But they pause their banter for a moment to reflect on the severity of the divisions that have seized the country.
"How many more times do we have to offer condolences?" asked presenter Winyu Wongsurawat, referring to the growing death toll from violent protests aimed at chasing Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra from office.
"When will you stop... hating one another and beating up one another... that is not funny," said the other half of the duo, Nattapong Tiendee, who sports a white suit and hair gelled into a shark-like fin.
The two comics -- Winyu more suave and sarcastic; Nattapong a self-styled shaman character and chaotic on-screen presence -- then resume the playful tone which has helped propel Shallow News In Depth, known as "Jow Kow Tuen" in Thai, to success.
Broadcast only on the Internet, the show owes its mounting popularity to the political crisis which began some four months ago, and has helped push ratings to more than 200,000 views for each of its monthly episodes.
Its creators say the programme is politically independent, a rare attribute made possible because it is broadcast only online.
Winyu, whose parents are academics, even highlighted its independence by conducting an interview while topless in order to deride the polarisation of Thai politics -- roughly cast between pro-government "red shirts" and the establishment-leaning "yellows".
"Jow Kow Tuen is a great show," said political commentator Verapat Pariyawong, who holds no grudge against the quickfire duo for mocking his rapid speaking style.
"We had seen political satire shows before but those focused on making jokes without much attention to substance. Jow Kow Tuen takes it to another level," he told AFP, praising its efforts for keeping "people politically sane".
The show's humour may feel a little safe to those from countries with strong traditions of satire, but it packs a punch in Thailand, which has many political television programmes but none as sharp as Jow Kow Tuen.
Coverage of the current political crisis is dominated by highly partisan channels, privately owned by supporters of the two opposing sides, while some experts say free speech is chilled by the nation's strict royal defamation law.
"It is very, very different," said Winyu, 28, described by the English-language daily The Bangkok Post as "like [The Daily Show's] Jon Stewart on crack".