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Andy Samberg Opens Up About ‘Difficult’ Decision to Leave ‘SNL’: ‘I Was Falling Apart in My Life’

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Andy Samberg Opens Up About ‘Difficult’ Decision to Leave ‘SNL’: ‘I Was Falling Apart in My Life’

Andy Samberg opened up about his “difficult” decision to depart Saturday Night Live in 2012 in a new interview with Kevin Hart.

During his appearance on Peacock’s Hart to Heart, the former SNL Digital Short maestro and “Dick in a Box” singer said of his exit after seven seasons, “It was a big choice. For me, it was like, I can’t actually endure it anymore. But I didn’t want to leave. Physically and emotionally, like I was falling apart in my life.”

He continued, “Physically, it was taking a heavy toll on me, and I got to a place where I was like I hadn’t slept in seven years, basically. We were writing stuff for the live show Tuesday night all night, the table read Wednesday, then being told now come up with a digital short so write all Thursday [and] Thursday night, don’t sleep, get up, shoot Friday, edit all night Friday night and into Saturday, so it’s basically like four days a week you’re not sleeping, for seven years. So I just kinda fell apart physically.”

Samberg first considered leaving shortly after his Lonely Island cohorts Akiva Schaffer and Jorma Taccone — who both served as writers on SNL — left the show in 2010. Samberg remained for another few seasons before the pressures of the weekly show — as well as his burgeoning movie career — wore him down again.

After consulting with former cast mates like Amy Poehler, Samberg relayed his desire to leave SNL to producers, who insisted that he remain.

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“They told me straight up, ‘We prefer you would stay,’ and I was like, oh, that makes it harder,” Samberg said. “But I just was like, I think to get back to a feeling of like mental and physical health, I have to do it. So I did it, and it was a very difficult choice.”

A year after his SNL exit, Samberg starred in the sitcom Brooklyn 99 and reunited with the Lonely Island for both The Wack Album and their feature-length satire Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping.

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