Well-known Indian-American comedian and television star Aziz Ansari will host NBC's "Saturday Night Live" on January 21, making history as its first host of South Asian descent.
The news comes on the heels of a big year for 33-year-old Ansari. The standup comic and television star won his first Emmy for outstanding writing for a comedy series after earning a total of four nominations for his Netflix series "Master of None", The Washington Post reported.
His nomination for outstanding lead actor in a comedy series was the first for an Indian American.
Also Read
"I'm very happy but it's a very specific accomplishment," he told USA Today about the historic nod.
Other "Saturday Night Live" hosts of Asian descent include Lucy Liu and Jackie Chan, who both hosted the show in 2000, according to an IndieWire examination of all 826 hosts in "Saturday Night Live" history. Bruno Mars and Fred Armisen, who are multiracial, have also hosted.
Ansari had mentioned wanting to appear on "Saturday Night Live" when he brought his Bobby Jindal impression to "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" in November 2015. "I finally look like a guy!" Ansari joked, adding that he had hoped the Louisiana governor's presidential candidacy would lead to his big "Saturday Night Live" break.
Ansari also shared his thoughts on the former Lousiana Governor Jindal's short-lived presidential race with Fallon. "I have a theory that he's not Indian," he said. "I don't know any Indian person that would allow himself to lose to that many white people in a contest," NBC News quoted him as saying.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content