they're replacing actors,' when in fact, once you really drill down and you see what we're doing, it's a celebration of the actor-director moment."

Cameron said now that generative AI is invading the industry, the idea that the technology could substitute for a performer is "horrifying."

"Now, go to the other end of the spectrum, and you've got generative AI, where they can make up a character," Cameron added. "They can make up an actor. They can make up a performance from scratch with a text prompt. It's like, no. That's horrifying to me. That's the opposite. That's exactly what we're not doing."

In September, comedian and producer Eline Van der Veldenintroduced AI performer Tilly Norwoodto the world at the Zurich Summit, boasting that her team had already received interest from multiple talent agencies. The presentation sparkedimmediate backlashfrom industry leaders.

In asit-down withVariety, Van der Velden said, despite the overwhelming backlash, the presence of AI is only going to grow in filmmaking.

"I think it will be a slow progression," she said. "I'm sure in the coming year, there'll be plenty of effects that will be made with AI. There'll be some establishing shots, there'll be some second-unit shots with AI, and then slowly, we'll progress to a full AI film. And whether people will pay for an AI film or not — I don't think they'll know the difference. It's good storytelling that will be the reason why people will pay for it or not."

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James Cameron Says It’s ‘Horrifying to Me’ that AI Can ‘Make Up an Actor’: It Creates a ‘Performance From Scratch With a Text Prompt’

Safe to say James Cameron will never cast Tilly Norwood in a movie. During a recent interview withCBS' Sunda...
Jesse Grant/Getty Brendan Fraser

Jesse Grant/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Brendan Fraser leads the new movie Rental Family, from filmmaker Hikari

  • He accepted the role of a struggling actor after himself winning an Academy Award

  • "I struggle with confidence," Fraser admitted in a candid new interview

Is it a coincidence thatBrendan Fraserplays a struggling actor in his new movie?

Rental Family(in theaters now), from writer-directorHikari, stars Fraser, 56, as an American actor working odd jobs in Tokyo, Japan. As the2023 Best Actor Oscar winnerjoked to theAssociated Pressin a recent interview, the role may have served as a reminder: "Don't get too comfortable. It can happen to me."

"I struggle with confidence," Fraser admitted. "I always have the feeling of not being good enough. Believe me, no one can be harder on me than me. No critic, no pithy internet comment can be more biting to me than myself in my private thoughts."

That's despite making a lauded comeback for his Oscar-winning performance inThe Whale. "I grapple with overcoming that," said the actor, recalling one of the two times he hostedSaturday Night Live. Producer Lorne Michaels, he recalled, told him, "'You know, it's all about confidence.' I don't know if that psyched me up or not."

James Lisle/Searchlight Pictures Rental Family

James Lisle/Searchlight Pictures

He added: "Forget everything you know and just own it. Can you do that is the question, the eternal one."

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Did becoming an Oscar winner change Fraser? "Honestly, I was kind of floating during that whole time without an agent," he said. "I was looking for that unicorn project that hadn't been made into oblivion. I ended up: What is a rental family? Which dog do you like at the pound? I like the one with four teeth and one tweaky eye."

Hikari, the filmmaker behindRental Family, "gave me the opportunity to kind of dovetail from whatever happens in the vacuum after you experience a recognition like that," he recalled. "It was a moment of: I guess things are going to be a little different going forward."

Retreating from Hollywood for a gig that requiredimmersing himselfin Japanese culture, Fraser added, "was personally what I needed. I wanted to remove myself from whatever this place is, just for a while."

James Lisle/Searchlight Pictures Rental Family

James Lisle/Searchlight Pictures

Related:https://people-app.onelink.me/HNIa/kz7l4cuf

Among Fraser's upcoming roles are Dwight D. Eisenhower in war dramaPressureanda return toThe Mummymovies. Of reuniting withRachel Weiszin Universal Pictures' monster franchise, Fraser teased to AP, "the one I wanted to make is forthcoming. And I've been waiting 20 years for this call… It's time to give the fans what they want."

Rental Family, costarring Mari Yamamoto, Takehiro Hira, Shannon Mahina Gorman and Akira Emoto, is in theaters now.

