Alabama was a major topic during "Saturday Night Live" yet again Saturday, with the state's Senate race results taking up much of its recurring "Weekend Update" segment.

"SNL" repeatedly poked fun Alabama and especially Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore in recent weeks. And the Yellowhammer State reclaimed its prominent place on the show by kicking off "Weekend Update."

"Congratulations to Alabama's newest senator, Not Roy Moore, literally what it's going to say on his nameplate. Doug Jones has become the first Democrat to win a Senate seat in Alabama in over 20 years. Said Roy Moore: 'gross, over 20 years?'" SNL staff member Colin Jost said, a reference to allegations of sexual misconduct by Moore that emerged during the hard-fought campaign.

"After Jones's victory, President Trump tweeted, 'Congratulations to Doug Jones... the people of Alabama are great, and the Republicans will have another shot... It never ends!' That's it? You just went all in for an accused pedophile and when he lost, [you're] just like, 'well, we had fun; good game guys,' like nothing happened.

"He could be removed from office tonight and tweet: 'Congrats to Robert Mueller on a great investigation. Had a fun time being president. Catch you on the flippity-flop! #DietCokeTime.'"

Jost was not the only "Weekend Update" star to weigh in on Alabama's Senate race results. Michael Che analyzed the racial breakdown of voters, highlighting the fact that black women overwhelmingly supported Jones over Moore.

"On Tuesday, we saw exactly why Republicans try to keep black people from voting. Ninety-eight percent of black women voted for Doug Jones, bringing the total number of black women who voted for Roy Moore to just Cheryl. D***it, Cheryl," Che said.

"Democratic National Committee Chairman Tony Perez tweeted, '#BlackWomen led us to victory and we can't take that for granted.' Mmm, but I bet you will. And you know why, it's because Democrats know that black people aren't really Democrats, we just vote for the guy that looks less likely to put us on a boat. Here's how I vote, I look at both candidates, I listen to them speak, and then I ask myself, I got pulled over, which one of these candidates would I rather see approaching my car? And it's almost always not the one on a horse."