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  1. Bryan Callen: Complicated Apes. 2019. 1 hr 15 mins. Comedy. NR. Watchlist. Bryan Callen goes against our tendencies to turn each other into nouns like black, white, immigrant, Muslim, gay ...

  2. Bryan Callen records his third special in Chicago’s historic Thalia Hall and reconsiders our debate on all things equality. He rails against our tendencies to turn each other into nouns like black, white, immigrant, Muslim, gay, straight, man, woman, and instead suggests that the best way to navigate our current culture war is to think of our fellow humans not as a fixed label, but as verbs.

  3. Bryan Callen: Complicated Apes is 16003 on the JustWatch Daily Streaming Charts today. The movie has moved up the charts by 12637 places since yesterday. In the United States, it is currently more popular than Bad Blood but less popular than Finding Dory.

  4. Bryan Callen records his third special in Chicago’s historic Thalia Hall and reconsiders our debate on all things equality. He rails against our tendencies to turn each other into nouns like black, white, immigrant, Muslim, gay, straight, man, woman, and instead suggests that the best way to navigate our current culture war is to think of our fellow humans not as a fixed label, but as verbs.

  5. Bryan Callen: Complicated Apes is OUT NOW on Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV, Dish, DirecTV, Spectrum, Google Play and more! The album is available on SiriusXM,...

  6. Bryan Callen: Complicated Apes. Bryan Callen records his third special in Chicago’s historic Thalia Hall and reconsiders our debate on all things equality. He rails against our tendencies to turn each other into nouns like black, white, immigrant, Muslim, gay, straight, man, woman, and instead suggests that the best way to navigate our ...

  7. Bryan Callen records his third special in Chicago’s historic Thalia Hall and reconsiders our debate on all things equality. He rails against our tendencies to turn each other into nouns like black, white, immigrant, Muslim, gay, straight, man, woman, and instead suggests that the best way to navigate our current culture war is to think of our fellow humans not as a fixed label, but as verbs.