Read the original article onPeople

Brendan Fraser Admits He 'Struggles with Confidence' Even After His Oscar Win

Jesse Grant/Getty NEED TO KNOW Brendan Fraser leads the new movie Rental Family , from filmmaker Hikari He accepted the role of a struggl...
Democrat to push war powers resolutions after report of attack on drug boat survivors

Sen. Tim Kaine says he plans to refile his resolution demanding there be no war against Venezuela without congressional approval and expressed confidence it could pass givenrecent developmentsin the Trump administration's escalating campaign against the South American country.

"It failed, but that was before all of these assets have amassed around Venezuela, and before President Trump said that the airspace needs to be closed," Kaine said Sunday on CBS' "Face the Nation."

Kaine also said he plans to reintroduce the war powers resolution that he and Democratic colleague Adam Schiff introduced in October that block the use of U.S. military force in the Caribbean Sea without an Authorization of Military Force by Congress.

Ramping up pressure, Trump says Venezuela airspace should be considered closed

"The circumstances have changed in the months since we had that vote. In each of these instances, we were able to get two Republicans to vote together with Democrats," Kaine said. "We think the escalating pace and some of the recent revelations, so, for example, the recent revelation about the 'kill everyone' order apparently dictated by Secretary Hegseth. We do believe that we will get more support for these motions when they are refiled."

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: US-POLITICS-MILITARY

Kaine was referencing a Washington Post report that Hegseth allegedly gave an order ahead of a Sept. 2 operation in the Caribbean Sea for the military to kill everyone aboard a suspected drug boat. After an initial strike left two survivors, the commander leading the operation reportedly complied with Hegseth's alleged directive by ordering a second strike, according to the Post report.

Hegseth defended the U.S. military's operations targeting the boats in the wake of the Post report, which ABC News has not confirmed the details of.

One person familiar with details of the Sept. 2 incident confirmed to ABC News that there were survivors from an initial strike on the boat and that those survivors were killed in subsequent strikes.ABC News has not confirmed, though, the specifics of the orders.

President Donald Trump told reporters on Sunday that he would not have wanted a second strike to kill survivors, but was adamant that Hegseth denied ordering it.

"I don't know anything about it," Trump said when asked about the report. "[Hegseth] said, he said, he did not say that. And I believe him."

"But no, I wouldn't have wanted that. Not a second strike. The first strike was very lethal. It was fine, and if there were two people around, but Pete said that didn't happen. I have great confidence," Trump said.

Van Hollen: 'Very possible there was a war crime committed' in Venezuela boat strike

According to the Post report, Hegseth is said to have given an order ahead of the strike that there should be no survivors, but Hegseth did not give a specific order to target the boat again when two survivors were seen. Instead, the special operations officer commanding the mission ordered the second strike "to comply with Hegseth's instructions," two people familiar with the matter told the Post.

Handout/US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth via Getty Images - PHOTO: US-MILITARY-STRIKES-PACIFIC-DRUGS

Since September, the U.S. haslaunched at least 20 strikeson suspected drug boats in the Caribbean, killing more than 80 people.

A resolution to prevent President Donald Trump from attacking what the administration says are drug cartel smuggling boats failed to advance earlier this month by a 49-51 vote. Republican Sens. Rand Paul and Lisa Murkowski voted with Democrats on the resolution.

Sen. Roger Wicker, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and ranking Democrat on the committee Sen. Jack Reed on Friday called for "vigorous oversight to determine the facts" of allegations that the military intentionally killed survivors of a boat strike.

"The Committee has directed inquiries to the Department, and we will be conducting vigorous oversight to determine the facts related to these circumstances," Wicker and Reed said in a statement.

On Saturday, the chairman and ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee also released a joint statement calling for "rigorous oversight" of the strikes against alleged drug smugglers.

"This committee is committed to providing rigorous oversight of the Department of Defense's military operations in the Caribbean. We take seriously the reports of follow-on strikes on boats alleged to be ferrying narcotics in the SOUTHCOM region and are taking bipartisan action to gather a full accounting of the operation in question," Chairman Mike Rogers and ranking member Adam Smith wrote in their statement.

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle expressed concern Sunday over the reports of the Sept. 2 incident, saying that if they were true, it would have been an illegal act.

