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Comedy in Russia is booming. But stand-ups live in fear of being jailed for jokes.

February 22, 2026
Comedy in Russia is booming. But stand-ups live in fear of being jailed for jokes.

Watched more than 1.3 million times since it was posted by Russian comedy group "Plyushki" to YouTube last month, the video comes with a disclaimer.

NBC Universal Daniel Zender for NBC News

"Some of the jokes are based on wordplay and do not carry any religious, philosophical, or ideological assertion," it says, acknowledging that comedy can be arisky business in Russia, where some have been jailed for jokes, particularly if they are thought to be critical of thewar in Ukraine.

"Maybe there's problems in the country," one of the comedians said, a nod to the fact that addressing the country's issues head-on could be dangerous. "There's a lot of cameras here," another replied, to laughter from the crowd, because the words for camera and jail cell are the same in Russian.

While there have been no repercussions for the group, others including Artemy Ostanin are not so lucky. The 29-year-old was sentenced to five years and nine months in prison by a Moscow court earlier this month after he was found guilty of inciting hatred for a joke about being tripped up by a disabled person. A second joke about Jesus Christ led to a conviction for offending religious believers.

They were brought to the attention of authorities in March by pro-government activists from a group called Zov Naroda, or Call of the People, which accused him of mocking a fighter who lost his legs in the war in Ukraine — a claim he denied, insisting the joke had been misinterpreted.

Aware that he could be in trouble, Ostanin fled toBelarus, only to be arrested and deported back to Russia. He told the Moscow courtroom that he was severely beaten in a forest and his hair was cut off by Belarusian security services, an independent Russian media outlet, Sota Vision, reported in its trial coverage.

Eva Merkacheva, a member of Russia's Human Rights Council, also posted a picture on Telegram of Ostanin with heavy bruising and blood on his back.

Belarus' interior ministry issued a statement on Telegram denying he'd been beaten.

Fellow stand-up Nikolai said his friend was "a convenient target" and the severe sentence was meant to scare other comedians into toeing the line. "It's easier to harshly punish one person so the others live with the knowledge that it's best not to take risks," he told NBC News in an interview earlier this month.

NBC News agreed not to use the last names of the people interviewed inside Russia, over fears for their security.

A relatively new thing in Russia, stand-up comedy took off in the last decade after it was aired on TV, turning relative unknowns into huge stars.

Even today, "it's hard to find a bar in Moscow that doesn't host a stand-up gig at least once a week," Nikolai said.

But "the state isn't well-versed in humor," according to Yevgeny Smirnov, a lawyer with the rights group First Division, which specializes in defending people accused of political crimes and espionage. He added that authorities take "everything seriously and literally," and Russia has introduced more laws that punish people for speech.

Among the more draconian was legislation introduced shortly afterPresident Vladimir Putinlaunched what the Kremlin refers to as its "special military operation" in Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022. Those found guilty of "discrediting" the Russian army could face up to 15 years in prison.

Previously, few topics were off-limits, including issues like the #MeToo movement, according to Anastasia, a 35-year-old artist from Moscow who regularly attended comedy gigs before the crackdown. She added that people took pride in how free and vicious Russian humor could be.

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That changed dramatically after the war started almost four years ago, she said, adding that in the current climate, comedians "play it safe." Before delivering their jokes, she said, some comedians will tell their audiences that they don't want to offend them, while others will tell the crowd that they have a joke "but I won't say it."

As a result, she said, she was going to fewer gigs because a lot of the material became repetitive.

"Every time, we stoop to a whole new low. And there's no end to it. We live in some kind of frightening mirror world," said Anastasia, adding that although she wasn't a fan of jokes about disabled people, she was frustrated by Ostanin's prison sentence.

After 2022, Nikolai said, he removed material about the army because he had been heckled and told to stop joking aboutthe war, and he'd heard others had been beaten up for doing so.

Some comedians who wanted to joke about those things have left Russia, among them Denis Chuzhoy, who performs in English using the name "Dan the Stranger," a literal translation of his name in Russian.

Once popular in his homeland, he said his fortunes changed after he spoke out against the war. During a show in the northwestern city of Vologda, he recalled, two men stood up and handed him a funeral wreath with a ribbon that read "to Russia's traitor," one of the reasons he decided to relocate to Spain.

