I got distracted and didn't finish that episode. I'm finishing it up now.
Many things haven't changed. Shouting "Live from New York, It's Saturday Night", although instead of being worked into the sketch, it was Chevy Chase playing a stagehand with a clipboard and earphone-mic stubling onto the stage and yelling it. Having a fake commercial right after the initial monologue.
Many things have changed, though.
It was weird how the actual cast, the "Not Ready For Prime Time Players", played such a minimal part. Lots of random actors with speaking parts in the sketches. The players all shared a title card in the opening credits that flashed by super quick, and was listed last. Especially in the short films, which there were several of, instead of just one. The host didn't appear in any sketches. Carlin just did his standup at the opening, and at random points throughout the show. Some female comedian who wasn't funny at all had a spot too. And the infamous Andy Kaufman Mighty Mouse thing, which I thought was one of the funniest parts, just seemed random as hell. And there was a weird, completely out of place Muppets sketch (which, although abnormally adult-themed, was not very funny), which apparently was originally a standard part of the show every week. Also two musical acts played two songs each, which was weird.
The Triple Track razor sketch is almost an eery glimpse into the future. It's pretty much exactly the Mach 3 commercial played straight.
The song at the end when the credits start rolling was basically the same. The funniest part to me was how they inserted "Bud" into about 80% of the names in the credits, for example, Lorne "Bud" Michaels.
Starting the second one now. Paul Simon was the host. Still, there was two additional musical guests. Also, the opening sketch wasn't a sketch at all, but Simon playing "Still Crazy". Chevy Chase stumbled on the stage to yell "Live From New York, It's Saturday Night". Then opening credits, then instead of a monologue, another Simon song. Then the fake commercial...then Simon singing again...
I think if you watch it like I did with no nostalgia attached, there's no way you can think it was funnier than the modern incarnation. At least not so far. I'm sure compared to other things on TV at the time it was edgy and irreverent, although Monty Python predates it by several years, and in my opinion was much funnier. Gonna definitely watch the first five seasons in its entirety, though.