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1-50 of 54
- This tells the story of what happens in Joe's basement.
- Joe Winston's award-winning account of America's largest countercultural event.
- A satire of "structural cinema" art film in which the host of a new TV series does nothing but sit in front of the camera and drink beer.
- 1989–1993Not RatedTV EpisodeHost Joe Winston and co-writer Paul Pomerleau wander the streets of Chicago with the camera, asking strangers to tell them a joke.
- Four people address the camera and deliver improvised, personal monologues.
- A leisurely walk from his house to the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, interrupted by various passers-by.
- Chef Mark Audrain bakes Joe a birthday cake, aided by several very messy assistants.
- The crew of "Joe's Basement" retell each others' versions of a classic tale, until it becomes unrecognizable.
- Two situation comedy sketches, "Horror in the Bathroom" and "Love in the Void."
- Joe eats from a can of dog food, to celebrate receiving his first ever piece of mail from a viewer of the program.
- Joe and the crew answer phone calls and take requests from viewers from pay phones at an undisclosed location.
- Joe offers a recipe for making a proper episode of This Week in Joe's Basement, including "skewed perspective" and "maniacal laughter."
- Joe expands his "recipe" for an episode of "This Week in Joe's Basement" to include a "mad craving for cigarettes" and "A small, burrowing insectivore."
- Host Joe Winston and his crew take phone calls from viewers, and perform skits they request, including "Paul's Butt."
- Host Joe Winston presents a narrative short film about a student at an elite university and his troubled relationship with his professors and fellow students.
- Host Joe Winston and his crew hit the streets of Chicago to search for more women to appear on "This Week in Joe's Basement."
- 1989–1993Not RatedTV EpisodeTwo TV sets come alive for a romantic encounter in "Video Dating," and a strange Eye Creature recites philosophy and drools.
- A letter from a mysterious fan, who calls himself King Zeke, introduces a series of intense personal monologues by Juan Luco, Therese Sherman and John Harriman.
- In "Remote Control," two students suspect a conspiracy on campus to transform students into mindless robots. One by one, their friends disappear, until a mute, video game-obsessed roommate reveals the true nature of the plot against them.
- The "Joe's Basement" crew visits two suburban shopping malls, to ask teens why they hang out there. Conversations ensue about life, love, shopping and war.
- Mark Audrain wins a bar bet from Joe and gets to host the show for a week. Eventually, the crew rebels and Joe gets control of the show back.
- Mark Audrain explores how well he knows himself, as Kate searches for her Knight In Shining Armor. Answers come from a science lecture on brain anatomy, in which a dissected human brain bursts into song and dance.
- The crew of Joe's Basement visits a shooting range, while a panel of experts tries to determine the identity King Zeke, the mysterious author of increasingly bizarre fan mail..
- Regular contributors Katalina Groh, Kate Olsen and Michelle Heuer - straight women - compare notes with gay men about romance and relationships.
- Michelle Heuer and John Harriman deliver monologues about their own misspent youths and troubled past.