Just for fun mit Marco Rima
Feb 29 2020
•Comedy
The Saturday evening show is based on Marco Rima's current stage program, "Just for Fun." It is embellished with humorous film clips that serve as an introduction to the next stage act and tell their own story. In the approximately 120-minute TV show, the audience is presented with a fictional day in the life of Marco Rima, which is completely exaggerated and humorously exaggerated. These insights into Rima's everyday life are complemented by numbers from the best-of stage program "Just for Fun" and correspond to the daily fictional events in the comedian's life. The show begins with the clip "Fudi vo geschter." This is a Rima classic and, for most of his fans, the highlight of his stage shows. This climax leads to the finale, where Marco suddenly searches for a punchline on stage—a nightmare for any stage performer.
Cast
See all
Marco Rima
Er selber
Recommendations
See all
iPeach
Peach Weber returns to the stage with his 15th solo show, “iPeach,” armed only with a stool, guitar and mic stand in classic stand-up style. After decades of mixing jokes, poems and songs, he surprises fans by swapping his usual shorts and ham sandwiches for bold new socks and salami sandwiches - proof that he’s still reinventing himself after nearly forty years in comedy.

Adam and Eve
It's all about an anonymous little gray book originating from sexually advanced Paris. The book doesn't look like much, but shouldn't be judged by its cover. Wherever this book goes, something will happen. And for sure, this book goes around.

American Jedi
Three candidates for knighthood must face a reckoning with the darkest issues from their past in order to be accepted into a real-life Jedi community. More than fandom, more than religion; for each Jedi initiate, it’s a personal crusade for the betterment of their world.

The Girl Spy Before Vicksburg
The opening scene of our story shows a Union powder wagon making its way down the road convoyed by a company of mounted Union soldiers. The route of this wagon is reported to Confederate headquarters by one of its spies. Nan, a girl frequently employed by the department of the Confederate army, is called to headquarters and instructed to secure the destruction of the enemy's ammunition train just reported. Nan is fitted out with a Union uniform, mounted on a fast horse and sent on her journey, previously provided with a forged order supposedly signed by a Union general which authorizes her to pass through the lines.