Sense of humour - a codger's view
Watching a few of those old sit coms on cable the other day I was struck by how unfunny I now regarded shows that I thought were hilarious when they were new. The canned laughter seemed to be in the wrong places, and soon became so grating that I soon had to concede that I should no longer seek entertainment in that form.
Reflecting on this in bed, I wondered whether it is my sense of humour that has changed, or is it America’s, or am I imagining this and nothing has changed? So, giving up on sleep, I turned on the TV and on came the Letterman Show. The crowd goes wild as he enters the theatre and the whistles and screams continue as he attempts to get out his opening one-liners. I pay close attention to his words and it is all I can do to find some mild irony or satire, certainly insufficient to raise a smile in me. But the signs are clearly urging the audience to applaud because Dave is getting an ovation that would do credit to an opera star. I turn off the TV and sink into a depressing reflection that I have grown into an old fart who no longer shares the mainstream sense of humour.
I think sense of humour is a personal thing and no doubt it varies with mood, age, and life’s experience. I think also it is well established that it varies markedly from country to country, even in the English-speaking world. The old paradigm was that British humour was subtle, dry, and strongly influenced by class and status, whereas Americans find most funny things that are obvious: farce, and even slap-stick.
I think we are now conditioned to reward anyone who tries to amuse us with wild applause, cheering, and whistling. To do otherwise is rude and ungrateful, even if it is honest. Sadly, I think we de-valuing real humour to the extent that we are forgetting what it is. After all, who can define “funny”. I can’t, but (like most art) I know it when I hear, or see, it.
Like many others, I howled with delight at the Monty Python productions. Here was something new. Features like The Life of Brian" and “the Holy Grail” allowed you fill in much of the background from your own knowledge of history and religion. The shockingly, sacrilegious, and profane antics that would otherwise have been deeply offensive became nothing more than good humoured satire. The willingness to touch a raw nerve with “Always look on the bright side of life” was deeply shocking for Christians but hardly sacrilegious in intent. Michael Palin’s every sperm is sacred is the most cutting criticism of the Catholic Church’s teaching on contraception imaginable. And yet it is done in such an innocent good humoured manner that few could take offence, not even the most conservative Archbishops. Could they ever really make the case that the sentiments expressed are not true?
But such brilliance is rare, and the mediocre crap that is now thrown at us in bulk in the name of comedy by the film and television industry deserves to be rejected until it gets better. Writing Comedy, like tragedy, is an ancient professional craft that can cope with technology and the new media, provided that the market for it is not eroded by willing acceptance of substituted mediocrity.
Is this an elitist view? Is the unsophisticated humour of ordinary folks just as valid as the intelligent undergraduate Monty Pythonesque form? My point is that humour is personal, transient, and fragile. We should relax and enjoy without analysing it: but don’t praise it if you think it is bad. Ignore the implied applause signs.
So what tickles your funny bone?
Has it changed over the years?
Is making humour a declining skill?
What is you favourite ethnic humour? (e.g German: “my dog has no nose”)
Should we withhold appreciation of unfunny attempts?
Tell us your favourite joke, and why you find it so funny.
Similarly tagged OmniNerd content:
- TWINKIE Project, by VnutZ over 2 years ago
- Jon Stewart as Glenn Beck, by EyeOfSage over 2 years ago
- George Washington's Overdue Books, by VnutZ about 3 years ago
- Man Pays $21K Tax in Coins, by VnutZ over 4 years ago
This article was edited after publication by the author on 26 Apr 2012.
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Dorkish Humor by GreatWhiteDork
I tend to go for the absurd humor. Especially if it’s dry. I spend most of my day attempting to be smart and knowledgeable in a fairly high stakes environment, so I go the opposite way for a break.
My sense of humor has most certainly changed over the years. About ten years ago, I thought the “Meet the Parents” movies were HILARIOUS! I saw them last month, and they just made me uncomfortable and slightly sad.
Humor, like anything that requires work and dedication, is a very much declining skill. How many comics now-days rely on poop jokes and swearing?
Ethinc Humor: I really like Carlos Mencia. He lampoons all races equally viciouslly.
We should not give just anyone praise. That “Everyone gets a trophy” mentality is killing us as a country. About 2002, I happend past a new employees cube while a manager was giving critical feedback. The employee, a product of our “Everyone is Special” school system, was blubbering. I don’t mean weeping. I mean loud “Boo-hoo” blubbering like a broken hearted school girl. Failure should be met with honesty. Period.
Don’t really have a favorite joke.
Humor by ldsudduth
I do believe your sense of humor changes with age, although I still laugh at Monty Python, and classic humor like The Stooges (original, not the new revamp), Little Rascals, Ma and Pa Kettle, etc.. BUT..I, like you, don’t see shows like ‘Threes Company’ as funny. Indeed, I don’t even think the modern ‘sitcoms’ are funny, I don’t watch any of them—including the nerd sitcom, whatever that is called.
As to the comment about our ‘Everyone is a Success’ schools..I agree with the poster—-failure is a learning tool. If you don’t ‘fail’ at something, you never learn there is a ‘wrong way’ to perform a task.
There are always winners and always losers in every situation.