She's as easily ignored as pornslappers. I just keep walking.
As for SNL, I was gratified to see a fairly recent interview with Laraine Newman (who, after retiring for a spell to raise two kids is now a voiceover actor) in which she decried the notion that everything old was gold and everything new is crap. In her opinion, the original cast failed as often as they succeeded. She also expressed admiration for the current cast (this was during the Kristen Wiig administration).
Now, of course, The show will have to move forward without Fred Armisen, Jason Sudeikis, Bill Hader or Andy Samberg, so the upcoming season will be scrutinized intensely and judged harshly. But one reality remains constant: Sometimes the magic works and sometimes it doesn't. This was as true then as it is now.
I have fond memories of the first few seasons of SNL, a blurry recollection of the Dana Carvey years and none whatsoever of the brief non-Lorne Michaels version. But, I'm old. A large portion of the audience is comprised of Millennials who wouldn't know Dan Ackroyd from Charles Rocket. Personally, I think any weekly television program that presents live sketch comedy for 38 years and still pulls an audience deserves a bit of begrudging respect.