
Watch S5, EP2: Airplane Showdown with Fubo for $0 Today
A flight attendant must handle a passenger who will not fasten his seatbelt; British explorers discuss travels; couples try to avoid spoilers; a prayer group receives divine intervention.
A flight attendant must handle a passenger who will not fasten his seatbelt; British explorers discuss travels; couples try to avoid spoilers; a prayer group receives divine intervention.
How to watch
More episodes
Key & Peele
S5, EP1 "Y'all Ready For This?"A football team hypes up before a game; President Obama and Luther meet Hillary Clinton; guys prepare for potential flight threats; pirates sing; a trigger-happy policeman.
Key & Peele
S5, EP2 "Airplane Showdown"A flight attendant must handle a passenger who will not fasten his seatbelt; British explorers discuss travels; couples try to avoid spoilers; a prayer group receives divine intervention.
Key & Peele
S5, EP3 "A Cappella Club"A PSA helps prevent child soldiers in Africa; a college a cappella group gets a new member; Meegan and André go on their first date; a terror group runs a food truck; two old men discuss popular music.
Key & Peele
S5, EP4 "Severed Head Showcase"A gospel group must practice without its coach; a group of warriors celebrate a beheading; a prisoner tries to trick his guard; a young man is confronted for only speaking in catchphrases.
Key & Peele
S4, EP11 "Terrorist Meeting"Sketches include a gangster desperately tries to prove he's crazy; terrorists meet up to plan their next move; a jealous older brother makes a family dinner awkward.
Key & Peele
S4, EP10 "Sex Addict Wendell"Sketches include performers being kicked in the crotch for their art; a class clown terrorizes a teacher; a man tries to get lucky at a sex addicts meeting.
More comedy shows
See allFamily Guy
This animated series features the adventures of the Griffin family. Endearingly ignorant Peter and his stay-at-home wife, Lois, reside in Quahog, R.I., and have three kids. Meg, the eldest child, is a social outcast, and teenage Chris is awkward and clueless when it comes to the opposite sex. The youngest, Stewie, is a genius baby who is bent on killing his mother and destroying the world. Brian, the talking dog, keeps Stewie in check while sipping martinis and sorting through his own issues.
America's Funniest Home Videos
Amateur videographers in the U.S. submit videos of their kids, pets, friends and families in funny and embarrassing situations with the hope of winning thousands in prize money; the studio audience determines a winner by voting for the video they find most-hilarious; at the end of the season, weekly winners compete for the grand prize; actor and "Dancing With the Stars" Season 19 champion, Alfonso Ribeiro serves as the host and Vin Di Bona is the executive producer.
Ridiculousness
Don't be ridiculous! When it comes to Internet videos run amok, however, the more zany, unbelievable and downright dangerous the clips are, the greater the chance they'll be shown on this series. It features amateur viral videos being critiqued by MTV personality Rob Dyrdek ("Rob Dyrdek's Fantasy Factory"), who knows a thing or two about pushing the envelope from his pro skateboarding days. With commentary from Sterling "Steelo" Brim and Chanel (the rapping receptionist from "Fantasy Factory"), Dyrdek breaks down the clips by putting them in such categories as "Hot Mess," "Worst Case Scenario," "Redneck Good Times" and "What Happened Last Night." It's sure to be seriously ridiculous.
Jimmy Kimmel Live!
Emmy-winning funnyman Jimmy Kimmel serves up comedy bits and welcomes guests that include other comics, celebrities, athletes and musicians, as well as everyday people with unusual or compelling personal stories. Kimmel's family and friends take part in the festivities, including his Cousin Sal, Uncle Frank (until his death in 2011) and childhood friend Cleto Escobedo III, who leads the show's house band. Recurring segments include the FCC-pleasing This Week in Unnecessary Censorship in which they take TV clips and "bleep and blur things whether they need it or not," as Kimmel describes it. But it's too bad they consistently run out of time for Matt Damon's segment.