British Comedy Guide

A couple of odd online jobs I did.

Thinking about critique, I thought I'd use or perhaps abuse it.
Too see if these slightly peculiar jobs were funny.
I mean I got good feedback, but all too often I do wonder. Was I funny or was the client just a bit radio rentals.

Honesty welcome.

The first was for a chap who wanted to do his first standup routine. But rather than ask me to write or edit anything. He sent me 30 of his favourite jokes and asked why I thought they were funny.

So here's the first 10, the jokes by other comics are in regular. My explanations in itallic, well they were so the second jokes are all by me. I also got bored so I added a similar version for each, feedback welcome.

1."You know that strange sound you used to hear when you were going to sleep? That was me CHEWING the bed, out of sheer boredom! Oooh, how I hate you, I hate you so much it gives me energy! I have to get up early in the morning to hate you because there isn't time enough in the day."

Comedic over exaggeration. Where the idea is too an idea and blow it up beyond all reason. This joke works because it's an irrational amount of extra exaggeration;
e.g. not

"I hate you all the time" but "I wake up early because hating you all the time that I am awake isn't enough"
Another example might be
"My dad was so mean he'd cut all of his quarters into eights."

2.I used to do drugs. I still do, but I used to, too.

Twisted expectation, we expect this to be an explanation of why they stopped using drugs instead it becomes a confession of using drugs and by using the word "to" through out even when it changes meaning it keeps you thinking in the same direction.

"If a vet picks up your cat don't say "put him down" or he'll kill it and charge you $100"

3.When someone hands you a flyer, it's like they're saying, "Here, you throw this away".

This is a negative, where the punchline is to be as misanthropic as possible, it's very much like the over exaggeration but the emphasis is more on the tellers misanthropy than the exaggeration for example

"I like to sneak into orphanages on Christmas Eve and leave all the kids notes saying "better luck next year"

4.Every time I go and shave, I assume there's someone else on the planet shaving, , so I say, "I'm gonna go shave, too".

This is a surreal joke, the idea is to say something weird and irrational, but still linked to the original idea. So it makes sense with twisted, tortured, logic for example,

"Roses are red violets are blue, but you'd have to explain this to a dog as they're colour blind."

5.I bought a 7 dollar pen because I always lose pens and I was sick of not caring.

Illogical logic, sort of like a surreal joke. The idea is the punchline isn't surreal, it makes complete sense. But in a over exaggeratedly sensible way, in this case I lose pens all the time so if I buy an expensive one atleast I'll
care about it. Another example

"You can take a horse to water but you can't make it drink, or teach it particle physics, there's a lot of things you can't do to a horse."

6.Boy, those French. They have a different word for everything!

Deliberate ignorance, making a remark that apparently you think makes you look smart but actually shows up your ignorance. In sitcom this is known as unreliable narration, which basically means you don't know what you're talking about. The trick is it should sound like you know what you're talking about, then the penny drops that you don't for example.

"I went on a diet where I'm only allowed one plate per meal, now I need to find a restaurant that allows me to bring my own 6 foot plate."

7.Being single at 41 after ten years of marriage and two kids is difficult. That's like having a bunch of money in the currency of a country that doesn't exist anymore.

This is a sort of surreal joke, where the idea is that the joke teller sets up an idea and then follows through with it to its logical end. So love is like a currency in a country that doesn't exist anymore, another example would be

"I told my mother I was the cream of my team at work, she replied, they must be skimming the milk there."

8.I have a lot of beliefs and I live by none of 'em. That's just the way I am. They're just my beliefs. I just like believing them. I like that part. They're my little "believies." They make me feel good about who I am. But if they get in the way of a thing I want, or I want to jack off or something, I f**kin' do that.

Illogical logic, in this case more rational than the earlier sample just more pointless. This one can be seen as emphasizing the joke tellers misanthropy (many jokes are misanthropic).

"I take 5 bucks in change with me whenever I go out, so I know I'm choosing not to give to the homeless."

9.Divorce is always good news. I know that sounds weird, but it's true because no good marriage has ever ended in divorce ... That would be sad. If two people were married and they were really happy and they just had a great thing and then they got divorced, that would be really sad. But that has happened zero times.

Again this is illogical logic, taking a sensible argument to its ultimate end. I really don't like this joke though, it's just kind of sour.

"If you're going to get a divorce, just walk out without an explanation. It'll save your kids thousands in therapy working out why they hate you"

10. When you say 'Bedtime, bedtime, bedtime!' that's not what the child hears. What the child hears is 'Lie down in the dark... for hours... and don't move... I'm locking the door now.'

