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Piano 1-0-Fun! with Jon Batiste: Jon Batiste hosts absurd instructional videos. Real News Tonight: A parody of television newscasts, anchored by "Jim Anchorton" (John Thibodeaux) and "Jill Newslady" (Jen Spyra), that consists entirely of overly-positive fake stories designed to praise Donald Trump.
The Script; Don't Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me the Pliers. It's Just This Little Chromium Switch Here "A Life in the Day" The Script; I Think We're All Bozos on This Bus. If Bees Lived Inside Your Head; Intrat Et Exit Ut Nil Supra! The Script; Addenda, Appendix and Et Cetera Mark Time's True Chronology of The Firesign Theatre; Lt. Bradshaw's ...
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"Rinse the Blood Off My Toga" is a comedy sketch by the Canadian comedy duo Wayne and Shuster. First broadcast on The Wayne and Shuster Hour on CBC Radio in 1954, it was reenacted for their British television debut in 1957 and their first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1958.
The spec script is a Hollywood sales tool with the vast majority of scripts written each year are spec scripts, but only a small percentage make it to the screen. [1] Though a spec script is usually a wholly original work, it can also be an adaptation.
Dealing with the Public: Leno plays real police or 911 audio/video recordings that are ridiculous, stupid or funny, such as a man who called 911 and admitted that he was high after smoking marijuana and asked the operator the score of a Detroit Red Wings game.
At a job interview, the interviewer (Chase) asks the applicant, Mr. Wilson (Pryor), to take a Word Association test. Partway through the test, the interviewer begins using increasingly offensive anti-black racial slurs, to which Wilson reacts with anti-white slurs (including "honky").
Saturday Night Live has long mocked the television medium with many fake commercials and parodies of TV shows themselves. Another of the show's frequently used styles of recurring sketches has been the talk show format (e.g. "Brian Fellow's Safari Planet", "The Barry Gibb Talk Show", etc.).