Today, comedians in Russia are "retelling wife jokes," Chuzhoy, who now performs in both Europe and the U.S., said in an interview earlier this month. While he mostly jokes about death and depression, some of his posts on social media reference Putin and the Russian state.

The bravest comedian he'd seen recently on a video filmed in Russia did a routine "about the right way to eat pizza," he said. As the comic held a pizza with two slices missing from the bottom, it eventually became clear that it "looks like a peace sign," he said.

On the first day of the Ukraine invasion, he added, it was made clear to comedians performing on TV that joking about this was off-limits. "We're making a comedy show, not a revolution," they were told by show producers in group chats.

Those who defied the ban were threatened with "dismissal or criminal charges," he said.

Even those who don't appear to have criticized the war are not immune, like Nurlan Saburov, a popular comedian from Kazakhstan who earlier this month was banned from Russia for 50 years for "criticism of the special military operation, as well as violations of immigration and tax legislation," according to the state-run TASS news agency.

In a statement on Instagram, Saburov said he did not want to comment on the situation and his lawyers were handling the matter.

Nonetheless, Nikolai said some political stand-up did still exist in Russia at a grassroots level. Comedians perform in front of loyal audiences of around 20 people "whom they basically know personally," he said. "No one will even consider doing it on TV. No one's suicidal," he added.

Comparing stand-up in Russia to an electric fence, he said it was "easy to get through, but God forbid you brush the side — you're dead."

Back in Moscow, a soldier who lost his leg in the war in Ukraine stood on the stage of a show broadcast on Russian social media channel VK.

"I'm the only comedian who's actually fought for every audience member," he said, to cheers from the crowd.

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Train's Pat Monahan Says Late Mom 'Delivered' Him 'All the Lyrics and Melodies' for 'Drops of Jupiter' While He Was Asleep

February 22, 2026
Train's Pat Monahan Says Late Mom 'Delivered' Him 'All the Lyrics and Melodies' for 'Drops of Jupiter' While He Was Asleep

Larry Marano/Shutterstock

People Pat Monahan of Train. Larry Marano/Shutterstock 

NEED TO KNOW

  • Train's song "Drops of Jupiter" came out in January 2001, and is still beloved 25 years later

  • Monahan's mother died in 1998, but he says she "delivered" him all the "lyrics and melodies" while he was asleep

  • "I felt like my mom wrote that song with me," he told PEOPLE in 2025

Pat Monahan, the lead singer of Train, got inspiration for "Drops of Jupiter" from someone very special: his late mother.

The Grammy-winning musician recently joined Lynn Hoffman on theMusic Saved Mepodcast to talk about his decades-long career and how the hit 2001 song came to be. He explained that, after the band first gained traction with their 1998 hit "Meet Virginia" from their self-titled debut album, they were looking to piggyback off its success.

"We recorded an album calledSomething Moreand delivered it to Columbia Records. And they didn't think we had a first single," the 56-year-old explained. "I was emotionally not in the mood because I lost my mother just recently. And now I don't have a single for this record company."

Monahan's mother, Patricia Ann Monahan, died in December 1998 from lung cancer while the band was on tour.

Pat Monahan Jeremy Chan/Getty 

Jeremy Chan/Getty

"One night, I went to sleep and probably was asleep for 10 minutes and woke up with all the lyrics and melodies in my head, as though my mother had delivered me the message, 'This is what it's like when you go to the other side. You can swim through the planets and come back with drops of Jupiter in your hair, and don't worry about me,'" he recalled.

"Drops of Jupiter" was officially released as the lead single off the album of the same name on Jan. 29, 2001.

However, he noted that there was one particular part of the song that he didn't get from his mom.

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"So then with the [lyric] 'looking for yourself out there,' that was the emotional part of it for me, that was like... it somehow had to translate into a love story, and so that was, that was the little bit of something I gave to the song that maybe my mother didn't deliver," Monahan added.

Pat Monahan Scott Legato/Getty

Scott Legato/Getty

Monahan admitted he was surprised the track did so well, saying that "there was no reason for that song to become a hit."

