Culture February 11, 2020

'The Conners' takes on New Hampshire primary in 1st live show

WATCH: How 'The Conners' live sitcom incorporated real-time election results

"Let's get political" was the overarching theme of "The Conners" live show that aired Tuesday night on ABC.

The episode, which was performed live twice for different time zones, aired at the same time as the New Hampshire primaries.

MORE: 'Nervous!': Cast of 'The Conners' sounds off about tonight's live show

This allowed the show to incorporate live updates of the primary and also insert some not-so-subtle jabs at the current Democratic candidates during the half-hour-long sitcom.

The storyline followed Darlene's children, Mark (Ames McNamara) and Harris (Emma Kenney), who are watching news reports on the primary. Mark has been assigned a school report on it, while Harris plays the cynical observer who considers the influence of money in politics a blockade to change.

Eric Mccandless/ABC
In the live episode of "The Conners," titled "Live from Lanford," Mark is watching the results of the primary for a school report with Harris who is apathetic to the electoral process and believes money's influence in politics means real change is impossible.

As results were pouring in, McNamara calmly broke the news that entrepreneur Andrew Yang had pulled out of the race while joking that previews for "The Bachelor" were blocking the bottom half of the screen.

MORE: Sara Gilbert: 'The Conners' works because it's relatable

Other family members circulate through the room and spout off their opinions, such as proclaiming that the results would be "a lot more fair" if all the candidates got into "a rap battle at the local club."

The episode also focuses on the relationship between John Goodman's Dan Conner and Louise (guest star Katey Sagal).

Eric Mccandless/ABC
In the live episode of "The Conners," titled "Live from Lanford," Mark is watching the results of the primary for a school report with Harris who is apathetic to the electoral process and believes money's influence in politics means real change is impossible.

In addition to the political updates, "The Conners" aired a live commercial during the broadcast, which took a moment to encourage people to go out and vote.

"You can't make people feel stupid about their choice unless you vote," Darlene quipped.