[1] One sketch which aired on Prime Time in 1990 satirized Canadian radio comedy's predilection for political humor, featuring an audience laughing uproariously at a reference to Meech Lake in the punchline to a deliberately unfunny "anti-joke".
[4] One of their most famous pieces was "Jellybellies Forever", a mockumentary about the rise and fall of a children's music group[5] who had been inspired by the legendary supergroup Sharon, Lois, Bram and Young.
[7] Another sketch with rare political overtones was "Looking for a Job in Quebec", in which a nervous anglophone insisted that his surname, O'Leary, was pronounced "Thibodeau".
[9] After Prime Time's cancellation, their sketches continued to appear on the CBC Radio programs Basic Black and Night Lines,[10] and on follow-up seasons of their summer series.
[12] In 1994, they collaborated with former Prime Time host Geoff Pevere on X-Ray Vision, a television comedy pilot which aired as a special on CTV but was not picked up as a permanent series.