Was Hudson Williams Rejected? Heated Rivalry Star Connor Storrie Set For Major Solo Milestone
Sometimes stardom is a duet — until the industry decides it is time for a solo.

The thing about Saturday Night Live is that it turns fame into a receipt. One can debate whether someone has 'made it,' but once walking into Studio 8H with a host's card in a pocket, the culture has effectively stamped a passport. Connor Storrie is set to receive that stamp on Feb. 28, when SNL returns from its extended break and hands the night to the breakout star of Crave's Heated Rivalry.
Storrie is hosting SNL for the first time on Feb. 28, with Mumford & Sons as the musical guest, and NBC has not announced a co-host, meaning Hudson Williams, his Heated Rivalry co-lead, will not be sharing the stage in that rare 'double host' format fans love to mythologise.

Hudson Williams, Connor Storrie and the Double-Act That Didn't Happen
Storrie's rise has been fast enough to make even jaded TV people blink: his Ilya Rozanov in Heated Rivalry (an adaptation of Rachel Reid's Game Changers books) landed rave reviews and turned him into the kind of name you suddenly hear everywhere. The show's success has lifted Williams as well, with the pair framed by fans, the press, and the broader attention economy as a packaged phenomenon rather than as two separate actors who happen to share a call sheet.
Last Night On's pop-culture gripe is straightforward: NBC had a flashy, once-in-a-blue-moon opportunity and did not seize it. Across more than 1,000 episodes, the show has featured only 20 installments with co-hosts rather than a single headliner, making that particular credit a tiny club with a curiously charming membership card. Think Steve Martin and Martin Short, Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, or even the more chaotic pairings from earlier decades — names that still read like a party guest list scribbled at 2 a.m.
Could SNL have added 'Storrie and Williams' to that list? Absolutely. Should it have? In the business of capturing lightning in a bottle, the least one can do is avoid setting the bottle down deliberately.
Connor Storrie's Solo Moment, Hudson Williams' Very Loud Absence
NBC announced Storrie's booking during the Jan. 31 broadcast, with the Feb. 28 episode set to feature Mumford & Sons. That's the official, on-the-record reality: one host, one musical guest, one of TV's hottest properties getting the full, slightly terrifying SNL treatment.
Williams, for what it is worth, did not exactly sound aggrieved in public. The TODAY segment notes that he celebrated the news on social media, writing, 'My baby boy is on SNL.'

Still, the unanswered question nags because it is so SNL: was a co-host invitation ever offered, and if so, who said no? Last Night On raises the possibility that NBC invited both men and only Storrie accepted, while noting that this is speculation rather than confirmed reporting. And because SNL rarely explains its booking logic in public — no neat press release clarifying why one duo receives double billing and another does not — the silence becomes its own little Rorschach test.
Meanwhile, Storrie and Williams are already signed for a second season of Heated Rivalry, due sometime next year, which means the fandom's clock is now split in two, counting down to Studio 8H and then counting down again to the next time these characters get to break hearts on screen.
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