Without further ado, here’s a look at some of the funniest things you’ve heard on the golf course… 42. Golfer A: “Let’s get a group photo here on the first tee.” 41. “May thy ball lie in green pastures, and not in still waters.” — @BHGolfEquipment
30 Funniest Sitcoms Of All Time 1 11 The Office (UK Version; AKA, "the original") (2001) 2 21 The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970 to 77) 3 22 Curb Your Enthusiasm (2000 to 2011; 2017 to Present) 4 23 Veep (2012 to Present) 5 24 Happy Endings (2011 to 2013) 6 25 The IT Crowd (2006 to 2013) 7 29 It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia (2005 to Present)
Here are the best water puns that will have you drowning in laughter: 1. H20 is water, but what is H204? It’s for swimming and drinking, of course.
Wipeout is an American television game show. It features contestants competing in (what was billed as) the "World's Largest" obstacle course which originally aired on ABC from June 24, 2008, to September 7, 2014. In 2021, the show was rebooted on TBS, with John Cena, Nicole Byer, and Camille Kostek as hosts.
“Wipeout” on ABC seems to be an Americanized version of the '80s Japanese game show “Takeshi's Castle.”
Paramount NetworkMXC / NetworkParamount Network is an American basic cable television channel owned by the MTV Entertainment Group unit of Paramount Media Networks. The network's headquarters are located at the Paramount Pictures studio lot in Los Angeles. Wikipedia
April 19, 2003MXC / First episode date
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Most Extreme Elimination Challenge (MXC) is an American comedy television program that aired on Spike TV from 2003 to 2007. It is a re-purpose of footage from the Japanese game show Takeshi's Castle, which originally aired in Japan from 1986 to 1990.
That show was made by producers who bought the rights to footage from “Takeshi's Castle,” a popular 1980s Japanese game show and then dubbed over their own comedic commentary.
Can US Citizens Use MXC Exchange? Yes, US citizens can use the services. In other words, US investors can sign up to the MXC Exchange website and make the most of the trade.
'MXC' is Now Streaming on Amazon Prime Video.
Watch MXC: Most Extreme Challenge, Season 1 | Prime Video.
There has been no reported casualties resulted from the making of "Takeshi's Castle", however there are a number of injuries contestants has suffered from playing. 1.) College student Takahiro Saito, 19, was hospitalized after falling more than six feet into a four-foot-deep water-filled moat.
(The ABC show Wipeout, which aired from 2008 to 2014, was based on MXC, but it never achieved the outrageousness of either the original or MXC.) The challenges always resulted in physical contortions and flailing.
Despite Kitano's global appeal, MXC's pointed parody of militarism and amped-up violence remain uniquely Japanese. The militarism, for one, is reminiscent of the life of one of Japan's most famous literary exports, Yukio Mishima.
The show follows Glover’s Earn, a young black man living in the titular city who’s down on his luck. He’s basically homeless when we meet him in the first episode, selling credit cards, making no money and trying to manage the rap career of his cousin, Paper Boi (Brian Tyree Henry). Over the course of the first and second season, Earn wrestles with issues of race, classism, and his own sense of self-worth. It’s a show that will probably feel familiar to some and strangely alien to others, but it should be required viewing for everyone.
After getting caught with a phony degree, former lawyer Jeff Winger (Joel McHale) heads to Greendale Community College to get a legitimate degree.
For a show about nothing, Seinfeld has left a cultural imprint that few shows can boast of achieving. Back before shows about neurotic people were the latest trend, Jerry Seinfeld blended his own neuroses with his stand up act, creating a New York landscape that many could relate to. With stories based on the minutiae of relationships and everyday living, Seinfeld embedded itself in the cultural zeitgeist like few shows have done. Even if you’ve never seen an episode, you still know about the Soup Nazi and Newman. Plus, Veep fans will enjoy seeing a pre-presidential Julia Louis-Dreyfus as the hilariously frazzled Elaine Benes. If you’ve been meaning to watch the show that has made people laugh for decades, Hulu has you covered.
