Amy Poehler, Bill Hader, Andy Samberg and Fred Armisen said goodbye to Seth Meyers on Saturday's episode of Saturday Night Live. The episode was the head writer and Weekend Update anchor's final appearance before he goes to take over Jimmy Fallon's spot on Late Night.

Melissa McCarthy hosted the episode, which featured plenty of Super Bowl jokes as well as one sketch about Black History Month.

"We are so proud of you, you have been the heart of this show for over a decade," co-anchor Amy Poehler told Meyers.

"This is the job I always wanted, and I had the best time and I met the best people," said a teary Meyers. He will start at NBC's Late Night on Feb. 24.

SNL head writer Colin Jost will replace Meyers at the Weekend Update anchor desk alongside Cecily Strong on Mar. 1.

The 40-year-old Meyers will appear on the season 11 premiere of Say Yes to the Dress to surprise an Army medic fan who is gearing up for her wedding after being injured in a roadside bomb explosion in Afghanistan.

Some point out that with Jimmy Fallon taking over for Jay Leno and Seth Meyers for Jimmy Fallon, NBC's late night lineup will become a lot more liberal. "One of the things that has marked Jay Leno's last few years is that he's been one of the few comedians willing to slam the Obama Administration when it deserves a comedic jab to the ribs. One can only hope that Fallon will be as willing to slam Obama when it is warranted, but it is easy to doubt he will," said a writer for Brietbart.

"Fallon has played the slavish host to Obama many times on his late night NBC show, rarely showing much interest in taking those jabs at the President."