Alternative perspective, this takes a normal situation and suddenly changes the perspective to change how you view the situation.
Another example is

"If I'm really bad my mother says "wait till your father comes home" he died a year ago"

Quote: sootyj @ 1st December 2013, 7:38 PM GMT

I used to do drugs. I still do, but I used to, too.

That's a very good line.

That wasn't one of mine.

Quote: sootyj @ 1st December 2013, 7:45 PM GMT

That wasn't one of mine.

Yeah, I know, but I just thought I'd say it, anyway, because I thought it was clever.

BTW, your italics haven't come out, but I think I see what bits were yours, Sooty.

Best I could do, so do mine work.

The jokes and the definitions.

Quote: sootyj @ 1st December 2013, 7:38 PM GMT

"Roses are red violets are blue, but you'd have to explain this to a dog as they're colour blind."

Here you go, to balance it out I like this one too, and that is one of yours, (err, have I got that right?).

I have a sort of twist on that: "Roses are red, violets are blue. Not all roses are red. Life is f**king difficult"

Quote: sootyj @ 1st December 2013, 7:38 PM GMT

9.Divorce is always good news. I know that sounds weird, but it's true because no good marriage has ever ended in divorce ... That would be sad. If two people were married and they were really happy and they just had a great thing and then they got divorced, that would be really sad. But that has happened zero times.

Again this is illogical logic, taking a sensible argument to its ultimate end. I really don't like this joke though, it's just kind of sour.

Really? I liked that one. I'd say that's actually sort of exaggerated observational comedy - "people say divorces are bad, but they're not" etc.

Anyway, why the hell did someone pay you to explain why their jokes are funny?! Elance gets more bizarre by the day.

Yeh like yours, it was a strange job.

Quote: gappy @ 1st December 2013, 7:52 PM GMT

I have a sort of twist on that: "Roses are red, violets are blue. Not all roses are red. Life is f**king difficult"

Laughing out loud

Quote: sglen @ 1st December 2013, 7:52 PM GMT

Really? I liked that one. I'd say that's actually sort of exaggerated observational comedy - "people say divorces are bad, but they're not" etc.

Anyway, why the hell did someone pay you to explain why their jokes are funny?! Elance gets more bizarre by the day.

I think he wanted to do a bucket list standup show and write his own stuff commendable.
But didn't feel confident on how jokes work, so he wanted some advice.

Quote: sootyj @ 1st December 2013, 7:51 PM GMT

Best I could do, so do mine work.

The jokes and the definitions.

The definitions are very good, but I would disagree with 7: I don't think it's really surreal, it's just a very well-turned analogy. There's nothing precisely funny aboutr this, but in a comedy environment you would laugh because it hit the nail on the head so originally ("What oft was thought but ne'er so well expressed", as Pope put it). Probably if you read it in a novel, you wouldn't laugh, but you;d still like it.

Or, at least, I would. Can't speak for all of you.

The orphanage joke, and the one about choosing not to give to the homeless were good.

The analysis of the jokes seemed pretty sound to me.

Very interesting feedback, also its feedback on my feedback.

Quote: sootyj @ 1st December 2013, 7:55 PM GMT

I think he wanted to do a bucket list standup show and write his own stuff commendable.
But didn't feel confident on how jokes work, so he wanted some advice.

Oh, I see. I thought these were jokes he'd written at first, and he just wanted someone to explain to him why they were funny.

Anyway, I think you did a pretty good job on the definitions for most of them, but disagree a little on #3 being misanthropy. I would say it's observation again, because it is a joke centring on normal behaviour that's bizarre when viewed in a different light - i.e. the fact we take flyers then throw them in the first bin we find.

Of your jokes, I liked:
"If a vet picks up your cat don't say "put him down" or he'll kill it and charge you $100"

and

"You can take a horse to water but you can't make it drink, or teach it particle physics, there's a lot of things you can't do to a horse."

I wasn't sure about this:
"If you're going to get a divorce, just walk out without an explanation. It'll save your kids thousands in therapy working out why they hate you"

There's a joke there, but if you walk out without explanation then they don't know why they hate you....right?....because if you give them an explanation they will know. So it needs reworded.

Same goes for the dinner plate one. You lost me on the diet where you're only allowed one plate of food, as most of us only eat one plate of food :) You've got something there but you change it to 'only five spoonfuls of food' or something. "No one said how big the spoon could be"

Ah I think the divorce one is an overly hidden idea.

The idea is your kids will hate you anyway, but if you're a total bastard who abandons them. Then they won't need to worry why they hate you, it's because you abandoned them.

I suppose a cruder version would be.

At least Fritzel's kids won't need to worry about why they hate him.

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