Physical Address

304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

‘Saturday Night Live’ Alum Slams Alec Baldwin: ‘He Said My Breasts Looked Like Garbage Cans’

“Saturday Night Live” alum Victoria Jackson is calling out Alec Baldwin, who has hosted the NBC show 17 times, for commenting on her breasts on two occasions — and she claims once he said it to her face.
Jackson joined former “SNL” colleagues Dana Carvey and David Spade on their reflective “Fly on the Wall” podcast Wednesday and said, “We gotta talk about Alec Baldwin, because he was on ‘Fly on the Wall,’ and he said my breasts looked like garbage cans.”
In an appearance on the podcast last year, Baldwin said “the only time” he ever broke character on “SNL” was in April 1990, when the costume Jackson was wearing for a sketch apparently made her “boobs” look “like two garbage cans sticking in your face.”
Jackson said Wednesday that Baldwin has “been mean” to her ever since the publication of her 2012 book, “Is My Bow Too Big?” which included a more direct description of alleged misconduct, which Jackson spoke about on another podcast in March.
“Alec was sitting next to me on the set, and he asked me why my boobs were so big,” Jackson said on the “Wasn’t That Special: 50 Years of SNL” podcast. “That’s rude, and it’s caustic and it’s inappropriate.”
HuffPost has reached out to representatives of Baldwin for comment.
Jackson added in the March podcast that, though it was hard to know “if he was flirting with me” or “being mean,” she sensed “a mixture.”
On Wednesday, she scolded Carvey for telling Baldwin last year that she was trying not to “fall in love with him” on the 1990 set.
“I don’t remember it that way,” she told Carvey.
Jackson also blamed “political correctness” for being dropped by her agent around that time and argued on Wednesday that Baldwin — who has done his Donald Trump impression on “SNL” over the years — “has hatred inside of him.”
Other news outlets have retreated behind paywalls. At HuffPost, we believe journalism should be free for everyone.
Would you help us provide essential information to our readers during this critical time? We can’t do it without you.
Can’t afford to contribute? Support HuffPost by creating a free account and log in while you read.
You’ve supported HuffPost before, and we’ll be honest — we could use your help again. We view our mission to provide free, fair news as critically important in this crucial moment, and we can’t do it without you.
Whether you give once or many more times, we appreciate your contribution to keeping our journalism free for all.
You’ve supported HuffPost before, and we’ll be honest — we could use your help again. We view our mission to provide free, fair news as critically important in this crucial moment, and we can’t do it without you.
Whether you give just one more time or sign up again to contribute regularly, we appreciate you playing a part in keeping our journalism free for all.
Already contributed? Log in to hide these messages.
As for the moment when “political correctness” supposedly reared its head, the outspoken conservative — who frequently shares Christian and pro-Trump posts on Instagram — said she had merely performed “this little song called ‘White Men Are Good’” at a comedy club.
Jackson sang its baffling lyrics on Wednesday’s podcast: “White men are good / My daddy was a white man / My brother is a white man / White men invented everything/ White men invented the universities.”
Jackson, who revealed in August that her breast cancer has returned in the form of an inoperable tumor, estimated in an Instagram post at the time that she had “34.8 months to live” — unless she gets “shot by a MAGA hater” before then.

Sign up for Peacock to stream NBCU shows.

en_USEnglish