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.
Erica Rhodes riffs on modern breakups, social media fallout, and dating someone who loves himself a little too much. The set leans on smart wordplay, grammar jokes, and relatable relationship moments from her appearance on Bring The Funny.
A simple audience question turns into an unfiltered take on parenting, childbirth, and learning the hard way when to keep your mouth shut. This clip dives into unexpected crowd interaction, first-time dad nerves, and the moments you can’t unsee once you’re in the delivery room. It’s observational comedy built on shared experiences, bad timing, and the realization that sometimes the smartest move is to grab a vacuum and stay quiet.
n this 4 PM Funnies clip, the comedian breaks down what happens when a doctor tells you to get in shape later in life—and technology gets way too involved. From a Fitbit that tracks every move (or lack of one), to fake workouts, hotel-room “5Ks,” and a very strong case against taking up skiing at 60, this set is packed with self-deprecating humor and relatable excuses. If you’ve ever tried to outsmart your fitness tracker or questioned why your watch knows so much about you, this one hits close to home.
his 4 PM Funnies clip takes an unexpected turn as the comedian shares a personal story about time spent in Hattiesburg during recovery and what that season of life meant. What starts with jokes about the city shifts into a sincere reflection on sobriety, community, and the people who showed up when it mattered most. It’s honest, vulnerable, and grounded in gratitude—reminding you that sometimes the funniest voices are also the most human.
This is a quieter moment from a comedy set, but one that sticks with you.
What if store names actually matched the experience you have inside them? In this 4 PM Funnies clip, the comedian breaks down everyday brands and gives them the names they probably deserve—from endless breadsticks to impossible parking lots and checkout receipts that never stop printing. It’s observational comedy built on shared frustration, brand recognition, and the little moments that make errands way harder than they should be.
Ever wondered what happens when a teacher turns comedian? In this 4 PM Funnies set, a former English teacher shares what it’s really like in the classroom—kids who don’t want to read, creative excuses for assigning movie adaptations, and students with big dreams that may need a backup plan. The laughs continue outside school with honest, self-aware takes on shopping, body image, and everyday moments that don’t go as planned. Relatable, observational, and rooted in real life, this clip lands with parents, teachers, and anyone who’s ever survived a long day and needed a laugh by 4 PM.
Darci Lynne shares a lighthearted, family-friendly Christmas performance filled with music, humor, and holiday joy. With her signature style and playful energy, this festive moment celebrates togetherness, laughter, and the simple fun of the season. A clean, uplifting clip that’s easy to enjoy and share during Christmas.
A holiday tune about gratitude, family, and the part nobody likes to say out loud. It starts sincere, turns practical, and ends honest. Kids need food, clothes cost money, and sometimes the reason for the season includes selling a few things online. Simple, self-aware, and funny because it’s true.
Christmas at grandma’s house comes with food standards and strong opinions. This bit breaks down holiday dinners, turkey and dressing, giblet gravy, and the belief that some people are simply built to make great mashed potatoes. It’s warm, visual, and rooted in family kitchens everyone recognizes.
Fear of flying turns into a full breakdown of airline logic, safety announcements, and the lies we tell ourselves at 30,000 feet. From flotation-seat optimism to tiny island planes that care a little too much about passenger weight, this bit skewers air travel with sharp observations and escalating absurdity. If flying makes you nervous, this will feel uncomfortably familiar.
Every family has a line when it comes to holiday decorations. This bit breaks down the unspoken timeline for when it’s acceptable, questionable, and completely unhinged to still have decorations up. It’s a simple, observational take on habits everyone recognizes and quietly judges.
Every family has a line when it comes to holiday decorations. This bit breaks down the unspoken timeline for when it’s acceptable, questionable, and completely unhinged to still have decorations up. It’s a simple, observational take on habits everyone recognizes and quietly judges.
A crowd-work bit about how many Christians switch denominations over time. He pokes fun at Baptist, Catholic, Pentecostal, and non-denominational experiences, then lands on how modern faith looks very different from earlier generations—especially when it comes to sacrifice and commitment.
A fast, self-deprecating opener about being a teenage “manager” at a 7-Eleven. He covers the graveyard shift, firing himself, late-night customers, microwave disasters, and shoplifting attempts, all built around exaggerated retail chaos and bad decisions.
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