'Key & Peele' imagines what would happen if we treated teachers like athletes

ByMeredith Carroll for Babble WLS logo
Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Keegan-Michael Key, left, and Jordan Peele speak on stage at the 66th Primetime Emmy Awards at the Nokia Theatre L.A. Live on Monday, Aug. 25, 2014.
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This story first appeared on Babble and is reprinted with permission.

You could argue that it's pretty much been the summer of Amy Schumer, the Emmy-nominated actress whose Comedy Central series, Inside Amy Schumer, and first feature film, Trainwreck, have been raking in ratings (and cash). Her hilariously dry delivery pokes no-holds-barred fun at herself while simultaneously making strong statements about pop culture, relationships, sexism and feminism, all of which clearly resounds with a wide audience.

However, she's not the only Comedy Central star who's blurring the lines between raunchy humor and serious news; Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele star in a show that's also bringing a fresh perspective to satire. On their Comedy Central program, Key & Peele, they've "anger-translated" the president, spoofed Nazis, and played old-timers talking about Drake. Recently, though, they managed to nail exactly what's wrong with everyone, everywhere.

In a sketch called TeachingCenter, Key and Peele perfectly poke fun at ESPN's SportsCenter -- by replacing any mention of athletes with teachers. They stage a teacher draft at Radio City Music Hall, analyze school trades, and enact a play-by-play of a classroom instructor who adeptly "brings an introvert into a discussion."

"That's a Teacher of the Year move right there," they said.

Of course, SportsCenter TeachingCenter wouldn't be complete without discussion of who's making the big bucks. In this case, it's a calculus teacher who goes first round in the draft. The fictional Mike Yost is lauded as a "mathlete" who made something of himself despite humble beginnings. Then there's another teacher celebrated for making $80 million over six years.

It's all ridiculous because teachers are never put on pedestals -- or paid -- like athletes. Except you watch it and think, "But they should be."

If humor that makes you think is the new black, break out the dark crayons.

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