@Tweetskoor Published April 5, 2026, 12:54 p.m. ET
In a new interview with Vanity Fair, Chloe Fineman left her fellow Saturday Night Live castmates stunned after recounting a story from her pre-fame days — one that’s now raising eyebrows online.
During the segment, Fineman shared that she was once fired from a job as a camp counselor after humiliating a young camper by pantsing them — and the camper was not wearing any underwear.
At first, she didn’t specify the child’s age. But when pressed, she clarified that the camper was a six-year-old boy whose “little ding-a-ling was out” — before attempting to brush off the incident by saying, “it was Berkeley, it was a different time.”
The moment, which you can watch in full in the unedited clip, now plays out in a more santized version that is posted to Vanity Fair’s YouTube page. In that version, Fineman’s anecdote was trimmed down substantially, removing both the age of the child and some of the surrounding context — a decision that has since drawn scrutiny from viewers comparing the two clips side by side. Fineman’s castmates like Ashley Padilla and Sarah Sherman looked on in horror during this cringe story, with Padilla going as far as to say “Oh honey, I think you’re on a list somewhere.”
The contrast between the unedited and edited versions has sparked conversation online, with some questioning the framing of the story as a lighthearted or “quirky” memory once the full details are known.
One YouTube user commented “NO WAY THEY EDITED THW FIRST STORY LOL,” while another wrote: “Edit away…. We all saw the original.”
Fineman, who joined Saturday Night Live in 2019, has built a reputation as one of the show’s standout impressionists, known for her spot-on takes on celebrities like Drew Barrymore, Timothée Chalamet, and Jennifer Coolidge.
Her polished, often eccentric on-screen persona has made her a reliable presence in sketches and celebrity-driven bits, particularly in recent seasons as the show has leaned heavily into viral impressions.
Off-screen, Fineman has occasionally leaned into similarly offbeat storytelling in interviews — though this latest anecdote is drawing a different kind of attention. In a strange twist of zeitgeisty coincidence, an startling confession sparks the plot of The Drama, the new Robert Pattinson / Zendaya movie currently playing in theaters.
As clips from the interview continue to circulate, the gap between what aired and what was cut is becoming part of the conversation itself — a reminder that, sometimes, the edit can be just as revealing as the story.