E01 · Ludwig van Beethoven
2/25/2016
Given a hearing aid, Beethoven hears some of his most famous compositions for the first time.
E02 · Ernest Hemingway
3/3/2016
Dan attempts to bond with Hemingway over their common interests in drinking and writing, but is intimidated by his masculinity.
E03 · Thomas Edison
3/11/2016
Unsatisfied with the quality of his phonograph recording, Edison insists on recording a new version in a modern studio.
E04 · Mary Wollstonecraft
3/18/2016
Mary's arrival gives Dan a chance to express his feminism, but he is irritated by Mary's stern demeanor. Meanwhile, it is Spencer's birthday.
E05 · William Shakespeare
3/24/2016
Shakespeare is unimpressed by Community, preferring the bawdy comedy film Dirty Grandpa.
E06 · Idi Amin
3/31/2016
Amin's arrival fulfills Dan's desire for ethnic diversity, until he takes the office hostage.
E07 · Betsy Ross
4/14/2016
Betsy's racism discomforts Dan until they broach the subject of Bernie Sanders.
E08 · Amelia Earhart
4/21/2016
Amelia is disappointed with her legacy of getting lost, and sets out to prove that she is indeed still alive.
E09 · Sigmund Freud
4/28/2016
Freud arrives just in time, as Spencer refuses to use catchphrases written for him by Dan.
E10 · Edgar Allan Poe
5/5/2016
Poe undermines Dan's need to impress a History Channel executive, who falls for Poe. Dan and Spencer attempt to influence their date to secure an additional run of episodes.
E11 · Buddha
6/10/2016
The Buddha participates in a series of product placements, making Dan feel guilty.
E12 · John Wilkes Booth
6/17/2016
Booth emphasizes his skills as an actor rather than his notoriety as the assassin of Abraham Lincoln.
E13 · Ada Lovelace
6/25/2016
After they bond over their shared love of coding, Ada convinces Spencer to convert his body to code and join her in virtual reality.
E14 · John F. Kennedy
7/1/2016
Kennedy is accidentally transported along with a spider, creating an additional half-Kennedy-half-spider being which cocoons the crew.
E15 · Harry S. Truman
7/16/2016
Dan takes Truman to a gay bar to teach him about gay rights and desperately pander to LGBT critics.