Posted in: Netflix, TV | Tagged: nate bargatze, saturday night live, snl
Nate Bargatze Wants to Be "Your Friend" in Netflix Stand-Up Special
Set to hit Netflix screens on December 24th, check out the official trailer for the upcoming stand-up comedy special, Your Friend, Nate Bargatze.
If you've been following our coverage of NBC's Saturday Night Live, then you know that we've become huge fans of stand-up comedian, actor, and inevitable SNL Host "Five-Timer" Nate Bargatze. So when the word came down back in October that he had inked a deal with Netflix for two comedy specials, we were excited to see what Bargatze would have to offer with his return to the streaming service after 2019's The Tennessee Kid and 2021's The Greatest Average American (Prime Video hosted his 2023 Hello World special). Well, we're about to find out on December 24th when Your Friend, Nate Bargatze arrives on Netflix – and we have the official trailer to pass along for you to check out. In addition, we have a look at the official overview waiting for you below, along with a look back at a recent late-night visit where Bargatze offers some behind-the-scenes SNL perspectives.
Hailed as "The Nicest Man in Stand-Up," by The Atlantic Magazine and "One of the Funniest People," by CBS Morning, Grammy nominated comedian, podcaster, director, and producer Nate Bargatze is back for his third hour-long Netflix comedy special. Bringing his latest special to a sold-out crowd in Phoenix, Arizona, Nate ignites the laughs with his comedic stories about being a man of the 1900s, marriage dynamics, and more.
Netflix's Your Friend, Nate Bargatze will be produced by John Irwin Entertainment and directed by Ryan Polito. Bargatze, John Irwin, Alex Murray, and Tim Sarkes will executive produce.
In the clip above from October, Bargatze and late-night host and SNL alum Seth Meyers discuss Bargatze hosting SNL for the second time, how the "Washington's Dream" sketch went from a shaky start to sketch gold, resurrecting a cut sketch from last season, and how his colorblindness had him reading Heidi Gardner's lines.