Saturday Night Live cast member Kate McKinnon sat down with five other television comediennes and the Hollywood Reporter this week for a wide-ranging discussion on comedy, television shows, sexism, the downsides of fame, and the presidential prospects of Hillary Clinton.

McKinnon, who will play Hillary on the sketch comedy show for the foreseeable future, or at least until the election, told THR that she feels “immense pressure” stepping into the candidate’s shoes.

“I do feel immense pressure. I’m rooting for her, obviously,” McKinnon told THR writer Michael O’Connell. “That’s the challenge, because once it becomes a comparison, it becomes a different story. Right now, the story is just that Hillary’s running.”

McKinnon said the “secret” to playing Hillary is a “combination of the writers’ take on her, and then I just wanted to play on the inherent contrast between a woman who is so driven and so hardened by her experiences – and needs this, and the country needs this – and also a little sweetie granny from the Midwest. Just the juxtaposition of those two things.”

Of course, Saturday Night Live cast members playing versions of real-life politicians they support in real life is nothing new.

Back in 2012, lead SNL writer Seth Meyers told Bill Simmons that the show mostly stuck to “straightforward” impersonations of President Obama while going over-the-top with their Mitt Romney and Sarah Palin caricatures. And in an interview with the New York Times the same year, just before the election, Lorne Michaels said the show still had not found a comedy “hook” to lampoon Obama with.

“My joke is always that he’s the first Canadian president,” Michaels told the paper. “He wants to think it through, do it in the fairest way possible and be thoughtful. And be a little distant, which I totally identify with, obviously.”

One need not go that far back for another example of Saturday Night Live playing softball with President Obama.

SNL castmember Cecily Strong hosted the White House Correspondents’ Dinner this year. Shortly before the gig, Strong told Variety that Stephen Colbert’s epic hosting gig in front of President George W. Bush in 2006 was “the coolest thing I have ever seen done.”

“I loved that, and thought it was so powerful and just incredible,” Strong gushed of Colbert’s performance.

One would think that Strong, having been such a fan of Colbert’s down-and-dirty, take-no-prisoners approach, would use some of her own biting humor to genuinely take President Obama to task on a night generally reserved for frivolity and back-patting.

Nope.

“After six years in office, your approval rating is at 48 percent; not only that, your gray hair is at 85 percent,” Strong joked. “Your hair is so white now, it can talk back to the police.”

Right.

SNL has since found ways to jab at Obama, most notably in a skit about his use of executive orders. But the ribbing came only after the president was safely reelected.

Now that we know McKinnon is “rooting for” Hillary, and has a place in the SNL writers’ room, it shouldn’t be too difficult to predict that most of the heavy-duty swipes at Hillary will come safely after the 2016 election.

That is, if the show can survive that long; the 40th season finale, hosted by comedian Louis C.K. with musical guest Rihanna, drew a tepid 1.8 rating among adults 18-49, good enough to tie with the Bill Hader-hosted October episode for the lowest key demo ratings in the series’ history.

SNL is facing something of an identity crisis in its upcoming 41st season, and the show’s producers ultimately have two options: they can either stay the course with low-risk, low-reward satire, or they can refocus on the equal-opportunity-offending, incisive humor that led to legendary skits like this one.