by Kristen HarrisBuzzFeedBuzzFeed Staff Every Saturday Night Live fan has their own opinions about which hosts sucked, but some were true nightmares to work with behind the scenes! Here are the 14 worst SNL guests, according to actual cast members: 1. On Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen, Bowen Yang revealed "the worst SNL host behavior [he's] witnessed," saying, "This man, this person, this host made multiple cast members cry. On Wednesday, before the table read, because he hated the ideas." A few months later, his castmate Chloe Fineman seemingly revealed the host's identity in a since-deleted TikTok. Responding to an insulting tweet Elon Musk made about the show, she said, "I'm gonna come out and say, at long last, that I'm the cast member that he made cry, and he's the host that made someone cry." NBC / Via youtube.com She continued, "Maybe there are others. But I saw some articles and stuff and was like, 'I'm not gonna say anything,' but I'm like, no, if you're going to go on your platform and be rude, guess what? You made I, Chloe Fineman, burst into tears because I stayed up all night writing this sketch, I was so excited, I came in, I asked if you had any questions, and you stared at me like you were firing me from Tesla and were like, 'It's not funny.' I waited for you to be like, 'Haha, JK.' Then you started pawing through my script, like, flipping each page, being like, 'I didn't laugh, I didn't laugh once, not one time.' ... Cut to the sketch made it on, and it was fine, and I actually had a really good time, and I thought you were really funny in it... But, you know, have a little manners here, sir!" NBC / Via youtube.com Replying to her video on Twitter, he said, "Frankly, it was only on the Thursday before the Saturday that ANY of the sketches generated laughs. I was worried." 2. On Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen, Bill Hader and Jay Pharoah agreed that Justin Bieber was the worst-behaved SNL host they had. Bill said, "He was just in a bad place. Maybe he's in a better place, but then... It was rough... He just seemed, like, exhausted or at the end of a rope. He was just so huge." NBC / Via youtube.com 3. Taran Killam called the week Donald Trump hosted "rough." He told NPR, "It was not enjoyable at the time and something that only grows more embarrassing and shameful as time goes on. I don't necessarily put so much weight into [the idea of] Trump hosting SNL helping him become president, but there's definitely something where it normalizes him, and it makes it OK for him to be part of the conversation. And I don't think the intention of having him on was ever politically based. I sincerely believe that. But I don't think it was considered - the implications that it had then and could have moving forward. And I think looking back...there's nothing good I can take from that week. Because he's not an enjoyable person to be around - he's from a different class; he's from a different way of life. There was never any common ground." NBC / Via youtube.com He continued, "The most heartbreaking moment at the time: We're at the host dinner, and he brings [his wife] Melania and he brings [his daughter] Ivanka and [son-in-law] Jared [Kushner]. And he says [to SNL creator Lorne Michaels], 'You know, Lorne, if I don't win this thing, I'm gonna be fine. We just bought this beautiful piece of property in Scotland. If I have to be president, I'm never gonna see that thing.' And that that was his priority in that moment, that that was even a consideration, made me sad." 4. On Watch What Happens Live, David Spade called out host Steven Seagal. He said, "He was a little tough. He was actually tough, and he was tough to work with. It was hard. He did not want to play along." NBC / Via youtube.com A year after Steven Seagal hosted, executive producer Lorne Michaels joked about him in Nicolas Cage's monologue. NBC / Via youtube.com 5. Terry Sweeney told Live from New York, "Chevy hosted the second show, and we were all so excited because, to us, Chevy was like a god; this was someone returning who'd been one of the original people and was this legendary figure. And when he got there, he was a monster. I mean, he insulted everybody. He said to Robert Downey Jr., 'Didn't your father used to be a successful director? What ever happened to him? Boy, he sure died, you know, he sure went to hell.' Downey turned ashen. And then Chevy turned to me, and he said, 'Oh, you're the gay guy, right?' And he goes, 'I've got an idea for a sketch for you. How about we say you have AIDS and we weigh you every week?' I don't know what he was on or what was happening to him mentally, but he was just crazy." NBC / Via youtube.com Revisiting the incident in I'm Chevy Chase and You're Not, Chevy said, "Terry Sweeney, he was very funny, this guy. I don't think he's alive anymore."In response, Terry - who's still alive, for the record - told the Hollywood Reporter, "Don't you think he is saying this and making himself look more