Suzuki not Samurai
This week's issue of the Economist magazine has an article about the car industry in India. The article is pretty straightforward, but the photo accompanying the article is not.
I was reading the article and thought the guy in white looked familiar, then I realized I knew the names of everyone in the photo.
http://www.economist.com/news/business/21571197-maruti-suzuki-defies-predictions-its-demise-four-wheeled-survivor
Indian carmakers
The four-wheeled survivor
Maruti Suzuki defies predictions of its demise

From the left: Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, Laraine Newman, and Garrett Morris.
I have to wonder, did an editor at The Economist magazine intentionally use a photo from an SNL skit? The editors frequently will use puns in the titles of the articles, so they're not above inserting some humor into their magazine.
I was reading the article and thought the guy in white looked familiar, then I realized I knew the names of everyone in the photo.
http://www.economist.com/news/business/21571197-maruti-suzuki-defies-predictions-its-demise-four-wheeled-survivor
Indian carmakers
The four-wheeled survivor
Maruti Suzuki defies predictions of its demise

From the left: Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, Laraine Newman, and Garrett Morris.
I have to wonder, did an editor at The Economist magazine intentionally use a photo from an SNL skit? The editors frequently will use puns in the titles of the articles, so they're not above inserting some humor into their magazine.