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SNL roasts Bill Belichick-Jordon Hudson relationship with President Donald Trump cold open

IMG_6598by: Nick Kosko05/04/25nickkosko59
Bill Belichick, Jordon Hudson
@BleacherReport on Twitter/X

Saturday Night Live was at it again with another President Donald Trump skit, this time roasting North Carolina head coach Bill Belichick and girlfriend Jordon Hudson. The cold open featured James Austin Johnson as the 47th president.

The skit featured Trump signing numerous executive orders to commemorate his first 100 days in office. The President is currently in the first year of his second term after serving from 2016-20.

Among Trump’s numerous “executive orders” in the skit was one that would make it “socially acceptable for a man in his 70s to date a 24-year-old” in the skit, a clear reference to Belichick and Hudson’s relationship. The Trump impersonator then doubled-down by calling it “the Belichick law.” The bit can be seen at the 2:12 mark below.

The Belichick-Hudson relationship has had its fair share of drama since the coach’s CBS Sunday Morning interview last week. That included reports of Hudson being the reason why Hard Knocks pulled the plug on following North Carolina this summer and Hudson forcing her way onto Belchick’s Super Bowl commercial in February.

Longtime NFL writer Peter King, who’s basically retired, couldn’t hold his tongue either. He commented on the “embarrassing” look for Belichick.

“This is a guy who owned every room he ever walked into and now he’s got a 24-year-old muse telling him what to do or trying to control situations that quite frankly she has nothing to do with or should have nothing to do with,” King said on Sports Media with Richard Deitsch. “Bill’s got to get a hold of himself here. He’s got to get a hold of this situation. This is embarrassing. It’s totally embarrassing for a guy who’s as great at his job as he is … This would’ve been a ‘Mike and the Mad Dog’ spectacular back in the old days.”

Ironically, Belichick might have a good book and a biography, which he was promoting, worth reading, since it’s from his own perspective. Acclaimed author Ian O’Connor wrote a Belichick biography which was well received, but the coach was not quoted directly.

“That was a terrible look in the first place, but in general if you’re going to be promoting a book, or you’re going to be doing interviews, you can’t be the sullen, disinterested person that Bill Belichick was for CBS,” King said of the CBS interview. “You just shouldn’t do it then. Why do it? Anyone who watched that piece, anyone. For me, if I’m watching that, ‘I’m not buying that idiot’s book. Why would I buy this guy? I hate this guy.’ That is going to be the impression I get. Now, I think there’s a lot of good stuff in the book.”