Ludwig van Beethoven

E1

Given a hearing aid, Beethoven hears some of his most famous compositions for the first time.

Ernest Hemingway

E2

Dan attempts to bond with Hemingway over their common interests in drinking and writing, but is intimidated by his masculinity.

Thomas Edison

E3

Unsatisfied with the quality of his phonograph recording, Edison insists on recording a new version in a modern studio.

Mary Wollstonecraft

E4

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.

William Shakespeare

E5

Shakespeare is unimpressed by Community, preferring the bawdy comedy film Dirty Grandpa.

Idi Amin

E6

Amin's arrival fulfills Dan's desire for ethnic diversity, until he takes the office hostage.

Betsy Ross

E7

Betsy's racism discomforts Dan until they broach the subject of Bernie Sanders.

Amelia Earhart

E8

Amelia is disappointed with her legacy of getting lost, and sets out to prove that she is indeed still alive.

Sigmund Freud

E9

Freud arrives just in time, as Spencer refuses to use catchphrases written for him by Dan.

Edgar Allan Poe

E10

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.

Buddha

E11

The Buddha participates in a series of product placements, making Dan feel guilty.

John Wilkes Booth

E12

Booth emphasizes his skills as an actor rather than his notoriety as the assassin of Abraham Lincoln.

Ada Lovelace

E13

After they bond over their shared love of coding, Ada convinces Spencer to convert his body to code and join her in virtual reality.

John F. Kennedy

E14

Kennedy is accidentally transported along with a spider, creating an additional half-Kennedy-half-spider being which cocoons the crew.

Harry S. Truman

E15

Dan takes Truman to a gay bar to teach him about gay rights and desperately pander to LGBT critics.