Promotional interviews are supposed to follow a rhythm. A question, an answer, a pivot to the next topic. Kevin Hart and Chelsea Handler had other ideas. What was intended as a sit-down tied to the new Netflix competition series Funny AF With Kevin Hart turned almost immediately into a relentless exchange of jokes, impressions and well-aimed personal jabs that left very little room for anything resembling a formal conversation.
The two comedians have been friends for years, and that familiarity came through from the first moment. Handler set the tone within seconds of the interview beginning, and he matched her energy without hesitation, turning what could have been a standard entertainment media moment into something that felt more like an unscripted bit between two people who have been doing this long enough not to care about the format.
The jokes and where they landed
Handler did not ease into the session. She opened with a crack about his posture and followed it almost immediately with a comment about something she claimed to spot in his beard, a remark that landed somewhere between affectionate and genuinely cutting. Kevin Hart, for his part, rolled with it entirely, leaning into the self-deprecation rather than deflecting.
One of the more extended bits in the interview centered on the pandemic. Handler recalled being on the receiving end of repeated FaceTime calls during the early months of the COVID-19 lockdown, calls that frequently included his wife Eniko. She described the arrangement as an unexpected dynamic she had not anticipated and was not entirely comfortable with, framing it as a situation that left her unsure whether she was being recruited as a therapist, a companion or something else entirely. She eventually stopped answering out of a combination of confusion and self-preservation.
His version of events, to the extent he offered one, did nothing to clear the air. The two seemed to enjoy leaving the story right where it was.
What the interview was actually promoting
Beneath the comedy, the conversation was nominally tied to two things. The first was Funny AF With Kevin Hart, a Netflix competition series that brings together aspiring comedians competing for recognition in the space. The second was a significantly bigger moment on the calendar.
On May 10, Kevin Hart will be the subject of a live Netflix roast at The Kia Forum in Los Angeles, presented under the banner Netflix Is A Joke Presents: The Roast of Kevin Hart. He spoke about the upcoming event with a competitive edge that suggested he is approaching it less as an occasion to absorb jokes gracefully and more as a challenge he intends to win on his own terms. He made clear that he views the roast not just as an opportunity for others to take shots at him but as a stage on which he plans to demonstrate exactly why he is not someone to underestimate in a comedy setting.
What the dynamic between them reveals
The interview works as entertainment precisely because neither of them is performing for the other. The jokes land because the friendship behind them is visible. There is no warmup, no diplomatic softening, no moment where either person appears to be managing the other’s feelings.
That kind of comfort is rare in a promotional setting, where most interviews involve at least some degree of image maintenance. These two abandoned that entirely and the result was more watchable than almost anything a structured sit-down could have produced. For Kevin Hart, who has a roast coming and a series to promote, it was probably the best advertisement he could have asked for.

