Even if you’ve never seen the Comedy Central show “Key & Peele,” you may know one of the show’s recurring characters. Luther, Obama’s “anger translator,” played by Keegan-Michael Key, appeared with then-President Obama himself at the 2015 White House Correspondents’ Association dinner. Playing off of Obama’s calm and measured demeanor, Luther represented the things that people may think but can’t say behind their social masks.

The Peele in “Key and Peele” is Jordan Peele, who worked with Key on “Mad TV.” When the comedy duo was about to debut their new show, they promoted it with a web series featuring Key as Luther and Peele as Obama. The promotion was so successful that when “Key & Peele” aired its first episode on TV, it attracted over 2 million viewers, more than any other Comedy Central debut in years.

The show ran for five seasons, from January 2012 to September 2015, picking up a boatload of awards and nominations along the way. It mixed humor and social commentary, using the first to illuminate the second.

Anatomy of an Episode 

To see how their comedy works, let’s take a bit of deep dive into one of their episodes — the first show of Season 3, which aired on Sept. 18, 2013. The comedians pack a lot into a single show. In a mere 22 minutes, they covered all of these subjects in comedy sketches, interspersed with short stand-up bits and intros before a studio audience:

  • The racial profiling of a black man walking through a white suburban neighborhood.
  • How older African-American fans reacted to Key and Peele.
  • People keeping secrets from their spouses about what they do online.

Some sketches focused on culture:

  • A rap battle disintegrates when a hype man overdoes it.
  • An elaborately staged sketch pokes fun at the way everyone sings over each other in “Les Miserables.”

Some of the sketches featured recurring characters:

  • Mr. Garvey, the substitute teacher from the inner city subbing in a white school, who mispronounces his students’ names (calling Aaron “Ay Ay Ron”), made his debut in this episode in which he doesn’t believe the kids have to leave to get their yearbook photos taken.
  • Luther, Obama’s anger translator, is back, with something else on his mind (I’m being deliberately vague for this PG-13 blog post) when Obama talks about the government’s surveillance of email.

What makes it all work is that the humor is razor sharp and keeps on coming at a quick clip so that you hardly have a chance to catch your breath between laughs. They use both verbal and visual humor. For instance, they show a close-up of the face of a man confronted by his spouse. A single drop of sweat rolls down his forehead. That keeps on increasing until finally the man looks like he is standing in the middle of a thunderstorm as water pours down his face. That gag provides a visual punchline when the tables are turned, and a single drop of sweat starts rolling down the face of his wife.

But it’s not just about the jokes—they’re always threading real, sometimes uncomfortable truths throughout. You get a sense that Key and Peele are almost daring you to laugh, even when the subject is a bit close to the bone. That sly feeling stays with you long after the sketch, which is probably part of why their work keeps getting passed around online even years after the original air date.

If you watch some of their sketches now, in 2025, they’ve aged weirdly well. The cultural references are still sharp, and the jokes hit just as hard—even if you’re not actively thinking about the incidents or politics of a decade ago. There’s this odd sense of déjà vu; many of the issues they lampooned are still rolling around today. Guess that’s either quite a compliment to their work or a bit of a bummer that some things just don’t change.

Adding Social Commentary and Humor to Your Wit Toolbox

Ideas for adding humor to marketing are everywhere. Content marketers can draw inspiration from looking at what other companies have done or by reading tips from comedy pros.

Humor comes in many forms. It can be sweet or biting. There’s a long tradition of using humor to deal with what might otherwise be painful topics. Comedy takes the edge off. Laughter is itself a kind of release. Issue-based humor is a way to have a conversation without being preachy. Key and Peele show that humor combined with social commentary can have a huge following. The tradition continues.

Can social commentary work for you as a way to publicize your business? That will depend on a lot of things, on what kind of business you have, on who your customers are, and on how you want to portray your brand.

If you decide to add social commentary to your wit toolbox, be sure to be authentic. If you are fake — if you promote an agenda you don’t believe in because you think it will sell your product or if you even appear to be doing that — you might be mercilessly mocked online. That’s what happened with Pepsi’s ill-fated commercial featuring Kendall Jenner at a protest.

It’s risky to be out in front on social issues, but as with all kinds of investments, the bigger the risk, the larger the potential reward. Boldness, when authentic, can have a big payoff. Just remember to be genuinely funny. Making people laugh can turn ordinary content into something memorable. It can even change people’s minds.

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