Watch S1, EP10: Bad Behavior with Fubo for $0 Today
What LBJ nicknamed his chief of staff; how Kim Jong-Il invented the hamburger; why the real-life inspiration for Dracula was even more bloodthirsty than the vampire.
What LBJ nicknamed his chief of staff; how Kim Jong-Il invented the hamburger; why the real-life inspiration for Dracula was even more bloodthirsty than the vampire.
How to watch
More episodes
I Love the 1880's
S1, EP1 "Presidents Gone Wild"The comedians examine executive power; the strange way Nixon wooed his future wife; a founding father that liked swimming in the nude; a vice president gets drunk at his inauguration.
I Love the 1880's
S1, EP2 "The United States of Awesome"Why America has the most awesome healthcare system in the world; people who picnicked at a Civil War battle; the "Star Spangled Banner's" creation.
I Love the 1880's
S1, EP3 "One Nation, Under Arrest"A Chicago mobster that went by the name Snorky; Bonnie and Clyde compared to Fleetwood Mac; how many U.S. vice presidents have shot people while in office.
I Love the 1880's
S1, EP4 "Military Madness"History's weirdest weapons, craziest generals and biggest battlefield blunders; the secrets behind the CIA's classified cat-training program; William Wallace's taste for human flesh.
I Love the 1880's
S1, EP12 "Breakthroughs and Breakdowns"The big moments that shaped the course of human events for better and worse; tips on how to avoid getting the Black Plague.
I Love the 1880's
S1, EP11 "Livin' Large"John Rockefeller makes his money, Marie Antoinette loses her bread; a Roman emperor hosts parties so depraved that Penthouse made a movie about them.
I Love the 1880's
S1, EP10 "Bad Behavior"What LBJ nicknamed his chief of staff; how Kim Jong-Il invented the hamburger; why the real-life inspiration for Dracula was even more bloodthirsty than the vampire.
I Love the 1880's
S1, EP9 "Heroes and Villians"What made Alexander the Great so great; where Fidel Castro stationed his Cuban missile; how Napoleon could have won the Battle of Waterloo with a bit more preparation.
More comedy shows
See allJimmy 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.
Gutfeld!
Greg Gutfeld looks at the news of the day through a satiric lens fused with pop culture and features his takes on the day's headlines.
Family 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.
The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
Improv actor and comic Stephen Colbert flexes the hosting muscles he honed over nearly 1,500 episodes of the popular and critically celebrated "The Colbert Report" at the helm of this long-running late-night talk show. Following the genre's classic formula, each show kicks off with a monologue and a look at recent headlines, and features sketch comedy, celebrity interviews and musical performances. The show is filmed in New York's famed Ed Sullivan Theater, the longtime home of "The Late Show."