Hegseth responds to report that boat survivors were killed as a result of his orders to military

Republican Rep. Mike Turner, a member of the House Armed Services Committee and a former chairman of the Intelligence Committee, told "Face the Nation," "Obviously, if that occurred, that would be very serious. And I agree that, that would be an illegal act."

He added that Congress has not been informed by the administration that such action has been taken.

"There are very serious concerns, questions in Congress about the attacks on the so-called drug boats down in the Caribbean and the Pacific, and the legal justification that's been provided, but this is completely outside of anything that has been discussed with Congress, and there is an ongoing investigation."

Sen. Chris Van Hollen, a member of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, told ABC News' "This Week" he believes "it's very possible there was a war crime committed" if the reports of a second strike are true.

"I think it's very possible there was a war crime committed. Of course, for it to be a war crime, you have to accept the Trump administration's whole construct here ... which is we're in armed conflict, at war with this particular -- with the drug gangs," Van Hollen said. "Of course, they've never presented the public with the information they've got here. If that theory is wrong, then it's plain murder."

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: US-POLITICS-MILITARY-STRIKES

Rep. Don Bacon, a Republican who sits on the House Armed Services Committee, told "This Week" the report was "a big concern," but also expressed skepticism Hegseth would have issued such an order.

"We should get to the truth. I don't think [Hegseth] would be foolish enough to make this decision to say 'Kill everybody, kill the survivors,' because that's a clear violation of the law of war. So, I'm very suspicious that he would've done something like that because it would go against common sense," Bacon said.

"But," he continued, "If it was as if the article said, that is a violation of the law of war. When people want to surrender, you don't kill them, and they have to pose an imminent threat. It's hard to believe that two people on a raft, trying to survive, would pose an imminent threat."

Turner said that despite Trump's social media posts suggesting a strike on Venezuela could be imminent, Congress has not been informed of that or given a justification as to why it should.

"Well, the president did not say that, and the president certainly has not given Congress any notice that that is going to occur," Turner said when asked if a strike was imminent.

"He certainly has not made the case there is a buildup that the president has not explained in a way that relates solely to the actions that are currently going down in the Caribbean, and with respect to the drug trade that the President has been discussing with Congress, it is certainly a significant concern in Congress."

Asked Sunday if his post meant an invasion of Venezuela was imminent, Trump replied, "Don't read anything into it."

ABC News' Anne Flaherty, Quinn Scanlan, Kendall Wright and Luis Martinez contributed to this report.

Democrat to push war powers resolutions after report of attack on drug boat survivors

Sen. Tim Kaine says he plans to refile his resolution demanding there be no war against Venezuela without congressional a...

Immigration activists interact with NYPD as they block a garage used by ICE vans during a protest against a purported ICE raid on Canal Street on November 29, 2025 in New York City. Activists assembled outside of a garage used by ICE and later they tried to block ICE vehicles as they traveled from the garage down Canal Street to the Holland Tunnel to exit Manhattan. Credit - Stephanie Keith—2025 Getty Images

For the second time in just over a month, a large-scale raid by dozens ofimmigration agentsin New York City was met with a similarly large-scale counter-protest. This time, however, the protesters thwarted the authorities' plans before they began.

Multiple arrests were made on Saturday during scuffles on the edge of Chinatown, during which hundreds of protesters faced off with federal agents, eventually supported by the New York Police Department (NYPD), as they prepared to launch araid in the area.

It comes just a month after a raid by 50 federal agents using military-style vehicles stormed nearby Canal Street in Lower Manhattan, and was met with a protest ofhundredsin response.

Read more:Inside Chicago's Battle With Trump

The confrontation also comes amid a reported surge in activity by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents in the city in recent weeks, despite a friendly encounter between the Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani and President Donald Trump earlier this month that appeared to avert a showdown over the issue.

But the mass counter-protest of some 200 people demonstrates the challenges federal authorities will face in enforcing President Trump's hardline immigration agenda in a city that is rooted in its immigrant identity.

Immigration crackdowns in other cities like Chicago and Portland have been met with similar responses from locals opposed to the Trump Administration's immigration crackdown, but New York could prove to be the toughest challenge yet.

Saturday's incident demonstrated how the city's physical infrastructure —its narrow streets and densely populated areas, built mostly by immigrant labor over the last two centuries—can impede ICE's so-called "enforcement surges," which involve large numbers of federal agents conducting sweeping raids, often moving quickly in and out of an area.

