

Netflix Is A Daily Joke
Netflix
It's simple: a joke a day featuring your favorite Netflix comedians. One joke. Every day.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 4, 2026 • 9min
Taylor Tomlinson: A Joke About Death
Taylor Tomlinson, stand-up comedian and writer known for sharp observational humor and her Netflix special Prodigal Daughter, riffs on fear of death and depression with darkly funny takes. She talks wills, naming a medical decision maker, creative afterlife options, awkward family moments with ashes, and dating while navigating grief. Short, personal, and unapologetically funny.

Mar 3, 2026 • 16min
Mo Gilligan: A Joke About The Hollywood Lifestyle
Mo Gilligan, British stand-up and TV personality known for high-energy observational comedy. He hilariously narrates a Hollywood nightlife misadventure with outrageous bottle service, impulsive splurges and a dramatic champagne reveal. Short, punchy stories about status, impulse and the morning-after shock keep the laughs coming.

Mar 2, 2026 • 2min
Dana Carvey: A Joke About Meeting His Heroes
Dana Carvey, famed SNL comic known for impressions, shares backstage memories of serving his comedy idols. He tells surreal waitstaff stories about George Carlin and Richard Pryor. Short, funny anecdotes revolve around an oatmeal gag and a memorable omelet reaction. The conversation teases moments recreated on set and promotes his special Straight White Male, 60.

Mar 1, 2026 • 2min
Katt Williams: A Joke About Drugs
Katt Williams, stand-up comedian and actor known for his sharp, high-energy style, delivers a blistering routine about drugs from his special The Last Report. He riffs on young people and drug affordability. He links 420 with Easter in a wild gag about Jesus. He skewers the physical fallout of meth and molly with relentless comic detail.

Feb 28, 2026 • 3min
Cristela Alonzo: A Joke About Liking What You Like
Cristela Alonzo, stand-up comedian and writer known for sharp observational bits about family and cultural identity. She recalls a tomboy childhood in South Texas and wearing her brothers' hand-me-downs. Neighbors misread her identity and teachers policed gendered toys. She riffs on mixing He-Man with My Little Pony and the absurdities of hypermasculine imagery.

Feb 27, 2026 • 4min
Brian Regan: A Joke About His OCD
Brian Regan, high-energy observational comic known for clean, physical delivery, riffs on discovering he has OCD. He playfully contrasts true suffering with mild compulsions. He jokes about alphabetizing everything and details a quirky book-shelf system. The set closes with his signature physical beats and a plug for his Netflix special.

Feb 26, 2026 • 2min
Jo Koy: A Joke About Sending His Son Into The World
Jo Koy, Filipino-American stand-up comedian known for sharp family and fatherhood humor. He riffs on his mother's brutal roasting and worries about sending his 20-year-old son into the world. He imagines people judging whose kid he is and jokes about money not buying maturity. The conversation highlights his Live From Brooklyn material in lively, personal bits.

Feb 25, 2026 • 3min
Jeff Foxworthy: A Joke About Viagra
Jeff Foxworthy, comedian known for his blue-collar humor and 'You might be a redneck' lines, riffs on aging and changing attitudes toward sex. He contrasts modern Viagra culture with the past, jokes about nursing homes and medication, and lands rapid-fire punchlines about attention span and nostalgia. Light, cheeky, and classic Foxworthy storytelling.

Feb 24, 2026 • 4min
Michelle Wolf: A Joke About Deciding To Have A Baby
Michelle Wolf, stand-up comedian and writer known for sharp, satirical comedy, riffs on deciding to have a baby and the messy questions that follow. She categorizes different kinds of women and admits she 'rolled the dice.' She jokes about starting generational trauma, pregnancy doubts, and the surprising reality that parenting is a full-time job.

Feb 23, 2026 • 11min
Mo Amer: A Joke About Touring The South
Mo Amer, stand-up comic and actor known for sharp takes on Arab-American life, tells stories from touring the South. He recounts first impressions, a wild cajun-club booking, bringing a comic for “protection,” a tense police mix-up, and the absurd reasons staff called cops. Quick, funny scenes about culture clashes and mistaken identity.