Cheers is one of the most watched shows of all time, and that comes as no surprise. It's a feel-good sitcom with a simple premise: a group of friends hang out at a bar called Cheers. At the end of the day, most people want to feel as though they belong.
Famously referred to as "the show about nothing," Seinfeld perfectly executes the sitcom's purpose: to bring a cast of characters to life that is flawed enough for audiences to fall in love with. And with that goal in mind, it's certainly one of the best sitcoms of all time.
As the title implies, How I Met Your Mother is the recounting of how the main character, Ted Mosby, met his children's mother. Each episode is a story Ted tells his kids, all of which lead up to the titular moment of meeting their mother. The framing device sets this show apart from others of its ilk, and keeps the audience coming back so they too can figure out how Ted met his wife. Plus, the humor in HIMYM is witty enough to be one of the most quotable shows, and broad enough to be a great background show to throw on while you're doing other things.
Community is a sitcom that makes fun of the fact that it's a sitcom. It's very self-aware, often playing off of classic television tropes and clichés. Created by Dan Harmon, Community caters to an audience that enjoys meta humor, and is a refreshing change of pace.
There are plenty of television dramas that take place in a hospital, but Scrubs brings us a comedy within those walls. Hospitals are full of death and despair, and making that funny is no easy feat. Scrubs pulls it off, and gives us some tear-jerking moments along the way. It has a lot of heart, which is one of the most essential ingredients in a sitcom. And to make sure it doesn't feel too corny, John C. McGinley's character, Dr. Cox, is always there to bully every character with his brutal wit.
Both a sitcom and a period piece, That 70's Show is really funny if you, like the characters most of the time, are really high. It has all of your usual tropes: the nice guy, the hot girl, the overly harsh dad, the doting mother, the foreign exchange student who delivers one-liners with an accent, and the unbelievably stupid friend played by Ashton Kutcher. The characters aren't anything new, but the show does dish out some social commentary without feeling too heavy-handed or agenda driven. At its core, That 70's Show is a funny, easy to watch sitcom about a group of teens doing dumb, teen stuff, and failing to get away with it. I think we can all relate to and find the humor in that.
There's nothing all that strange about the premise of The Newlywed Game, and indeed it's even rather endearing in theory: the game asked newly married couples a series of questions about one another, revealing how well the spouses knew each other and often comically revealing what they didn't in fact know or expect. The thing is the show was really just one long series of euphemisms for questions about sexual practices. The show, which ran in the 1960s and was then revived in the 80s and 90s, led to many spousal arguments and is even "credited" for leading to a number of divorces. The episodes that led to discord were of course some of the best rated, so there was no reason for the show to avoid such controversies.
Televised game shows have been around for almost as long as the medium of television itself. In fact, the first ever TV game show, Spelling Bee, aired in 1938, which was less than a decade after the first TV sets were created, and well before they became a fixture in every home (or in every room in every home, as is common in 2017).
That's right, they made a game show based off of... musical chairs. Yes, contestants had to clamber over all sorts of crazy obstacles and perform feats requiring varying degrees of fitness and acrobatic prowess, but look: it's just musical chairs.
The 15 Most Intense Physical Challenges on Reality TV Competitions. For some people, a triathlon is a joyous event. These super-humans can run faster than you, swim faster than you, bike faster than you. They're fit in a way you can't imagine, as you sit on your couch, remote control in hand, ready to surf the channels.
If the victims were tagged, they would have to suffer some form of punishment that was written on their suit. Classic. 8. The Gliding Ring.
Jackass's own Steve-O hosts Killer Karaoke, though this time around he's not the one doing dumb shit. The premise is simple: participants sing while being put through degrading ordeals. If they stop singing, they lose.
Wipeout bills itself as having “the world‘s largest obstacle course.” That may or may not be true, but what is definitely true is that the folks behind Takeshi's Castle sued the Wipeout creators for copying their show.