Not only are large-scale ICE raids being met by hundreds of protesters, but in two months, New York will be led by an immigrant mayor for the first time in 50 years. Mamdani, who moved to the United States when he was seven years old,campaigned on protectingNew York's immigrant community from these very same raids. He received a boost early in his campaign from a viral moment in which hescreamed at Trump's border czar, Tom Homan, accusing him of abandoning the First Amendment.

A spokesperson from Mamdani's transition team told TIME on Sunday in response to the clashes in Manhattan that the Mayor-elect "has made it clear — including to the President — that these raids are cruel and inhumane, and fail to advance genuine public safety."

"New York City's more than three million immigrants are central to our city's strength, vitality, and success, and the Mayor-elect remains steadfast in his commitment to protecting the rights and dignity of every single New Yorker, upholding our sanctuary laws, and deescalation rather than use of unnecessary force," Monica Klein, a transition spokesperson, added.

'Agitators'in 'goggles'

The confrontation began on Saturday, when agents from U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) gathered in a parking garage in a federal building on the edge of Chinatown in preparation for a raid.

Videos of the incidentshow protesters blockingthe agents as theytry to leave the garagein their cars. The crowd then swells to the hundreds, as more NYPD officers arrive.

Later, according to reports, federal agents emerged from the garage and assisted the NYPD in detaining protesters.

The DHS blamed "agitators" for blocking the federal agents in a statement to TIME.

"Following social media posts calling agitators to ICE's location in New York City, individuals dressed in black clothing with backpacks, face masks, and goggles showed up and began to obstruct federal law enforcement officers including by blocking the parking garage," the statement said. "NYPD was called and responded to hundreds of violent rioters, which resulted in the arrest of multiple agitators."

Murad Awawdeh, President of the immigrant advocacy group the New York Immigration Coalition and a member of Mamdani'stransition team, said the protests this weekend were a sign that the city would put up fierce resistance to federal immigration operations.

"New York City is unlike any other place in this country or even the world, and what you have seen yesterday and time and again is that New Yorkers of all stripes, across all creeds, are not going to allow a rogue, lawless, violent and horrific agency to continue to mess with their neighbors," he told TIME.

"I think the message here is that we're all walking each other home together," he added.

The attempted raid in Lower Manhattan comes amid an increase in ICE activity in New York City over the past few weeks. On Oct. 21, in a separate raid on Canal Street, nine people from Africa were taken into custody by ICE agents during what DHS called a "targeted, intelligence-driven enforcement operation…focused on criminal activity relating to selling counterfeit goods." The raid, which involved more than 50 federal agents, also led to the arrest of five protestors after people reportedly attempted to chase federal agents away. The DHS claimed protestors were blocking vehicles and obstructing law enforcement duties.

In recent weeks, ICE agents have been spotted with greater frequency in immigrant neighborhoods of Corona in Queens, Washington Heights in Manhattan, and Sunset Park in Brooklyn.

Activists in those neighborhoods have responded to the increased ICE activity by organizing community alert systems, such ashanding out whistlesto be used when agents are seen in the area. The strategies resemble ICE Watch in other cities hit especially hard by Trump's immigration crackdown,such as Chicago, where groups likeProtect Rogers Parkenlist community members to follow and report onICE activity in the area.

'This is an immigrant city'

Saturday's incident is likely to renew tensions between Mamdani and the Trump Administration over immigration before the Mayor-elect has even taken up his post at City Hall.

Mamdani staked out a firm position on how the city would respond to raids after Tom Homan warned that ICE agents would soon "flood the zone" in New York earlier this month. He also signaled a change in how he wanted the NYPD to deal with federal immigration agents operating in the city after reports that Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, whom Mamdani has announced will keep her position in his administration, was tipped off about the Oct. 21 raid.

"What we will ensure is the NYPD will be delivering public safety, not assisting ICE in their attempts to fulfill the administration's goal of creating the single largest deportation force in American history," Mamdanisaidin an interview posted on Nov. 19.

"This city is also an immigrant city. It's a city that is proud of its immigrant heritage," he said. "And we will protect those New Yorkers."

