My wife regularly quotes a pair of local radio comedy sketches, but it occurs to us that we don't know who performed them (or even that we didn't just imagine the whole thing). They were contemporary (well, in the 1990s?) but clearly inspired by the classics like Rap Replinger. Both, perhaps unsurprisingly, were borderline risque.
One was a passionate near monologue by a woman telling a man about how much she'd like to cook him breakfast, filled with as much throaty innuendo as possible. "Ooh, I like cook you sausage!"
The other was a lost-in-translation interaction between a man and a woman, based on dentistry. The man offended the woman by complimenting her "nice teets."
Was this just a random morning show? Or a well-known routine?
One was a passionate near monologue by a woman telling a man about how much she'd like to cook him breakfast, filled with as much throaty innuendo as possible. "Ooh, I like cook you sausage!"
The other was a lost-in-translation interaction between a man and a woman, based on dentistry. The man offended the woman by complimenting her "nice teets."
Was this just a random morning show? Or a well-known routine?
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