Following Saturday Night Live’s most watched season in 23 years, not to mention the show’s impressive tally of nine Emmy Awards on Sunday, NBC revealed it will continue its recent practice of live coast-to-coast airings.

Ryan Gosling will host the show’s 43rd season premiere on September 30, in advance of the opening of his new movie, Blade Runner 2049, on Oct. 6. Jay-Z will be the musical guest. Each episode will air live at 11:30 p.m. Eastern, 10:30 p.m. Central, 9:30 p.m. Mountain, and 8:30 p.m. Pacific. For the Mountain and Pacific time zones, the episode will be repeated at 11:30 p.m.

SNL experimented with the format last season. The series’ first-ever episode to air live across all time zones debuted in April, followed by the same schedule for the season’s final four episodes.

That move resulted in an 11 percent spike in same-day viewership, from 7.5 million to 8.3 million, according to Nielsen. The network continued live airings last month with four episodes of the half-hour telecast Saturday Night Live: Weekend Update in primetime.

The season drew a total of 11 million viewers per episode, making it the highest-rated season since 1993-1994.

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The growth was due, in part, to Alec Baldwin’s portrayal of President Donald Trump, and Melissa McCarthy as former White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer.

The sketch comedy was nominated for 22 Emmys this year, and picked up nine, including wins for Baldwin, McCarthy, cast member Kate McKinnon and Dave Chappelle, host of the show’s post-election episode in November.

SNL also scored for Outstanding Variety Sketch Series and Outstanding Directing for a Variety Series.

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READ MORE: Adweek, Variety

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