Lee Henman
Thursday 16th April 2009 12:29am [Edited]
5,183 posts
Quote: Timbo @ April 15 2009, 9:15 PM BST
Laughter is a very primitive response, and is not purely a reaction to how funny something is. It is primarily associated with social situations; your friends are not comic geniuses, but you laugh far more in their company than you would watching the most brilliant comedy on the telly. A laughter track replicates that social bonding experience and stimulates your own laugh response.
It also helps to lift the performers to have live audience, and if they have the necessary craft they can make use of that energy in their timing.
Absolutely, 100% correct.
Hearing other people laughing makes us laugh too. Think of the laughing clown at Blackpool Pleasure Beach. He's there to warm you up and make you smile. The same with the warm up artist at recorded shows. He's there to get the audience in a laughing mood. It's why you can't help smiling at that old song "The Laughing Policeman". It's why people love Ricky Gervais's laugh so much. It truly is infectious. Laughter begets laughter in exactly the same way anger begets anger in a crowd, quickly creating violence. Humans have a herding mentality and like to go with the flow.
The argument that audience laughter is there to tell us when to laugh is wrong. It's there to enhance the experience, not dictate it.