"It's the same thing as any other song that was big for us. Like, even 'Meet Virginia' was a quirky little song, and then a song with a ukulele," he said of his popular songs, referring to "Hey, Soul Sister."

"'Drops of Jupiter' was like four minutes and 20 seconds or something at a time when there were, you know, two-and-a-half-minute songs on the radio," Monahan added. "So it was pretty interesting that it happened."

When talking toPEOPLEin 2025, Monahan said he "felt like my mom wrote that song with me."

"We were kind of talking back and forth about [it]," he said.

Read the original article onPeople

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Bill Maher responds to Trump's rant about their White House dinner: 'Bulls---'

February 22, 2026
Bill Maher responds to Trump's rant about their White House dinner: 'Bulls---'

Taylor Hill/WireImage;Stefanie Keenan/VF25/WireImage

Entertainment Weekly Bill Maher at the 2025 Vanity Fair Oscar Party in Beverly Hills; Donald Trump at the premiere of 'Melania' in Washington, D.C.. in January 2026 Taylor Hill/WireImage;Stefanie Keenan/VF25/WireImage

Key points

  • Bill Maher addressed a number of claims Donald Trump made about a dinner that they shared in April: "Bulls---."

  • Maher confirmed that he didn't understand a joke that Trump recently made about Canada and China: "I think we're gonna have to workshop that one."

  • The comedian also said that in the next episode of Real Time, he would definitively prove that he does not have Trump Derangement Syndrome.

Bill Maheris responding toDonald Trump's rant about adinner they sharedin April.

On Friday's episode ofReal Time, the comedian shared his reaction to the president'sscathing Truth Social tirade, which he posted on Feb. 14.

"I woke up Saturday morning to a blistering social media text from him," Maher said. "It went on and on — on Valentine's Day, by the way. He was very mad at me because I didn't get his joke about how China is gonna make Canada give up hockey."

Indeed, Trump's post included a dig about Mahertaking his comments about Canada seriouslyin an episode ofReal Timelast week.

"I jokingly stated in a TRUTH that, 'The first thing China will do is terminate ALL Ice Hockey being played in Canada, and permanently eliminate The Stanley Cup,'" Trump wrote. "Well, he went on and on about the Hockey statement, like 'What kind of a person would say such a foolish thing as this,' as though I were being serious when I said it. Fortunately, his Television Ratings are so low that nobody will learn about his various Fake News statements about me."

Bill Maher at the CAA pre-Oscar party in Los Angeles on Feb. 28, 2025 Vivien Killilea/Getty for Creative Artists Agency, LLC

Vivien Killilea/Getty for Creative Artists Agency, LLC

"I think we're gonna have to workshop that one for a while," Maher cracked of the joke.

Trump's post claimed that Maher came to the White House for dinner "extremely nervous" with "ZERO confidence in himself," and claimed that "to soothe his nerves, immediately, within seconds, asked for a 'Vodka Tonic.'"

Maher said that Trump's telling of their meeting was inaccurate.

"Okay, it was a margarita. It was not a vodka," Maher said. "And it wasn't immediately. I had a drink before dinner, as people do. He said I was nervous, scared, no confidence — bulls---."

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Trump also said that he thought Maher's first show after the dinner was "very respectful about our meeting," but he subsequently "noticed his show started to devolve into the same old story — Very boring, ANTI TRUMP."

Maher responded with befuddlement that the president assumed their dinner would prevent further criticism onReal Time.

"I never stopped criticizing him," Maher said. "I never said I would! I know how women feel now: A guy buys you dinner and expects you to put out. I'm not that guy."

The comedian also said that whenReal Timereturns on March 6 after a one-week hiatus, he would respond to Trump's post in further detail — and definitively disprove one of Trump's repeated assertions about him.

"We're gonna come back. I'm gonna address this at the end," Maher said. "His whole long screed, and prove that I don't have Trump Derangement Syndrome."

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

At the end of the segment, Maher complained that the White House dinner ultimately led to being attacked from all sides.

"It's so funny, because I got so much s--- from the left for reporting honestly that in person, he was very different, very nice, very gracious," he said. "And then he says, 'No, he was scared!' I'm like the Democrats with an election — I just can't win."

