
A man with a swollen leg is given a massive pill by his doctor. Impatient, he forces it down at the fountain. When the doctor returns with a bucket of warm water, he tells him to soak the leg—after the pill dissolves.
Ninety-year-old George tells his doctor God helps him see the bathroom light at night. Later, his wife laughs—he’s been peeing in the fridge again.
Two kids cry in a waiting room—one fears a finger prick, the other a urine test.
Grandpa Morris fakes being lost in the park; an old man drives ducks downtown—they end up wearing sunglasses on a beach trip.
A Texan cowboy drinks three beers in honor of his brothers, then quits drinking due to church, making everyone laugh.
An elderly couple confesses decades of harmless pranks while planning bucket lists.
Little Johnny fails math because the teacher keeps changing sums.
A husband trades bodies with his wife for a day—learning the chaos of homemaking, only to find he’s pregnant.
Riddles, clever tricks, and absurd situations—from a magic desk to lost handbags—keep the laughter rolling.
Life, it seems, is funnier when you look at it sideways.