Chloe Fineman’s decision to leave “Saturday Night Live,” an industry insider told Page Six, “all unfolded in one day … It happened very quickly.”Chloe Fineman’s decision to leave “Saturday Night Live,” an industry insider told Page Six, “all unfolded in one day … It happened very quickly.”
After seven seasons it was the “best move” for Chloe Fineman to leave “Saturday Night Live” — as the comedian found herself up against rising stars like Ashley Padilla and Veronika Slowikowska, insiders said.
Fineman, 37, made the decision to depart the NBC sketch show just hours after she was offered a role on David E. Kelley’s new Netflix drama, “Myron Bolitar,” Page Six is told.
It “all unfolded in one day … It happened very quickly,” an industry insider told us. “Chloe went back and forth, but it was a smart move — she knew she couldn’t say no.
“After seven seasons on the show, and with all the new faces, it was probably the best move for her.”
Breakout star Padilla, 33, is set to be upped to a fully fledged cast member, after two years as a featured player, when the show returns in the fall.
It’s not yet known who else, if anyone, might leave the show, and announcements about cast changes are typically made in August.
Padilla became a bona-fide hit this past season, featuring in 92 sketches, according to the website Consequence of Sound. Her most-watched sketch was the season 51 opener, “Parent Teacher Conference,” featuring guest host Bad Bunny.
The clip garnered 9.6 million views on YouTube alone, ranking as the season’s second most-watched video overall.
Veteran Fineman appeared in 81 sketches for the 2025-2026 season, and Slowikowska was in 50. Featured player Kam Patterson was in the fewest with 48.
Announcing her exit, Fineman wrote on Instagram, “It’s really hard to leave SNL but it does feel like the right time. I’m going to miss it a lot. But the people who work there are my family and that place is my home, and I know I’ll never be too far away.”
“Chloe made the time-honored calculation that’s a big part of the ‘SNL’ experience: weighing future opportunities against affection — and sometimes burnout — for the show,” said James Miller, who wrote the “SNL” oral history, “Live From New York.”
“Her versatility was a big boon, and the audience trusted her ability to make them laugh,” he added.
Fineman’s exit comes a year after the show lost popular cast members Bowen Yang, Heidi Gardner and Ego Nwodim.
While hosting Gardner on her “Thanks Dad” podcast, last October, Nwodim said the long days and pressure-cooker environment of “SNL” can help people become “close quick” but “it could also not make you close. It can make you not like each other.”
She also explaiend that it can be challenging to feel like the “SNL” cast is “winning together,” which can make the show “not the easiest place to work.”
However, she praised Gardner for being “such a light in what can be such a challenging place … where it can get so competitive and you can become so self involved.”
Of Fineman, Miller added, “You had the feeling she placed the interests of the show above her own.
“Her levels of ego and paranoia — two key indicators of whether someone is meant for an ensemble — seemed healthy, and you couldn’t help but root for her.”






