List of programs broadcast by Comedy Central

Current Comedy Central logo.

This is a list of television programs formerly or currently broadcast by Comedy Central in the United States and some other countries.[1]

Current programming

Animation

Title Genre Premiere Seasons Runtime Status
South Park Animated black comedy August 13, 1997 28 seasons, 338 episodes 22 min Renewed for seasons 29–32[2]
Digman! Animated sitcom March 22, 2023 2 seasons, 16 episodes 22 min Pending

Late night

Title Genre Premiere Seasons Runtime Status
The Daily Show Late-night talk show July 22, 1996 4,133 episodes 22–45 min Ongoing

Continuations

Title Genre Prev. networks Premiere Seasons Runtime Status
Beavis and Butt-Head (season 11) Animated sitcom MTV (seasons 1–8)
Paramount+ (seasons 9–10)
September 3, 2025 1 season, 30 episodes 21–22 min Pending

Syndicated programming

Upcoming programming

Animation

Title Genre Premiere Seasons Runtime Status
Golden Axe[6] Animated sitcom TBA 1 season, 10 episodes TBA Series order

Former programming

Original programming

Scripted programming

Animated sitcoms
Live-action sitcoms

Stand-up programming

  • Stand-Up Stand-Up (1991–95)
  • Comics Only (1991–95) (hosted by Paul Provenza)
  • London Underground (1991–96)
  • Two Drink Minimum (1991–96)
  • The Big Room (1991–92)
  • Women Aloud (1992–94)
  • Comic Justice (1993–94)
  • Tompkins Square (1996)
  • Pulp Comics (1996–2000)
  • Premium Blend (1997–2006)
  • Lounge Lizards (1997)
  • Comedy Central Presents (1998–2011)
  • Comic Groove (2002)
  • Comic Remix (2002)
  • The World Stands Up (2004)
  • Shorties Watchin' Shorties (2004)
  • The Comedians of Comedy (2005)
  • Friday Night Stand-Up with Greg Giraldo (2005–06)
  • Live at Gotham (2006–09)
  • John Oliver's New York Stand-Up Show (2010–13)
  • The Benson Interruption (2010)
  • Russell Simmons Presents: Stand-Up at the El Rey (2010)
  • Gabriel Iglesias Presents Stand Up Revolution (2011–14)
  • Russell Simmons Presents: The Ruckus (2011)
  • Mash Up (2012)
  • Comedy Central Stand-Up Presents (2012–19)
  • Adam Devine's House Party (2013–16)
  • Comedy Underground with Dave Attell (2014)
  • The Meltdown with Jonah and Kumail (2014–16)
  • This Is Not Happening (2015–19)
  • Kevin Hart Presents: Hart of the City (2016–19)
  • The Comedy Jam (2017)
  • Hood Adjacent with James Davis (2017)
  • Kevin Hart Presents: The Next Level (2017–18)
  • This Week at the Comedy Cellar (2018–20)
  • The New Negroes with Baron Vaughn and Open Mike Eagle (2019)
  • Bill Burr Presents: The Ringers (2020)

Sketch shows

Competitive/game shows

Late night/talk shows

  • The Sweet Life (1989–90)
  • Afterdrive (1991)
  • Night After Night with Allan Havey (1991–92)
  • Sports Monster (1991)
  • Alan King: Inside the Comedy Mind (1991–95)
  • Offsides with Dom Irrera (1994–97)
  • Politically Incorrect (1994–97)
  • Turn Ben Stein On (1999–2001)
  • Primetime Glick (2001–03)
  • Tough Crowd with Colin Quinn (2003–04)
  • The Graham Norton Effect (U.S. version) (2004)
  • Crossballs (2004)
  • The Colbert Report (2005–14)
  • The Showbiz Show with David Spade (2005–07)
  • Too Late with Adam Carolla (2005)
  • Weekends at the D.L. (2005)
  • Chocolate News (2008)
  • Tosh.0 (2009–20)
  • Sports Show with Norm Macdonald (2011)
  • Onion SportsDome (2011)
  • The Burn with Jeff Ross (2012–13)
  • @midnight with Chris Hardwick (2013–17)
  • The Jeselnik Offensive (2013)
  • The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore (2015–16)
  • Why? with Hannibal Buress (2015)
  • Not Safe with Nikki Glaser (2016)
  • The Gorburger Show (2017)
  • The Opposition with Jordan Klepper (2017–2018)
  • The President Show (2017)
  • Problematic with Moshe Kasher (2017)
  • The Jim Jefferies Show (2017–19)
  • Taskmaster (2018)
  • Good Talk with Anthony Jeselnik (2019)
  • Getting Closure with Sydnee Washington (2019–20)
  • Klepper (2019)
  • Lights Out with David Spade (2019–20)
  • Hell of a Week with Charlamagne tha God (2021–22)[g]
  • Doing the Most with Phoebe Robinson (2021)

