mr show best sketches
“Hail Satan” (Season 3, Episode 1) This sketch about a 700 Club–esque show for Satanists is a simple concept made a little stronger by the notion of people actually greeting each other with, “To Hell with you.” I could get behind that! “Van Hammersly” (Season 2, Episode 4) Three things make this faux-infomercial with Odenkirk as an instructional billiards whiz a brief, nonsensical burst of hilarity: the conceit itself (GED prep by playing pool?
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“Teardrop Awards” (Season 4, Episode 9) This might be taken as silly hyperbole, but fuck it: “A Mouthful of Sores,” sung by Odenkirk’s Brian Wilson–aping Willups Brighton, ranks up there with most classic Beach Boys songs. “Night Talk Senate Committee” (Season 3, Episode 9) A brief late-night-TV-themed sketch mainly notable for a Jon Stewart cameo and the return of two Mr. Show recurring characters: Blueberry Head (and he brought props!) A lot of Mr. Show’s sketches were oddly prescient and this is no exception. 143. 34. What Does It Take To Reopen A Hotel During The Pandemic?
Leading up to Mr. Show was the short-lived Ben Stiller Show, featuring segments by Stiller, Bob Odenkirk, Janeane Garofalo and Andy Dick, and appearances by Dino Stamatopoulos, David Cross and so on.It was a Mr. Show primer, and nothing makes that clearer than the satire meets stupidity of this sketch. An extremely well-constructed sketch with a punchline so potent that, upon delivery, it feels like a time-tested standard. “Blind Girl” (Season 4, Episode 5) Mr. Show does Neil LaBute, kind of. 20. “Hit By Truck” (Season 1, Episode 1) A simple concept (everything is changing, constantly) with a surprise ending that, as the title suggests, comes at you fast. jokes nodding to cults like Heaven’s Gate, ending with the truism that assholes will make fun of anyone’s beliefs. You just want your stuff, man, and you don’t want to hear that song again, either. 108. “Age War/Elderly Taking Over/Goin’ on a Holiday” (Season 3, Episode 6) If you don’t enjoy this series of sketches imagining a dystopian future where the elderly terrorize the general population (“The oldies are not goodies!”), then perhaps you deserve a testicular electrocution of your own. The idea of this sketch — what if rap was sanitized and reduced ... 156. Yeah, actually, that’ll do the trick. “Talking Junkie” (Season 2, Episode 2) Who says there’s no such thing as a talking junkie? 125. “Borden Grote” (Season 1, Episode 3) Mr. Show’s character names are often just ridiculous-sounding enough to be solid gags in and of themselves, and devoted method actor Borden Grote is no exception. And it does, as this legendary sketch plays to Mr. Show’s expert sense of pacing: The conflict escalates, steadily, before exploding so grandly and gloriously onscreen that it’s practically comedic fireworks, a conceptual payoff that’s as trippy as it is inspired. “Time Capsule/Drugachusetts” (Season 3, Episode 3) This Sid & Marty Krofft–inspired trip of a sketch is as much an homage to the Land of the Lost creators as it as an outright spoof of the source material’s hallucinatory lunacy. How about an ostentatiously holier-than-thou pastor? “Erotic tangerines,” anyone? 157. 151. Let’s find out! 26. Lewis Jr. 7. This Jay Johnston brainchild could have gone on five more minutes and it would still be funny. “No Adults Allowed/No Slackers” (Season 2, Episode 3) A capable satire of talking-to-teens propaganda that takes a headlong turn into absurdist territory, with the stuck-up adults finding out how the other half (that is, slackers) really live. “Child Labor Writers’ Room/Bhopal” (Season 2, Episode 4) That old adage about a bunch of monkeys with typewriters turning out Shakespeare? “Toenapper” (Season 4, Episode 2) The notion that a hapless kidnapper would somehow bungle cutting off his victim’s toe — even after he has the victim in his possession — is incredibly dark, and makes for some very funny material, too. Like their best work of the early years, they get the little details down perfectly to make the madness even greater. “Easily worthy of being considered among the best comedy programs of all time.”. “Ewww Girl Video/Video Soul/Homage Awards” (Season 2, Episode 2) In which the Mr. Show audience is introduced to Three Times One Minus One, perhaps the first alt-R&B act in existence (take that, the Weeknd). Who knew! Just remember the title of the sketch as you watch it and enjoy this little bit of twisted brilliance. “Mayostard/Mustardayonnaise/Mustmayostardayonnaise” (Season 3, Episode 5) The most disgusting thing about this triumvirate of combined-condiment advertisements is that there’s actually products like this out there. Mr. Show was a good show. “Siamese Twins” (Season 3, Episode 7) Much of Mr. Show’s genius comes from comedic concepts so obviously clever that it’s surprising no one came up with them before. The second of these interconnected sketches, “Blowing Up the Moon,” is pure absurdist gold. 77. That’s why I’m on your penny.”. 58. But a perfect fit for a 13-year-old sneaking down to the living room to catch a late-night program his parents banned.
It’s where many of us first ran across comedians like Posehn, Sarah Silverman, Paul F. Tompkins, and Jack Black. “The Audition” (S04E03). 83. 19. You know, that old comedy trope. As this sketch suggests, they light up the world, one lonely hallway mop dance at a time. — is decent enough, but something just feels off about the execution. 2. 111. 126.
112. “Drunk Cops” (Season 2, Episode 3) A brief, Cops-spoofing interlude that, following the previous season’s Ronnie Dobbs sketch, comes across as little more than reheated leftovers.