Mamdani and Trump appeared to avoid major disagreements on the issue during their notoriously friendly Oval Office meeting a few days later.

In that meeting, Mamandi said he and the President spoke about immigration enforcement in New York City.

"We discussed ICE and New York City, and I spoke about how the laws that we have in New York City allow for New York City government to speak to the federal administration for about 170 serious crimes," Mamdani said, standing alongside Trump.

"The concerns that many New Yorkers have are around the enforcement of immigration laws on New Yorkers across the five boroughs, and most recently, we're talking about a mother and her two children, how this has very little to do with what that is," he added.

Trump responded: "What we did is, we discussed crime. More than ICE, per se, we discussed crime. And he doesn't want to see crime, and I don't want to see crime, and I have very little doubt that we're not going to get along on that issue."

Contact usatletters@time.com.

How 200 New Yorkers Foiled an ICE Raid Before It Even Began

Immigration activists interact with NYPD as they block a garage used by ICE vans during a protest against a purported ICE raid on Canal Str...

Battle Company troops work on a new outpost their platoon fought hard to establish after the Taliban had controlled this strategic high ground near several of their bases in Korengal Valley, Kunar province, Afghanistan on Sept. 2, 2007. Credit - Lynsey Addario—Getty Images

The suspect in the shooting oftwo National Guardmembers in Washington, D.C., had worked with an elite counterterrorism unit operated by the CIA, according to a veterans group that supports the United States military's former Afghan allies—but little is known about the group or its work.

Afghan national Rahmanullah Lakanwal, 29, was arrested in connection with the killing of Sarah Beckstrom, 20, and the wounding of Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, 24, two West Virginia Guardsmen who were posted to the city as part of President Donald Trump'scrackdown on crime.

Read More:'I'm Afraid:' What U.S. Aid Cuts Mean for the Women of Afghanistan

Lakanwal was one of thousands of Afghans who worked alongside the U.S. military during the nearly 20-year war against the Taliban. Not everyone worked with the CIA, however.

AfghanEvac, a veterans group that supports America's former Afghan allies, told TIME that he worked for a CIA-backed "03" unit, one of several so-called "Zero Units" that received "direct U.S. intelligence and military support."

Here's what we know about those groups.

Extrajudicial killings

Lakanwal's particular unit "03", as it's described on his badge, was responsible for operations around the southern province of Kandahar and beyond. Images of his badge that circulated on social media after the attack included the words "Firebase Gecko," which was the name of the CIA and special forces' base in the southern region where the 03 unit was located, previously the compound for Taliban-founder and Afghanistan's first supreme leader, Mullah Mohammad Omar.

The CIA did not immediately respond to TIME's request for comment.

These units worked as Afghan intelligence and paramilitary forces, aiding U.S. troops in their years-long battle against the Taliban. They were trained by American special operations soldiers and carried out dangerous missions and night raids.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) hasaccusedthe units of extrajudicial killings, indiscriminate airstrikes, and several violations of international humanitarian law in the 2010s. Known for their night raids and clandestine missions, HRW said the units were referred to as "death squads" by diplomats in the nation. The CIA and the U.S. government have denied these claims.

A HRW report recounts an incident in which CIA-backed Afghan paramilitary forces raided the home of a staff member of an NGO in 2018.

"The forces arrived late at night at the family compound and separated the women from the men. They singled out the staff member's brother and took him to another part of the house. They shot him, leaving the body, and left with another male family member, whom the government later denied holding," the report said.

The same report, which does not specifically name the 03 unit but talks generally about CIA-backed Afghan forces, says those groups "often have U.S. special forces personnel deployed alongside them during kill-or-capture operations; these U.S. forces, primarily Army Rangers, have been seconded to the CIA."

It added: "Afghan paramilitary strike forces generally carry out operations with U.S. logistical support and are dependent on US.. intelligence and surveillance for targeting."

Kevin Maurer, a journalist who traveled with Special Forces in Afghanistan during the war, said the Zero Units were the stuff of legend.

"I covered the War in Afghanistan for 17 years, and the Zero Units were cloaked in legend," he wrotes forRolling Stone. "Zero Unit slots were coveted because of better pay, better training, and the chance to work alongside elite U.S. operators."

