This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated.

NEW YORK — Tina Fey called it.

On “Saturday Night Live” this weekend, the former cast member predicted that Donald Trump would bash NBC’s longtime sketch comedy show.

“No matter how it goes, the President of the United States will say that it’s sad and overrated,” Fey said during Saturday’s show. “It’s fine. No one cares.”

And she was right: On Sunday, five days before his inauguration, the President-elect took a swipe at NBC’s news division before laying into “SNL,” which returned from a winter break.

“.@NBCNews is bad but Saturday Night Live is the worst of NBC,” Trump tweeted. “Not funny, cast is terrible, always a complete hit job. Really bad television!”

.@NBCNews is bad but Saturday Night Live is the worst of NBC. Not funny, cast is terrible, always a complete hit job. Really bad television! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 15, 2017

Berating “SNL” is hardly new territory for Trump, who has repeatedly slammed the show as “boring” and “totally one-sided.”

In recent months he’s been especially critical of Alec Baldwin, the actor who plays Trump on “SNL.”

Baldwin’s Trump was front and center during the opening sketch of Saturday night’s episode. The show parodied Trump’s first press conference since being elected.

At one point during the segment, a character played by “SNL” cast member Sasheer Zamata tells Baldwin’s Trump that if the Affordable Care Act is repealed, “people could die.”

“Listen, sweetheart,” Baldwin-as-Trump responds. “I’m about to be president. We’re all going to die.”

Mockery and snarky responses to Trump’s criticisms of “SNL” have become about as predicable as the Trump tweets themselves.

“Yeah – flash in the pan show. It probably won’t last more than one or two seasons at most,” read one sarcastic tweet from Mark Kornblau, the senior vice president of communications at NBCUniversal. The show is in its 42nd season.

Yeah – flash in the pan show. It probably won't last more than one or two seasons at most. https://t.co/NgtYkObaqK — Mark Kornblau (@MarkKornblau) January 15, 2017

Actress Debra Messing, a vocal critic of Trump’s who made a name for herself on the NBC sitcom “Will & Grace,” followed suit.

“Been on NBC 4O years,” she tweeted. “Calling it being ‘bad TV’ is kinda like saying u have a ‘mandate.'”

Been on NBC 4O years. Calling it being "bad TV" is kinda like saying u have a "mandate." https://t.co/4Ze47hCw6m — Debra Messing✍🏻 (@DebraMessing) January 15, 2017

Trump’s take on the show hasn’t always been this harsh.

When he hosted “SNL” in late 2015, he spoke warmly of his experience, tweeting that he had an “amazing evening at Saturday Night Live!”