Funny
Jokes
Humor is subjective, and we know it when we try to pull off a crass
joke at a formal dinner party or we tell a highbrow quip at a baseball
game. We know it when we flop. We know it when we
land a funny, kill, hit the funny bone, too, but how is it that we were
funny? How did our funny jokes go over so well?
We don’t have to take the substance out of funny jokes to
consider what makes funny jokes funny, really. We just have
to have the thick skin and miserable childhoods and caustic, bantering
mentality that compose a comic sense of humor…and give a few
nods to the elements of a good joke.
The Element of Surprise
When the unexpected—the absolutely bizarre or
unpredicted—suddenly appears, the shock elicits
[inappropriate] laughter.
You have likely seen (in an old movie, in a melodramatic TV show) a
woman slap a man for kissing her. Consider the show, Third
Rock from the Sun. Dick Solomon (played by the genius of
quasi-slapstick, John Lithgow) is an alien commander sent by The Big
Head to study earth humans. Everything is new or daunting or
perplexing to him. In the first episode, he is at a gathering
with Mary (played by the brilliantly witty Jane Curtain).
They end up in the restroom together and he inappropriately kisses
her. She slaps him. He looks wounded.
Then he slaps her back. He thinks it is part of the earthling
ritual. Hysterical, that unexpected out of the norm behavior.
Exaggeration
Slippery slopes make for the funniest of simple jokes. On
Tool Time, for example, Tim Allen is fretting about his oldest son Brad
(and again, I paraphrase). He says to his wife that if Brad
doesn’t go to college, he’ll never get a degree,
and if he doesn’t get a degree, he’ll have to move
back in, and if he moves back in, Tim and his wife will have to
baby-sit the whole new family of Brad, Brad’s wife, their
kids, etc., when they are in walkers….
The Truth
Funny jokes are based in truth—somebody’s
truth. This is unfortunately how racist jokes have survived,
too, as they are based in a common understanding of what is a truth
(which is in fact an ignorant mythological, collective
truth). But since we can get away with humor about an
ethnicity if we are of that ethnicity (and known for our
people’s sense of humor, ahem), let’s pull off a
mild one here:
What’s a Jewish dilemma?
Free ham.
Self- and Other-Effacing Funny Jokes
Telling the truth about oneself is safe. And the more
ridiculous the better. David Sedaris is superb at pointing
out his own inanities and idiosyncrasies: he writes of having
the booze-drinking, cigarette-smoking, aproned housewife mother who has
a coffee clatch neighbor over for a visit one morning, and how he, with
OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder), is still compelled to carry out
his necessary rituals, no matter how bizarre, no matter that an
outsider will witness them. So he walks to the doorway of the
kitchen where his mother and their neighbor are chatting, and he steps
to the wall near the door, to the light switch. He begins his
imperative licking of the light switch. The neighbor is
stunned and staring. The mother just rolls her eyes and says
something casual, like, “David, stop licking the light switch
and come say hello to Suzie Q.” [note: paraphrased
from memory]
The Funny Jokes without the Fanfare
Some of the funniest stuff is that which is not prefaced by any warning
that it will be funny. The funniest people to me are those
who are deadpan—as if they are SERIOUS—and we are
the nervous gigglers who can’t quite wrap our brains around
whether they are for real or not.
Cary Grant pulled this off in the best of ways, tossing off flip
remarks every other line or so of dialogue.
Jake Johansen (sic) tells a wide-eyed, innocent tale that is so funny
you pee a little.
No laugh, giggle, grin, or even smirk that indicates it is a joke.
Then again, there are hysterical jokesters who are so funny they
can’t contain their usually straight-faced selves, and they
laugh, too. This is funny, also. Louie Anderson,
Jerry Seinfeld, and Ellen Degeneres come to mind. You can
catch them breaking, and that makes their humor all the funnier.
And Timing Matters
This is the trickiest part of telling funny jokes, waiting for the
beat, knowing the pause. But if you know your audience, know
your joke (are comfortable with it) and don’t TRY too hard,
it’ll come for you. Or it won’t, and
they’ll kick you out of their homes, and you’ll be
so ashamed you’ll move to a secluded hick town where no one
laughs, an you’ll sink deeper and deeper into forgetting and
depression and drinking Jack Daniels, about which, Robin Williams says,
if alcohol is a crutch, then Jack Daniels is a wheelchair!
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