As Bob Odenkirk told Kevin Pollak in an interview a few years back, the key to this sketch’s success is how Cross plays the kid with such insane glee. 60. “Bad News Breakers/Mafia Mathematicians” (Season 3, Episode 7) The adorable “Bad News Breakers” appear several times throughout the series, and here they provide the perfect lead-in for one of Mr. Show’s most bafflingly brilliant sketch concepts. “Greenlight Gang/Coupon: The Trial/Coupon: The Movie” (Season 2, Episode 6) The case could be made for “The Velveteen Touch of a Dandy Fop,” the finale to Mr. Show’s second season, as the greatest single episode in the series — and the epic tale of Coupon: The Movie is its crown jewel. This one — about a Civil War reenactment, and the problems that arise when “two Lincolns” show up — falls toward the latter. Not me, and not you, either. “Victor & Dylan” (Season 3, Episode 5) The pretentious I-don’t-own-a-TV Dylan, from second-season skit “Donuts,” returns here briefly and somewhat less memorably, though he does leave us with the lasting and effective epithet “Jupiter’s Thunder!”. Krystallnacht! If you’re a current HBO subscriber, you might already have access to HBO Max — all of HBO plus blockbuster movies, must-see series, and new Max Originals.
More important, can you hold your breath for over two minutes? “Directions” (Season 3, Episode 1) Anyone who’s ever been the bearer of their own bad news — only to find out that the recipient is more interested in talking about themselves — will find this sketch deeply familiar. There could be something in here about how we, as a society, are also easily amused by the most simple and juvenile of humor. “Soul Singer (Larry Black)” (Season 1, Episode 3) Almost any sketch where Odenkirk unleashes his so-bad-it’s-kind-of-great singing voice is guaranteed to be extremely funny. The premise is a pitch-perfect portrait of pre-9/11 American jingoism. If that strikes you as tragic, just watch the whole series — even at its low points, Mr. Show is still some of the funniest comedy around. There are plenty of legitimate excuses here. Mr. Show cast list, including photos of the actors when available. One of the basic tenets of Mr. Show is that yelling is funny, and this one delivers. “Music Offer” (Season 4, Episode 9) “Yes, Bach, get him too.” A good play on Time-Life boxed set ads, envisioning an alternate reality where the Time-Life folks are asking you to send them music. “Announcements” (Season 1, Episode 2) Short-and-sweet joke depository stuff, as Odenkirk rattles off a bevy of capable one-liners as a voiceover artist and seemingly threatens to break character at a specific line’s audaciousness (“We’ll bring out the kid in ya!”). “Landlords” (Season 3, Episode 5) The question this skit asks — when you move apartments, does your old landlord get jealous? “Ice Cream Flavors” (Season 3, Episode 9) An extremely brief bit acting as proof that literally nothing is safe from Mr. Show’s satirical target — not even your favorite Ben & Jerry’s ice cream flavor. what many believe to be one of its worst episodes in years, there’s actually products like this out there, there are now TV shows where the entire conceit rests on two people having sex on a studio set. 129. 84. Another Stamatopoulos/Forrester gem. “Commercials of the Future” (Season 1, Episode 2) It’s getting harder to shock people these days — but luckily, two ad pitchmen have the solution to staying ahead of the curve, and that solution involves a lot of cursing. This sketch about a queen mischievously negging her subjects — only to have the plan fall apart in her face — has the hilarious-misunderstanding vibe of a solid sitcom episode. “Writer in Audience” (Season 1, Episode 3) There’s some truth in this brief bit — specifically, that giving your friend notes on their writing is something of a nightmare for twenty- (and thirty-) something creatives the world over. “Vendetta” (Season 4, Episode 10) The literal last sketch to air on Mr. Show — and sadly, it’s just okay. 141. Say what you will about Fairsley Foods’ advertising methods and their desire to crush the small business owners in the area through a campaign of misinformation and suggestion, but I don’t think it’s too much to ask that a grocery store always have apples. 50. You probably know the answer already, but it’s the ruthlessness of the competing businesses (“Come with your kids, leave with your kids — that’s the Fairsley difference”) that makes this sketch especially hilarious.
One of the best sketch shows ever made. “Marriage-Con and Boat Show” (Season 3, Episode 9) Fact: After watching this sketch, you have no excuse afterwards if you don’t own a boat or aren’t newly married. — but this sketch takes it one step further and introduces us to a character who really lays into it with the cannibalism business, giving new, horrific meaning to the term “well-fed.”.
145. MGM pushed its release date to August 2021. 76. 87. “Marty Farty” (Season 4, Episode 7) Essentially a playground rhyme refashioned as a breaking news story — not exactly A-grade stuff, but it does the trick well enough. 53.
135. 110. That’s just how good Mr. Show was and remains to be. Please add “wigs” to that list. A metal band visits the kid who was encouraged to jump into a vat of acid by one of their songs (“Try Suicide”) and has to contend with his badly deformed body (“He looks like a wet cigar!”) and his insistence that he spend as much time as possible with them on tour. “Weeklong Romance” (Season 4, Episode 10) This is Mr. Show’s take on Ross and Rachel’s “We were on a break!” argument. More importantly, we felt like it was sketch comedy for us.
Over the years I've gone back and forth on my favorite bit of one of my favorite Mr. Show sketches. “It’s great. 113. 37. “Gus Kryzinski, Night Janitor” (Season 3, Episode 10) What do night janitors do when no one’s watching? The Kids in the Hall wouldn’t grab us until a couple summers later with reruns on Comedy Central. — and pushing it to its most illogical extreme, with a punchline that’s equal parts hilariously corny and genuinely genius.
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