Reality/documentary

  • Travel Sick (2001–02)
  • Insomniac with Dave Attell (2001–04)
  • The Sweet Spot (2002)
  • I'm with Busey (2003)
  • Straight Plan for the Gay Man (2004)
  • Con (2005)
  • Reality Bites Back (2008)
  • Brody Stevens: Enjoy It! (2013–14)
  • Nathan for You (2013–17)

Variety

Clip shows

  • The Higgins Boys and Gruber (1991)
  • Access America (1991–92)
  • Short Attention Span Theater (1991–94)
  • Jump Cuts (2004)
  • Atom TV (2008–2010)

Syndicated programming

Events and specials

  • Out There (1993–94)
  • Canned Ham (1996–2002)
  • Heroes of Black Comedy (2002)
  • Heroes of Jewish Comedy (2002)
  • Comedy Central Roast (2003–19)
  • Last Laugh (2004–07) (specials)
  • This Show Will Get You High (2010)
  • The Comedy Awards (2011–12)
  • Best of The Comedy Central Roast (2019)
  • Hall of Flame: Top 100 Comedy Central Roast Moments (2021)
  • South Park The 25th Anniversary Concert (2022)

Films

Comedy Central original movies

  • Porn 'n Chicken (2002)
  • Windy City Heat (2003)
  • Knee High P.I. (2003)
  • A Clüsterfünke Christmas (2021)
  • Hot Mess Holiday (2021)
  • Out of Office (2022)
  • Cursed Friends (2022)
  • Reno 911! It's a Wonderful Heist (2022)
  • Office Race (2023)

Comedy Central films

These are films that were theatrically released and based on Comedy Central properties.

Notes

  1. ^ Seasons 1–6 originally aired on Comedy Central. Season 7 originally premiered on Quibi, and season 8 originally premiered on The Roku Channel.
  2. ^ Seasons 1–4 originally aired on Fox, seasons 5-7 originally aired on Comedy Central as an original series, before being revived by Hulu in 2023
  3. ^ Moved to Quibi for season 7 and The Roku Channel for season 8.
  4. ^ a b Moved to HBO Max for season 2
  5. ^ Moved to Paramount+ for season 5
  6. ^ Moved to Quibi for season 2
  7. ^ Formerly titled Tha God's Honest Truth

References

  1. ^ Boone, Brian (12 January 2012). "The Origin and Early Programs of Comedy Central". Splitsider. Archived from the original on 13 January 2012. Retrieved 29 March 2012.
  2. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (July 23, 2025). "South Park Creators Trey Parker & Matt Stone Ink New 5-Year Overall Deal; Paramount+ Becomes Show's Global Streaming Home". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved August 16, 2025.
  3. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (September 15, 2021). "Seinfeld: Comedy Central To Be Series' Exclusive New Cable Home; Jerry Seinfeld Stars In Promo Touting Lunch". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved September 15, 2021.
  4. ^ "Reno 911 – New Episodes Premiering October 19th on Comedy Central". Comedy Central. September 30, 2022. Retrieved September 30, 2022 – via The Futon Critic.
  5. ^ White, Peter (August 14, 2024). "Family Guy Heads To Comedy Central In Licensing Deal". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved August 14, 2024.
  6. ^ Otterson, Joe (April 17, 2024). "Golden Axe Animated Series From Mike McMahan Set at Comedy Central; Matthew Rhys and Danny Pudi Among Voice Cast". Variety. Retrieved April 17, 2024.
  7. ^ Del Rosario, Alexandra (February 7, 2022). "Brooklyn Nine-Nine Heads To Comedy Central; All-Day Marathon Set". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved February 7, 2022.
  8. ^ a b "Comedy Central Picks up Clerks the Cartoon". The View Askewniverse. Archived from the original on October 21, 2002.
  9. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (September 21, 2020). "Schitt's Creek Heads To Comedy Central Following Emmy Wins". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved September 22, 2020.
  10. ^ "Zach Braff Scrubs into Comedy Central" (Press release). Comedy Central Press. July 11, 2005. Archived from the original on November 26, 2021.