Where to Stream Netflix Is a Joke Fest 2026 and Watch the Biggest Comedy Specials

Published 05/11/2026, 9:37 AM CDT

Credits: ANDREW LEVY/Netflix

The laughter marathon officially wrapped on May 10, but the aftershocks of Netflix Is a Joke Fest 2026 are still ricocheting through comedy fandom like a perfectly timed callback at The Comedy Store. The festival turned Los Angeles into a live wire of stand up mythology between May 4 and May 10.  For comedy fans, this has become part of the ritual. Festivals like this operate almost like modern bootleg folklore.

A set goes nuclear in the room, clips leak online, Reddit threads dissect every punchline, and suddenly audiences everywhere start hunting for the streaming release. In the age of Netflix comedy dominance, missing a live taping no longer means missing the cultural moment forever.

Where to stream Netflix Is a Joke Fest 2026 Specials

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The biggest answer is also the most obvious one. Many headline performances from the festival are being recorded for future release directly on Netflix, often arriving shortly after the live events conclude. Subscribers will not need separate pay per view purchases or premium event fees for most specials, which has quietly become one of the platform’s smartest strategies for turning live comedy into binge worthy streaming content. 

This year’s festival featured more than 350 live events across over 25 venues in Los Angeles, with well over 100 comedians and performers appearing throughout the week. Katt Williams, Flight of the Conchords, Nikki Glaser, Ali Wong, Bill Burr, John Mulaney, and Dave Chappelle were among the major names attached to viral sets and sold out shows during the festival run. Meanwhile, SiriusXM’s Netflix Is A Joke Radio on Channel 93 carried live festival coverage throughout the week, giving fans another way to experience backstage banter and crowd reactions in real time.

Netflix Is a Joke Festival 2026: Dates, Time, Venue, and How Can You Watch It Live?

Netflix Is a Joke Fest 2026 was built like a buffet of comedy subgenres, from arena sized insult comedy to intimate observational sets, giving audiences the rare chance to curate their own version of the festival long after Los Angeles has gone quiet. And so it gives viewers many options for streaming. 

The most viral shows from Netflix Is a Joke Fest 2026

Several performances already escaped festival status and entered full blown comedy internet lore. Dave Chappelle’s multi-night run became immediate conversation fuel because of surprise guests, improvised crowd work, and the unpredictability that follows him wherever he performs. Meanwhile, The Roast of Kevin Hart, hosted by Shane Gillis at the Kia Forum, generated massive online traction for roasting Chelsea Handler before it even aired thanks to the sheer collision of personalities involved. 

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Then there were the festival deep cuts that comedy obsessives adore. Seth Rogen’s Seth Goes Greek blended music and stand up into something resembling an old school variety spectacular filtered through modern streaming culture. The Flight of the Conchords reunion felt like a transmission from an earlier alt comedy era when awkward musical absurdity ruled midnight television. Even the Pee wee’s Playhouse anniversary celebration carried the strange emotional electricity of comedy history folding into itself. 

In the end, Netflix Is a Joke Fest 2026 proved that stand up comedy still thrives as both live performance and streaming event television. The microphones may be off in Los Angeles for now, but the specials are only beginning their second life online. 

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Which set are you most excited to stream once the festival releases hit Netflix? Share your take in the comments.

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Sarah Ansari

554 articles

Sarah Ansari is an entertainment writer at Netflix Junkie, transitioning from four years in marketing and automotive journalism to storytelling-driven pop culture coverage. With a background in English Literature and experience writing across NFL, NASCAR, and NBA verticals, she brings a research-led, narrative-focused lens to film and television. Passionate about exploring how stories are crafted and why they resonate, Sarah unwinds through sketching, swimming, motorsports—and yearly winter Harry Potter marathons.

Edited By: Hriddhi Maitra

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