Key And Peele's "Substitute Teacher" is one of their most famous sketches, and here's every name that Mr. Garvey mispronounces. After meeting on sketch series Mad TV, comedians Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele would go on to front their own, self-titled show for Comedy Central. Key And Peele would mix a variety of topics, from pop culture parodies to addressing politics or racism.

While comedy sketch shows can have a spotty hit/miss ratio when it comes to genuinely funny skits, Key And Peele had a much higher than average success rate. Sketches such as "Continental Breakfast," "East/West College Bowl," "Obama Meet And Greet" and many more went viral, and are still raking in views on YouTube to this day. Key And Peele would ultimately last for five seasons and while the pair reunited for 2016 comedy Keanu, they later broke off in different directions. Key has acted as host for various shows and acted in the likes of The Predator, while Peele became a horror auteur, directing movies like Get Out or producing Candyman 2021.

Related: Where To Watch Key & Peele Online And Is It On Netflix, Hulu Or Prime?

In any list of their best sketches, Key And Peele's "Substitute Teacher" either comes out on top or very close to it. The skit's premise is simple, with Keegan-Michael Key playing Mr. Garvey, an intense teacher who has spent years teaching in inner schools called in to substitute for a class of white students. During class roll call, he mispronounces the names of his students and becomes increasingly furious when they correct him as he feels they're just trying to mess with his authority. Here's every mispronounced name from Key And Peele's "Substitute Teacher."

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Aaron - "A-A-Ron"

Jacqueline - "J-Quellin"

Denise - "Dee-Nice"

Jessica - "Jess-See-Cuh"

Blake - "Bill-Lock-Ay"

Principal O'Shaughnessy - "O-Shag-Hennesy"

Key And Peele's "Substitute Teacher" mispronounced names has amassed over 200m views on YouTube since 2012 and led to Mr. Garvey becoming a rare recurring character on the show. In an interview with EW, Key felt part of the sketch's appeal came down to the "...ownership of your being is connected to your name, and if you've ever had your name pronounced incorrectly, it's something that resonates. That's my unscientific, unproven theory as to why it continues to bring joy."

He also revealed that parts of this classic Key And Peele sketch were improvised, and the clipboard Mr. Garvey uses was breakaway so he could find the right moment to snap it in two. Key And Peele's "Substitute Teacher" even briefly inspired talk of a solo Mr. Garvey movie, which (sadly) didn't happen. Like many of Key And Peele's best sketches, it took a simple, genius idea and explored it from every angle.

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