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A type of sketch comedy primarily aimed at an audience of kids or teenagers. This category may include shows for a family audience that have strong kid appeal, as well as general variety shows that contain sketch comedy pieces or skits among other content forms.
Colbert answers video questions submitted by children. The sketch typically begins and ends with Colbert complaining about the title. (The sketch has had numerous titles, including Stephen Takes Your Kids, Stephen's Re-Education Camp, Stephen Colbert Is Watching Your Children, Stephen Doesn't Care About Your Kids, Stephen Colbert Is Short And ...
Air Farce; Alan Hamel's Comedy Bag; Baroness von Sketch Show; The Beaverton; Bizarre; The Bobroom; Brothers TV; Buzz; Bye Bye; Caution: May Contain Nuts; Charlie Had One But He Didn't Like It, So He Gave It To Us
Videos We Found on YouTube: A prototypical Leno segment where he shows amusing videos supposedly found on YouTube. However, the videos are not viewed on YouTube but video files instead. "Zoo Tube" features similar videos of animals. [citation needed] Virtual Jay: Computer-generated animation of Leno. According to the skit, when Leno heated up a ...
Al MacAfee – A parody of Joe Louis Clark, David Alan Grier plays a strict, yet clueless shop teacher with a bad hip. He is known for working as a Hall Monitor and using a bullhorn to yell at innocent students and teachers, while being oblivious to bad things going on around him, as well as the consistent rejection by a fellow female teacher (played by Kim Wayans), with whom he is infatuated.
Israel’s TV writers are fighting back against disinformation with comedy. Earlier this week satirical show “Eretz Nehederet,” the Israeli version of “Saturday Night Live,” broadcast a ...
The 700 Club goes on hiatus and returns to The Family Channel's cartoons starting with "Britney Toons", a cartoon starring Britney Spears. Featuring the voices of Robert Smigel, Doug Dale, Kevin Dorff, Maya Rudolph, and Samantha Scharff. Only seen on West Coast airings and in the 90-minute NBC reruns. 57 December 15, 2001
Saturday Night Live star Bowen Yang mocked Chappell Roan’s statements about fame and her desire for boundaries in a skit where he played the internet’s favourite pygmy hippo, Moo Deng.