Operation Allies Welcome

Positions in these units were also coveted for their ability to help participants immigrate and resettle in the U.S. The Biden-era program, initially known as Operation Allies Welcome, was launched after the Taliban returned to power in 2021. It was set up to help Afghan nationals and their families who aided the U.S. war effort to resettle in the U.S. without permanent resident status.

When Kabul fell to the Taliban, the scene was chaotic as the U.S. attempted to extricate itself after 20 years of military presence, and many of the Afghan nationals who aided the U.S. during that time feared they would be targeted by Taliban forces.

Under Operation Allies Welcome, later renamed Enduring Welcome, the program admitted nearly 200,000 Afghans to the United States. About 40 percent of those were granted Special Immigrant Visas.

Shawn VanDiver, president of nonprofit AfghanEvac, released a statement after the shooting calling Enduring Welcome was "the secure, deliberate, interagency pipeline built to continue relocating vetted Afghan wartime allies after the evacuation," despite Trump's claims that the program allowed in people that were not "vetted."

The Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) archived page for the program says that all those admitted went through a "rigorous screening and vetting process," that was "multi-layered and ongoing," and included screenings from the DHS, the Department of Defense (DOD), the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), and more.

"It was the safest, most secure immigration pathway in U.S. history, combining multiple layers of vetting by DHS, DoD, FBI, and the intelligence community," VanDiver said. "It allowed the U.S. to continue fulfilling promises to Afghan wartime allies and is supported by both Republican and Democratic Members of Congress."

In response to the shooting, the Trump Administration announced that it wouldpause all asylumdecisions and stop issuing visas to people from Afghanistan, a decision that VanDiver says is collective punishment based on one person's actions.

The organization lamented the defunding or elimination of several Homeland Security programs it says were built to "identify threats, prevent radicalization, and support community-based interventions," including the Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) programs, and mental-health, trauma, and reintegration programs for immigrants.

TIME contacted the DHS for comment.

"The administration curtailed the programs that were designed to prevent individuals in crisis from becoming violent, while simultaneously using one tragic outlier to justify broad restrictions on Afghan families who have no connection to this case," AfghanEvac wrote.

Contact usatletters@time.com.

What We Know About the CIA Unit Allegedly Tied to the D.C. Shooting Suspect

Battle Company troops work on a new outpost their platoon fought hard to establish after the Taliban had controlled this strategic high gro...
Santiago Felipe/Getty; Kait Dugan/NBC Sebastian Maniscalco in September; Marcello Hernández on 'SNL' as Sebastian Maniscalco

Santiago Felipe/Getty; Kait Dugan/NBC

They say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but how doesSebastian Maniscalcofeel about being parodied onSaturday Night Live?

Apparently, he was a fan ofMarcello Hernandez's impressionin the Nov. 15 episode of the sketch comedy series, though he did have one note. "So, [it was] pretty good. I didn't know I was that gray, but, anyway," he told Drew Barrymore of the impersonation duringan upcoming appearance onThe Drew Barrymore Show.

View this post on Instagram

In the sketch in question,SNLhost of the week Glen Powell plays a groom-to-be who invites Maniscalco (as played by Hernandez) to his bachelor party. Of the scene,Billboardwrote in its review of the episode, "Hernandez's impression of Maniscalcohilariouslynails the comedian's greatest hits of histrionics — his cock walk, wildly swinging hands and hips, referee signals and the old Superman back kick — in a skit about him joining a bachelor's weekend. He's dressed in sharkskin and a black turtleneck. The rest of the guys are wearing Hawaiian shirts and shorts."

Barrymore, herself a six-timeSNLhost, admitted that Maniscalco's note was "true," and that Hernandez's wig "was a little too white."

"Yeah, it's okay," Maniscalco replied. "He did a great job. I was very flattered that they did that. He actually called me on Thursday before the show, said, 'Do you wanna come in and do a cameo at the end of it?' I couldn't do it because I was performing in Palm Springs, but I thought this kid did a fantastic job."

"I mean, when you get parodied onSaturday Night Liveand it's the good kind, like when they're communicating with you, when there is not a, just an ounce or an atom of meanness, it's like cute, honoring, loving. I think it is like one of the world's great compliments," Barrymore told her guest, before asking him, "Did you take it that way because there was so much love in that?"

