The 68-year-old veteran actor ruffled some feathers amid Saturday Night Liveâs 50th birthday bash weekend.
On Sunday (February 16), Hollywoodâs famous faces flocked to New York to celebrate the showâs mega milestone, from Meryl Streep and Martin Short to Jack Nicholson and Aubrey Plaza.
But Hanks delivered one skit that caused a bit of a drama among Donald Trump supporters as he appeared to portray a Republican voter as a âracist redneckâ.
However, the Cast Away legend defended the sketch â and some of SNLâs other historic tongue-in-cheek moments â in his opening monologue.
The show, which has stood the test of time in American comedy, having first graced our screens in 1975, has been renowned for testing the limits, pushing the boundaries of comedy and hitting some cultural sensitivities in the process.
The Forest Gump star kicked off his monologue with what seemed like an âIn Memoriamâ tribute to âhonorâ the âcountless members of the SNL family that were taken from us too soonâ.
The actor has hosted SNL at least 10 times (Todd Owyoung/NBC via Getty Images)
Yet, in true Hanks fashion, the speech took a comedic turn when he said he was talking âabout SNL characters and sketches that have aged horriblyâ.
Instead of digging at some of the gags that would be considered outdated or downright offensive to the modern audience, Hanks said: âEven though these characters, accents, and⌠letâs just call them âethnicâ wigs were unquestionably in poor taste, you all laughed at them.
âSo if anyone should be canceled, shouldnât it be you, the audience?â
Some controversial SNL moments ranged from sketches like âethnic stereotypesâ, âsexual harassmentâ, and âgay panicâ as well as rolling out the red carpet to some controversial guests, like R.Kelly, Diddy, and O.J. Simpson.
These moments certainly aged terribly, and itâs ironic Hanks highlighted these blunders before launching into his own contentious and perhaps insensitive skit.
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Hanks apparently upset some Trump supporters with the joke (Theo Wargo/NBC via Getty Images)
The Californian Golden Globes winner sported a red âMAGAâ (Make America Great Again) cap as he performed as a religious âredneckâ man called Doug on a parody game show called Black Jeopardy.
During the skit, Kenan Thompson, the host of the parody show, tried to shake Dougâs hand, but he initially refused.
Doug did eventually perform the greeting gesture, before saying: âDonât like that, whoa, whoa, whoa. Maybe Iâll start a show for you to come on and weâll call it White Jeopardy.â
However, some viewers werenât impressed with the gag, with dozens taking to Twitter to write that Hanksâ performance poked fun at Trump supporters by âportraying them as dumb, racist, rednecksâ.
Hanks with his wife, Rita Wilson (NBC/Noam Galai/NBC via Getty Images)
Link Lauren, a former advisor to Robert F. Kennedy Jr, also wrote on social media: âTom Hanks just came out on SNL in a MAGA hat for a bit where he acted like he didnât want to shake a black manâs hand.
âThis show wonders why their ratings are in the gutter,â he added.
Others, however, have praised his performance, saying it was âspot onâ and that he âdeserves every awardâ.
Another wrote: âI feel like some people are maybe just now discovering the Tom Hanks Black Jeopardy SNL skit lol this is not new to 2025. And it was funny. Lighten up.â