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

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US sailor medically evacuated from nuclear submarine near Greenland: Official

February 22, 2026
US sailor medically evacuated from nuclear submarine near Greenland: Official

A U.S. Navy sailor was medically evacuated Saturday afternoon from an American nuclear-powered submarine by Danish military forces, according to a U.S. and Danish official.

ABC News

The submarine broke from its mission and surfaced about eight miles from Nuuk, Greenland, an extraordinary step for a vessel designed to remain hidden beneath the sea in secrecy.

The sailor was airlifted by a Danish Defense Seahawk helicopter, deployed from the Vædderen, a Danish military patrol ship.

It's unclear what the nature of the medical emergency was, but it was not combat-related, according to the U.S. official.

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The sailor is being treated at a hospital in Nuuk, Greenland's capital.

Evgeniy Maloletka/AP - PHOTO: Greenland Daily Life

Trump considering initial limited strike against Iran, source says

The incident unfolded against the backdrop of the Navy's typically strict secrecy surrounding the movements and missions of its submarine fleet. Even acknowledging a sub's general location is highly unusual, underscoring the gravity of a situation that required assistance.

The waters surrounding Greenland have been among the most strategically consequential terrain for military planners.

It includes passageways and choke points between Russia, Europe, and North America, particularly as ice continues to melt and the area becomes easier to navigate. China is also aiming to expand its footprint in the Arctic.

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Would a War Against Iran Be Legal? An Expert Explains

February 22, 2026
Would a War Against Iran Be Legal? An Expert Explains

FILE - In this photo provided by the U.S. Navy, the USS Gerald R. Ford embarked on the first of its sea trials to test various state-of-the-art systems on its own power for the first time, April 8, 2017, from Newport News, Va. The world's largest aircraft carrier entered the Mediterranean Sea on Saturday, according to maritime tracking data. Credit - Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Ridge Leoni/U.S. Navy via Associated Press

Time

After building up amassive military forcein the Middle East over the last few weeks, President Donald Trump said Friday that he was considering strikes against Iran to pressure its leaders into accepting a deal on its nuclear program.

Trump has ratcheted up threats of action against the country's leadership in recent months alongside a steady buildup of military forces. Two aircraft carriers are currently deployed, and one more—the USS Gerald Ford—is expected to arrive imminently.When questioned by reporters on Friday whether he was weighing limited strikes against the country's leadership in order to get it to accept a deal over its nuclear program, Trump replied: "I guess I can say I am considering that."

Read More:Leavitt Says Iran Would Be 'Wise to Make a Deal' as Trump Escalates Military Buildup in RegionOn Thursday, Trump gave Tehran a deadline of 10 to 15 days to finalize a deal to solve the nuclear dispute or face "really bad things."

The United States joined an Israeli-led military operation against Iran in June last year that struckthree of the country'snuclear sites. After that operation, Trump claimed Iran's nuclear enrichment facilities had been "completely and totally obliterated."

Trump raised the prospect of further military action against Iran following a brutal crackdown on protests therethat killed thousands.

That prospect has drawn harsh criticism from inside and outside of the President's own party.

Rep. Thomas Massie, a Republican, and Rep. Ro Khanna said they would table a War Powers resolution to prohibit the president from ordering military action in Iran without congressional approval.

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"Congress must vote on war according to our Constitution. Rep. Ro Khanna and I will be forcing that vote to happen in the House as soon as possible,"Massiewrote on X on Feb. 18. "I will vote to put America first which means voting against more war in the Middle East."David Janovsky is the Acting Director of The Constitution Project at theProject on Government Oversight, and researches and develops policy reforms on separation of powers issues. He answered TIME's questions about the legality of potential strikes on Iran.

If Trump orders strikes on Iran tomorrow, however limited in scope, could that be legally justified?

DJ: The short answer is no. There's no indication that there's any sort of circumstance that would give the President the unilateral authority to order military action. It's true that presidents have some inherent authority to deploy the military as Commander in Chief, but that's really limited to true emergency circumstances where there is an attack underway that needs to be repelled, or maybe an extremely clear imminent attack. But there's no suggestion that that's the case today—that would make the strikes illegal.

What steps would the White House need to take for this military action to be legally above board?