The stand-up comedian agreed that he felt it wasn't a mean-spirited impression, and in fact, took the opportunity to pitch himself to host the show someday.

Will Heath/NBC Jeremy Culhane, Marcello Hernández as Sebastian Maniscalco, Glen Powell, and Tommy Brennan on 'SNL'

Will Heath/NBC

"Yeah, this is absolutely all, all in love, and I have never hosted the show, which I'm here today kinda to... and maybe you could help me out," Maniscalco told Barrymore, adding, "Apparently you've done it."

"I have 6 times," she said, prompting him to joke back, "Six times! You're taking all the spots!"

Though he hasn't hostedSNLyet, he has Barrymore's vote.

"By the way, you would be so amazing with that show," she told him.

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

In the meantime, Maniscalco's newest comedy specialIt Ain't Rightis now streaming on Hulu.

Watch the full interview with Maniscalco onThe Drew Barrymore Showon Dec. 2 (check local listings).

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Sebastian Maniscalco reveals reaction to “SNL” star Marcello Hernandez's dead-on impression of him

Santiago Felipe/Getty; Kait Dugan/NBC They say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but how doesSebastian Maniscalcofeel about bei...
Temilade Adelaja - WPA Pool/Getty Prince William pictured in November 2025

Temilade Adelaja - WPA Pool/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Prince William made a private visit to see children from Gaza who are being treated at hospitals in the United Kingdom

  • "His Royal Highness was moved by the courage shown by the children and their families and by the dedication of the team who are supporting them," a Kensington Palace spokesperson said

  • The Prince of Wales has followed the region closely since visiting in 2018, and he previously released statements on the Israel-Palestine conflict in 2023 and 2024

Prince Williamwas moved by a recent visit he had with children from Gaza who are being treated in the United Kingdom amid the Israel-Palestine conflict.

"The Prince wished to offer a moment of comfort to these young people who have endured experiences no child should ever face," a Kensington Palace spokesperson tells PEOPLE in a statement of William, 43.

The representative adds that the Prince of Wales was "able to offer his heartfelt gratitude" to staff at National Health Service hospitals in the U.K. for "providing exceptional care during such a profoundly difficult time."

"His Royal Highness was moved by the courage shown by the children and their families and by the dedication of the team who are supporting them with such professionalism and humanity," the Kensington Palace spokesperson continues.

Ian Vogler - WPA Pool/Getty Prince William in November 2025

Ian Vogler - WPA Pool/Getty

The children are being cared for as part of a government humanitarian mission, due to the collapse of medical care following the conflict in Gaza.

Longstanding tensions between Israel and the Palestinian territories came to a head on Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas — designated as a terrorist group by the U.S. State Department — launched asurprise attack on southern Israel, killing hundreds of civilians andtaking at least 150 as hostages.

In response, Israeldeclared war on the Gaza Strip, killing and injuring thousands of Palestinians.

The conflict has continued since, and both have declared numerous temporary ceasefires in the time after the conflict began two years ago.

Prince William has followed the region closely since his travels to Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories in 2018, a Kensington Palace spokesperson previously told PEOPLE.

During that visit, William met with then-President Reuven Rivlin and the Palestinian leader President Mahmoud Abbas. He became thefirst British Royal to make an official visit to Israel.

Temilade Adelaja - WPA Pool/Getty  Prince William in November 2025

Temilade Adelaja - WPA Pool/Getty

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Williamreleased a rare statement on the conflictin the region in early 2024, ahead of a visit to the headquarters of the British Red Cross in central London. (While he made a previous statement in October 2023, the extent of human suffering led him to make another, a Kensington Palace spokesperson told PEOPLE at the time.)

"I remain deeply concerned about the terrible human cost of the conflict in the Middle East since the Hamas terrorist attack on 7 October," Prince William said. "Too many have been killed."

"I, like so many others, want to see an end to the fighting as soon as possible. There is a desperate need for increased humanitarian support to Gaza. It's critical that aid gets in and the hostages are released," added the royal. "Sometimes it is only when faced with the sheer scale of human suffering that the importance of permanent peace is brought home."

William concluded, "Even in the darkest hour, we must not succumb to the counsel of despair. I continue to cling to the hope that a brighter future can be found and I refuse to give up on that."

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