At some point in April 2022, Aidy Bryant made the decision to say what she had been holding inside for over a year: she was prepared to go. Not with resentment. Not in a dramatic way. It was only a silent admission that the chapter was over. She told Lorne Michaels during a conversation that she later described as friendly but a little unsettling, and he got it.
Her tenth season hadn’t quite lived up to her expectations. The lingering energy of a once-in-a-century disruption, audience restrictions, and pandemic protocols were still present. However, it felt like the right time because it was sufficiently close to “normal.” She would later half-smile as she told Variety, “Ten felt like a nice, solid round number.”
| Name | Aidy Bryant |
|---|---|
| Born | May 7, 1987 |
| Joined SNL | Season 38 (2012–2013) |
| Left SNL | May 2022 (after 10 seasons) |
| Notable Work | Shrill (Hulu), Cheeky (Peacock), SNL characters like “Trend Forecasters” with Bowen Yang |
| Return | December 2025 SNL cameo for Bowen Yang’s farewell |
| Source | NBC Interview & Variety Profile |
Along with Kate McKinnon and Cecily Strong, Bryant joined Saturday Night Live in 2012 as a member of a refreshingly strong cohort. She brought a very grounded energy with her: she was never desperate for laughs, she never tried to be the loudest person in the room, and she frequently stole scenes with a perfectly timed “um” or an eyebrow raise.
She made the awkwardness of sincerity hilarious. Her drawings frequently focused on social discomfort, raw emotion, or that strange moment when someone says something that no one else is willing to say. From Sarah Huckabee Sanders to the Trend Forecasters on “Weekend Update,” her humorous voice was layered, with equal parts tenderness and absurdity.
It became especially evident that Bryant was more than just a performer when she co-created Shrill for Hulu. She was a writer who had something to say and was skilled at expressing it without resorting to excessive irony. She was able to transform years of insight and frustration into a show that felt emotionally rich without compromising wits during that three-season run.
However, managing two shows concurrently came at a price. She flew back to New York to record sketches on the weekends while filming Shrill during one season of Saturday Night Live. “I missed a lot last season because I had to shoot Shrill for half of it,” she said. “After that, I thought, ‘Well, I should go back one more.'” I persisted in looking for one final year of normalcy.
That kind of reasoning has a very mature quality to it. Not overly dramatic. Not dazzling. Just being considerate.
I recall seeing her last episode. No elaborate farewell speech was given. Just one of those wry, subtly sweet, deeply Aidy moments. And perhaps that was the most appropriate way out. Leaving without a self-congratulatory montage felt remarkably appropriate for someone whose comedy flourished in tension and tenderness.
She then made a brief but exquisite return in December 2025 to bid Bowen Yang farewell. A cult favorite, the pair’s Trend Forecasters skit was a bizarre weekly explosion of neon mayhem and ridiculous fashion. Not only was her appearance during his finale unexpected, but it also served as proof that, at its best, Saturday Night Live creates enduring creative relationships.
Shortly before, Yang told Entertainment Weekly, “To be honest, I would never dream of doing it without Aidy.” “In show business, she will eventually be the boss of everyone.” It sounded like praise. And it sounded like a prophecy.
Even though her ten years at SNL are coming to an end, Bryant’s creative sphere appears to be growing. She is still in demand for both serious and comedic voice roles, and she is currently working on the animated series Cheeky for Peacock. The trajectory seems more like a logical next step than a departure. the kind you only take after you’ve actually completed the task at hand.
Bryant did not depart amid controversy or at the height of a news cycle. When it felt right, she walked out. By doing this, she served as a reminder to a generation of viewers—and likely many of her co-stars—that meaningful endings don’t always require dramatic resolutions.
She might return to host at some point. She might do something totally unexpected to take audiences by surprise. However, it’s still evident that her time at SNL was more than just a gig or a resume line; rather, it was a pivotal moment that shaped her self-assurance, voice, and sense of art.
And she didn’t leave a single note out of tune as she departed, taking with her everything she had created.

