Key and peele are gay

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Skittles.” Crying.

“Is RuPaul gonna be there?”

Finally, he just had to quit them because he was so unable with their questions. So they wanted to make sure they knew all they could about how those go and they ask a coworker to come school them on the logistics.

Cous cous. The panic and horror Peele's character experiences from being labeled as a gay person - as if that's inherently a bad thing - is also parodied.

"Gay Wedding Advice”

The Key And Peelegay marriage sketch from season 4 sees Key's Gary, a gay man, asked by his co-worker (Peele) to give his family advice on the upcoming same-sex wedding of their cousin.

To a man. When Key's politician starts talking about the homosexual community, the camera cuts to Peele's character, who becomes increasingly uncomfortable.

"Town Hall Meeting" is both a testament to Peele's comedic talents - he doesn't utter a single word but his facial expressions tell a whole story - and a skewering of how the media portrays sexual identity.

HYMNS.

key and peele are gay

Gary eventually calls it quits after weathering all the stereotypical questions he can withstand, some of which real families would probably be asking before a same-sex ceremony.

Next: Key & Peele's "I Said..." Was Their First Viral Sketch

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Every time the word "gay" is uttered, the camera cuts back to Peele as he increasingly attempts to hide from this assumption, and he even tries to throw attention to a flamboyantly dressed man who is revealed to be straight.

In addition to various acting gigs, Keegan-Michael Key has also become a TV host, having recently appeared in the likes of Playing With Fire and Brain Games. Peele has made a hard right turn into becoming a horror auteur, helming Get Out and Us and he is the producer behind multiple genre movies and TV shows.

Related: Key And Peele's "Pizza Order" Introduced Uber Nerd Wendell

Key & Peele sketches were never afraid to tackle political or racial topics, and here's how three of their skits looked at homophobia from different angles.

“Office Homophobe”

Key & Peele's season 3 sketch "Office Homophobe" really zeroes in on gay stereotypes and follows a dispute between two office co-workers.

He was so prepared to learn.

“Cousin Delroy’s getting married. Gary patiently answers their queries by stressing a gay wedding is exactly the same as any other wedding, but he has to deal with increasingly offensive questions. My homies over at Very Smart Brothas actually met Key and Peele and sat down with them for the “Blackness Challenge.” Hilarity ensued and it’s great because VSB is basically a mirror of K&P, blog-version.

Watch: ‘Key & Peele’ Debunk Gay Wedding Myths in Season 4 Sketch

Keegan Michael Key and Jordan Peele sure know how to build excitement for the fourth season premiere of their hugely popular Comedy Central sketch series “Key & Peele.” After releasing an alien impostor sketch late last week that quickly went viral, the duo is teasing the upcoming season once more with a new clip, “Gay Wedding Advice.”

Featuring special guests Romany Malco, Vy Smith, Lance Reddick and Gary Anthony Williams, the sketch finds Key and Peele hilariously debunking myths about gay weddings, with topics ranging from jazz hands to anal sex, sailors to “It’s Raining Men.”

Watch the clip below, and tune into the fourth season of “Key & Peele” beginning Wednesday, September 24 on Comedy Central.

Read More: Watch: Key and Peele Makes the Alien/Racism Allegory Way Funnier Than ‘District 9’

How Key & Peele Sketches Take On Homophobia

Here's how multiple Key & Peele sketches tackle homophobia in different ways.

Key's flamboyantly gay Latrell irritates Peele's character by playing loud music that's basically orgasmic noises set to a beat, constantly talks in a sexually explicit manner and even shows him a close-up of a rather private area.

"Office Homophobe" presumes that Peele's character really is somewhat homophobic or uncomfortable around gay people - until his boyfriend turns up to take him for lunch.

The duo still collaborates from time to time, like the upcoming Wendell & Wild, but they've mostly gone their own way. These range from questions about when it's appropriate to sing "gay hymns" like "YMCA" or where the "straight" section sits. LMAOOOOOOOO!!!

Courtesy of BuzzFeed

“Do we have to participate in the anal sex or do we have to watch and cheer in a firemen’s hat?”

“When do we sing YMCA?”

“So there’s no gay hymns in the ceremony?” GAY.

Key And Peele skits could range from pop-culture parodies like their Gremlins 2 pitch meeting, awkward but relatable mishaps like "Text Message Confusion" or searingly political ones like their final sketch "Negrotown."

Key & Peele called it quits after five seasons, with the show ending in 2015.

Key and Peele’s Gay Wedding Advice Has Me Howling

Key and Peele are geniuses. They’re truly everything that makes comedy important.

I saw a sketch from them is about a family who is about to experience its first gay wedding. I don die!

“Do we throw something other than rice?” “What would you throw?” “I don’t know.

What ensues is complete utter hilarity, and with some dope actors (like Lance Riddick, Romany Malco, Vernee Watson-Johnson).

Just watch.

I couldn’t stop laughing about one thing before the next line made me cackle like a hyena.