DJ: Most simply, the administration would need to go to Congress. This is a contemplated attack against a sovereign state, and that, in simplest terms, is an act of war. And the Constitution gives the exclusive power to declare war to Congress, not the president. So this is something that would need a vote and congressional approval.

How would this operation be different from the strikes on Iran's nuclear sites in June 2025, legally speaking?

DJ: My position is that those strikes in 2025 were not legally justifiable and also that strikes now would likewise not be justifiable. In 2025, the administration put out a very brief explanation that relied on both the President's inherent authority and a notion of collective self-defense with Israel. But again, self-defense is properly understood to involve a threat that is much more immediate than anything that's at play now.

What would be the legal and political implications if Congress passed a formal War Powers resolution restricting the President's ability to strike Iran?

DJ: It's important to keep in mind that if Congress didnothing, that would be a sign that Congress didn't approve an act of war, and so it would be illegal.

So, congressional action isn't necessary, legally speaking, to prevent a strike against Iran. But, if Congress were to take the preemptive step of saying, "You cannot do this," I think it would do two things. First, it would change the legal calculus, because the executive branch, for decades— this is not a new phenomenon—has resorted to creative lawyering to come up with excuses for using the military abroad. A clear statement from Congress should at least make those executive branch lawyers a lot less willing to push the envelope. It could also change the calculus for the military lawyers who would need to reviewany actual strike order.

And, politically, I think it would send a powerful message. We have seen, especially recently, that the administration is sensitive to losing support, particularly from its allies in Congress, and a clear congressional statement that there is not the buy-in for military action in this case would also be a limiting factor.

Why has the reaction from Congress to this military buildup been so muted?

DJ: I think there are probably both long-term structural reasons and sort of short-term political reasons, hand in hand with the executive branch's decades-long effort to push the envelope of what it can do has been Congress's acquiescence in the face of those expansions. In some ways, this is part of a constitutionally very dangerous but long-running trend.

Back in 2025, there was an effort after the strikes to pass a war powers resolution. But the most charitable explanation for why Congress didn't act then was that there was a suggestion that the strikes were over and done. It was a one-off, and there was no need for Congress to prevent anything else. The fact that we're back here suggests that was not the correct assessment, and certainly underscores the need for Congress to act urgently now.

Contact usatletters@time.com.

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DHS pausing TSA PreCheck, Global Entry programs amid funding lapse

February 22, 2026
DHS pausing TSA PreCheck, Global Entry programs amid funding lapse

The Department of Homeland Security is suspending frequent flier and quick-processing programs for travelers at airports and U.S. border crossings starting Sunday, a DHS official confirmed.

NBC Universal Image: FAA Targets 40 "High-Volume" US Airports For Flight Cuts Amid Government Shutdown (Joe Raedle / Getty Images)

The programs include the Transportation Security Administration's TSA PreCheck, which allows vetted passengers to forgo customary security check-in lines for quicker passage, as well as U.S. Customs and Border Protection's Global Entry, which offers similarly rapid check-ins for Americans at U.S. ports of entry.

The suspension, first reported byThe Washington Post,will start at 6 a.m. ET Sunday, DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement.

Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem blamed congressional Democrats and said the lack of funding endangers Americans and puts personnel in a financial bind.

"Shutdowns have serious real world consequences, not just for the men and women of DHS and their families who go without a paycheck, but it endangers our national security," Noem said in a statement. "The American people depend on this department every day, and we are making tough but necessary workforce and resource decisions to mitigate the damage inflicted by these politicians."

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The DHS funding shutdown started Feb. 14 as the White House and Senate Democrats negotiate changes to DHS and its Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency aftertwo people were killed by federal law enforcementpersonnel in Minneapolis amid a federal crackdown on undocumented immigrants.

Personnel at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Transportation Security Administration and the Coast Guard aren't being paid, though most will continue coming to work because their jobs are considered critical.

ICE and Customs and Border Protection personnel are continuing their paid work under $75 billion in funding approved last year under President Donald Trump's tax cut and spending law.

Noem said CBP and the TSA will prioritize "the general traveling population," while FEMA will halt non-disaster responses amid the funding lapse.

"This is particularly important given this weekend anothersignificant winter stormis forecast to impact the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast United States," she said in her statement Saturday.

