The razor-sharp comedy of Key & Peele
As fans of their comic sketches know full well, Key & Peele are a couple of real characters. Their provocative brand of humor has won them an enthusiastic following, which is why our John Blackstone has paid them a visit:
On their Comedy Central TV show, "Key & Peele" transform themselves into hundreds of unpredictable characters, like the college football players with the exceptional names:
Tyroil Smoochie-Wallace, D'Squarious Green, Jr., Jackmerius Tachtheritrix, D'Jasper Probincrux III, Leoz Maxwell Jilliumz, Javaris Jamar Javarison-Lamar, Davoin Shower-Handel, Hingle McCringleberry, L'Carpetron Dookmarriot, Shakiraquan T.G.I.F. Carter, X-Wing @Aliciousness
... or the extremely knowledgeable movie hecklers.
KEY: "Do not go into a crane shot right now! You kiddin' me?"
PEELE: "Yeah, man. Y'all, this movie's got a inconsistent visual language!"
KEY: "Handheld, like he a Dogma filmmaker? That's funny, since Dogma clearly forbids temporal geographical alienation!"
PEELE: "Oh, I loved that shot the first time -- when it was in 'Nosferatu'!"
KEY: "I mean, this [bleep] trying to do some homage to the German Expressionists, or something."
As they head into their fourth season, Key & Peele are getting the attention that fans and critics have felt they've long-deserved. Sketches from their TV show posted online have made them hugely popular on the Internet.
SUBSTITUTE TEACHER: "I said it like four times, so why didn't you say it the first time I said 'A-Aron'?"
AARON: "Because it's pronounced 'Aaron.'"
This year, they were named to Time's "100 Most Influential People" list, and also featured on the cover of the magazine's Ideas Issue . . . and they won a prestigious Peabody Award, which honors programming excellence.
"Trust me, it's an honor, mistake or otherwise," said Key. "We weren't vying for a Peabody. So this has been one of the most pleasant surprises of my life, like since I got that bike when I was eight."
Peele said, "People don't know our names: Who's Keegan? Who's Jordan? Just this past year, there's been a difference. We feel very lucky."
Keegan-Michael Key (married, 43 year old, from Detroit) and Jordan Peele (single, 35 years old, from New York City) first met at a sketch club in Chicago, then worked together on "Mad TV," creating comedy built on surprise.
"We love to use an audience's expectations against them," said Peele.
Who would expect a slave auction as a subject for sketch comedy?
"I think our intention was that people go, 'Oh, I'm not gonna be able to laugh at this because it deals with an atrocity,'" said Peele. "And then we use judo, or try to, to make it a scene that is not exploiting the issue of slavery, but is really examining these characters."
"It's a scene about vanity that happens to be in the framework of slavery," said Key. "And then you go, 'Oh, OK, I see, they actually made me laugh with this!'"
Bidder: "Eight dollars on Lot A."
Auctioneer: "Going once, twice, three times. Sold!"
Peele (Lot B): "How does that happen?"
Key (Lot C): "No, not true!"
Peele: "How does that happen? Look at him!
Key: "OK, that can't be true, because what can this dude do? Look at him. What can he pick? A cotton plant is like this tall. No, offense, brother, I'm just sayin'."
Slave: "Offense taken."
"You don't want to just change the way people think about comedy, though; you want to change the way people think about race," said Blackstone.
"We view comedy as transformative," said Peele. "If you laugh at something, it's because you've had some sort of cathartic moment. We have a perspective that hasn't been explored. So that's an easy place for us to go and say, 'OK, well, how does a mixed person deal with something like this?'"
Mixed, as in biracial. Peele's mother is white, his father was African-American. Key, too, was born to a white mother and black father, then adopted by a white mother and black father. At junior high, other kids did not understand.
"So they say mean, harsh things like, 'Man, you're lyin', man, that ain't your mom. Quit playin', dude, quit playin'. That ain't your mom,'" said Key. "And then here I am, in the class, weeping, going, 'It's my mom!' you know? That discovery comes and you start to go, 'Oh, my gosh, what a drag. I didn't know I had to pick sides.' That's the problem: They just throw the pieces down there, and walk away, and no one ever told you it's a bunch of pieces to two different puzzles.
"And then you meet someone like this [Peele], who wants to facilitate what you want to do."
How lucky that this meeting of minds and backgrounds occurred during the Obama years.
"Significant for you to have a man elected president who has a white mother and a black father?" asked Blackstone.
"Oh, yeah," said Key. "I'm not sure we'd have a show if he hadn't been elected president."
And it's possible that only Key & Peele could have created a presidential aide named Luther -- Mr. Obama's "anger translator."
"If there was just a surrogate, if there was just someone who could express Obama's frustration, or anger, because he can't do it," Key said, "couldn't there be someone to stand at his side to be his emotional valve?"
OBAMA: "First of, concerning the recent developments in the Middle Eastern region, I just want to reiterate our unflinching support for all people and their right to a democratic process."
LUTHER: "Hey, all y'all dictators out there: keep messin' around and see what happens. Just see what happens. Watch!"
OBAMA: "What has my administration accomplished?"
LUTHER: "Did we accomplish killin' America's biggest enemy? Uh, check! Did that! Boom!!!"
Two years ago, boom! Key & Peele met the president they'd been playing for laughs.
He's "super-cool," said Key. "He came in and got straight up, bro hugs, like, right up to us."
"He goes, 'I need Luther. I need him,'" said Peele. "Which was the best thing for us."
For Key, it was "confirmation that what we were doing was resonating with the one person that we never in our wildest dreams thought it would resonate with."
Blackstone watched as Key & Peele shot an Obama sketch for this coming season. Their upcoming agenda includes a remake of the "Police Academy" franchise; writing a screenplay with Judd Apatow; and for their TV show, producing more sketches filled with unexpected comedy.
"If we can get away doing comedy that has nothing to do with race, that's almost the most progressive statement we could make," said Peele.
"We're going to play Italian mobsters," said Key. "We're going to play 17th century French fops, two English anthropologists talking about their travels up and down the Amazon. Not to sound antagonistic, but deal with it!"
For more info:
- "Key & Peele" (Comedy Central)
- Follow Key & Peele on Twitter (@keyandpeele) and Facebook
- "Key & Peele" playlist at YouTube