He leans into his engineer brain and turns everyday life into charts, proofs, and dumb little equations. He riffs on PowerPoint culture, the autocorrect disasters that can wreck your day (or your marriage), why USB plugs are never right, and how “smart” devices keep getting smarter in the worst ways. It’s nerdy, fast, and packed with callbacks—basically a night of laughing at how modern life works (and doesn’t).
A stand-up set built around family life as it actually happens. The comedian talks about marriage, raising two daughters, navigating autism at home, kids asking impossible questions about life and death, and the strange logic children bring to everyday moments. Along the way, he covers aging parents, career shifts, pets that refuse to cooperate, hosting foreign exchange students, and the gap between how adults and kids see the world. The humor comes from honesty, self-deprecation, and recognizing the chaos most families live in.
A stand-up set built around family life as it actually happens. The comedian talks about marriage, raising two daughters, navigating autism at home, kids asking impossible questions about life and death, and the strange logic children bring to everyday moments. Along the way, he covers aging parents, career shifts, pets that refuse to cooperate, hosting foreign exchange students, and the gap between how adults and kids see the world. The humor comes from honesty, self-deprecation, and recognizing the chaos most families live in.
A stand-up set about getting older and the family moments that come with it. The jokes move from milestone birthdays and shrinking bucket lists to parents discovering FaceTime, thermostat battles, adult kids drifting back home, and the little household victories that somehow feel big. It’s built on everyday family life, technology gaps, and laughing at yourself as the years add up.
Adam Carolla breaks down the strange overlap between being very rich and very broke—and why the middle class doesn’t make the cut. From outdoor showers and speed bumps to department stores, ladders on wheels, and knowing the price of copper, the laughs come from sharp observations and unexpected comparisons. Clean, fast-paced, and built on smart exaggeration.
A clean stand-up bit about marriage and the everyday moments couples know all too well. From late-night spider emergencies and checking locks before bed to thermostat debates, food portions, and taking out the trash, the humor comes from small frustrations and familiar rhythms of married life. It’s observational, relatable, and built on experiences most couples recognize immediately.
As kids get older, they start talking back—and adults realize they’re not so different.
In this stand-up comedy clip, a comedian connects parenting, marriage, and everyday life through one universal phrase: “I don’t want to.” From tattoos and toddlers to credit cards, church plans, and family expectations, the jokes build around how kids and adults use the same logic—just with different consequences.
Relatable, clean, and rooted in family life, this set hits home for parents, couples, and anyone who’s ever been asked to do something they didn’t feel like doing.
In this stand-up Q&A clip, a comedian shares how he first tried stand-up comedy in college—and why one open mic changed everything. From dropping out of school to navigating family expectations, he breaks down what it really takes to get started in comedy.
The conversation also includes practical advice for aspiring comedians, why writing your own material matters, and why clean comedy opens more doors.
In this stand-up comedy clip, a dad sits down for a serious father–son talk about life after high school—and quickly realizes that getting an answer may be harder than expected. From vague plans to creative solutions, the conversation spirals into a familiar family standoff that parents everywhere will recognize.
Parenting little kids while exhausted leads to some questionable answers.
In this stand-up comedy story, a mom looks back on the things she said while juggling minivans, crying kids, deep questions, and zero sleep. From faith-filled curiosity to celebrity questions she definitely wasn’t prepared for, this is an honest and funny reflection on motherhood, grace, and realizing later that you didn’t always get it right.
A relatable story for parents, grandparents, and anyone who’s ever answered a serious question on no energy at all.
Turning 50 is supposed to come with wisdom. Instead, it comes with more questions.
In this stand-up comedy clip, Jeff breaks down everyday mysteries no one can explain—aging, marriage, technology, customer service, dentists, razor blades, and the small frustrations that make life confusing and funny. The humor is fast, relatable, and built on real-life observations most people recognize immediately.
This set focuses on growing older without suddenly becoming smarter, and why some things in life still make no sense—no matter how long you’ve been around.
A funny look back at childhood mischief, grocery-store surprises, and a wife navigating menopause one hot flash at a time. From exploding jars to kale “chips” and freezer-level bedroom temps, he turns real life into fast, punchy laughs.
A quick run through America’s changing team names and why no one’s scared of a “Guardian.” From Rangers politely reminding you to clean up your campsite to imaginary matchups like the Slaughterhouse Employees, he turns baseball branding into fast and funny social commentary.
A lively take on family life from a dad holding it together one Costco trip at a time. From sleepless date nights to kids glued to their rooms, he turns marriage, parenting, and procrastination into fast, relatable laughs that any family can recognize.
Bob riffs on the everyday irritation of freeway merging, stop-and-go on-ramps, and battling for space on California highways. From long on-ramps to white-knuckle lane changes, he turns road rage into laughs with fast punchlines, sharp observations, and a clever twist on driver behavior.
Bob Zaney brings his quick punchlines and audience-friendly humor to the Huckabee stage. From small-town casinos to oddball news stories from the Zany Report, Bob keeps the pace tight with clean jokes, crowd interaction, and his trademark twist on everyday life
A relationship-heavy stand-up set about marriage dynamics, gift-giving pressure, and the fear that comes with those four words every married guy dreads: “We need to talk.” The comic mixes self-deprecation, exaggerated gender differences, and a longer personal story that moves from jokes into family history and a chess-based metaphor for marriage.
A longer stand-up set built around relationship jokes, wedding stories, and growing up Southern while living in other parts of the country. The comic riffs on shopping with a girlfriend, bridesmaids, Catholic wedding culture, pranks during ceremonies, surfing and shark paranoia, bungee jumping trust issues, and miscommunications caused by accents and regional slang.
A stand-up story about moving from Nashville to New York City and trying to do the right thing—only to have it go very wrong. The comic recounts a late-night diner encounter with a man pretending to be blind, a confrontation outside, and an unexpectedly precise blast of mace. Dark, observational humor built around culture shock and bad judgment.
A clean stand-up bit about worship music and why some men struggle to connect with modern church songs. The comic contrasts emotional, expressive lyrics with a more understated, everyday way men often show devotion—ending with a tongue-in-cheek “worship song” built around silence, snacks, and watching the game.
Salem Media, our partners, and affiliates use cookies and similar technologies to enhance your browsing experience, analyze site traffic, personalize site content, and deliver relevant video recommendations. By using this website and continuing to navigate, you consent to our use of such technologies and the sharing of video viewing activity with third-party partners in accordance with the Video Privacy Protection Act and other privacy laws.Privacy Policy