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'American Dad!' is back on Fox this Sunday. Here's how to watch.

February 22, 2026
'American Dad!' is back on Fox this Sunday. Here's how to watch.

Stan Smith and his wacky family are back, with Season 20 of "American Dad!" premiering on Fox this weekend.

USA TODAY

The show follows CIA agent Stan Smith and his family, who live in Langley Falls, Virginia, as they navigate familial issues and growing up. And in the case of the alien who lives in their attic, taking on new personas while snarking on those around them.

Created by Seth MacFarlane, who voices the family's patriarch and Roger the alien, the show has gained popularity partly for its musical numbers performed by the Smith family's pubescent son and Roger.

The show originally debuted on Fox in 2005 and remained part of the network until 2014, when it moved to TBS. Inspring 2025, Fox announced the show would return to the network for at least four seasons.

Francine and Stan Smith during a March 1, 2026 episode of "American Dad!" During the episode, Stan struggles to appreciate Francine's interest in flume rides.

Other animated sitcoms:'South Park' escalates war with Donald Trump in brutal new episode

The show is part of Fox's"Animation domination"block, where the network airs hours of adult, animated sitcoms such as "The Simpsons," "Universal Basic Guys," "Family Guy" and "Bob's Burgers" on Sundays.

Here's how to watch this upcoming season and what's to come.

<p style=Looking for something good to watch? Amid the deluge of television in 2025, here are the very best, starting with number 20: "Star Trek: Strange New Worlds" (Paramount+)

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  • "The Gold" (PBS)

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  • "High Potential" (ABC)

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  • "IT: Welcome to Derry" (HBO)

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  • "The White Lotus" (HBO)

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  • "Sirens" (Netflix)

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  • "Severance" (Apple TV)

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  • "Matlock" (CBS)

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  • "Apple Cider Vinegar" (Netflix)

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  • "Overcompensating" (Prime Video)

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  • "Task" (HBO)

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  • "North of North" (Netflix)

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  • "Taskmaster" (YouTube)

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  • "Boots" (Netflix)

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  • "Death by Lightning" (Netflix)

  • " style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <ol start=
  • "The American Revolution" (PBS)

  • " style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <ol start=
  • "Adolescence" (Netflix)

  • " style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <ol start=
  • "Andor" (Disney+)

  • " style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <ol><li><p style="The Pitt" (HBO Max)

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    The 20 best TV shows of 2025

    Looking for something good to watch? Amid the deluge of television in 2025, here are the very best, starting with number 20: "Star Trek: Strange New Worlds" (Paramount+)

    Where to watch this season of 'American Dad'

    The season premieres at 9 p.m. ET/PT on Sunday, Feb. 22, according to Fox. Episodes will air Sundays and can be streamed viaHulu the following day.

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    During the upcoming season, the family throws a pool party and finds what appears to be a rat in the pool, Fox revealed online. During another episode, Francine and Stan feud after Stan fails to show interest in flume rides, which Francine loves.

    "American Dad" Executive Producer and Showrunner Matt Weitzman said in a statement to USA TODAY on Feb. 18 that the creative team is grateful they can keep producing the show.

    "To work on something you love, with so many outstanding creative voices for so long is a joy," he said. "It could have been canceled more than a few times, but this silly beast just refuses to die. Um, did I jinx it?"

    Hayley, Jeff, Francine, Stan, and Steve look on in horror as they spot what looks like a rat in the family pool. On the pool party's guestlist are Francine's sister and Steve's ex. The episode premieres on Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026 on FOX.

    Once fans saw promo for the show in December, they took to social media to share their excitement.

    "Just aired on Fox during the new Simpsons tonight,"wrote a Redditoron Dec. 7, sharing a clip of Stan twerking to New Orleans bounce music while Roger looked on, impressed.

    A camera man stood behind Stan, capturing each ebb and flow of the CIA agent's"thunder butt"(as the ladies at work call him).

    "The show's been off (FOX) for over a decade, and this is the first footage we get," the Redditor wrote. "We've never been more back."

    Saleen Martin is a reporter on USA TODAY's NOW team. She is from Norfolk, Virginia – the 757. Email her at sdmartin@usatoday.com.

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:'American Dad!' season 20 premieres this weekend. Where to watch.

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