Jeff Allen shares a relatable story about buying a “sports car” at 50 — a Ford Focus — and the struggle of finally getting a speeding ticket. From doing math on the side of the road to dealing with police questions, Jeff delivers clean, observational comedy about aging, driving, and everyday life.
Simple, relatable humor that connects with broad audiences.
Comedian Ron Pearson breaks down what it’s like getting diagnosed with ADHD as an adult — distraction, anxiety, forgetfulness, and the daily chaos of simple errands. Then he shows the one upside: when ADHD hyperfocus kicks in, you can get weirdly good at something… like juggling.
Fast, relatable, and built around clean family life jokes with a skill payoff at the end.
A comedian and “older mom” shares stories about moving from Hollywood to an old family farm in Ohio, raising two energetic boys, and surviving marriage along the way. The set mixes self-deprecating humor, motherhood reality, and small-town farm chaos — from chickens multiplying overnight to football games, braces, and the “miracle” of the school bus showing up.
Good fit for audiences that like family and marriage comedy with a little edge.
A fast-paced comedy set about the realities of raising kids, surviving marriage, and how parenting changes with each child. Dustin shares relatable stories about baby-proofing, youngest-child life, youth sports chaos, and the everyday challenges families face.
A light, honest look at family life that parents will recognize immediately.
In this live stand-up segment, John Crist shares crowd work and observational humor inspired by touring through Salt Lake City. The material touches on regional culture, religion, social dynamics, and current issues, delivered through an unscripted, conversational style.
In this clean stand-up segment, the comedian shares a funny, self-deprecating look at joining Planet Fitness, trying to get healthier, and navigating the gym later in life. From free pizza at a “gym” to comparing progress with a workout buddy, the humor is honest, relatable, and grounded in real experience.
In this clean stand-up segment, Jeff Allen reflects on turning 65, marriage, family, and the humor that comes with aging. From well-meaning birthday gifts to grandchildren’s honesty and learning to take better care of himself, the stories are relatable, self-deprecating, and warm.
The comedy focuses on marriage, family life, and growing older with perspective and gratitude. No profanity or crude material is used, making this a strong fit for churches, conferences, and clean comedy audiences.
In this unscripted stand-up segment, Henry Cho takes audience questions and shares off-the-cuff stories about family life, parenting, marriage, touring, and getting older. The humor is conversational and reflective, built around real experiences and audience interaction.
Ken Davis shares a humorous, honest look at parenting on Sunday mornings—those moments every parent recognizes on the way to church. Using exaggerated storytelling and self-deprecating humor, he highlights the chaos, frustration, and love that exist in everyday family life.
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.
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