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Showing posts with label The Humor Code. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Humor Code. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 28, 2020

The Taxonomic Method

 Copyright 2020 by Gary L. Pullman

 


 

In The Humor Code: A Global Search for What Makes Things Funny, authors Peter McGraw and Joel Warner share a method of generating humor based upon Greg Dean's taxonomy of comedy.

 

The method consists of a “target assumption,” a “connector,” a “reinterpretation,” and a “punchline.” The connector is a key word that allows a play on words by which the punchline is effected. The authors provide this example:


My wife is an excellent housekeeper.


The target assumption is that the word housekeeper, which is the connector, refers to a woman who keeps house.


To effect humor, however, the meaning of “keeps house” is reinterpreted, and the new meaning is presented in the punchline that follows:


When we got a divorce, the bitch got the house.


This method, involving plays on words, can be used to generate jokes about almost any topic, including a risque one. Here are a few original examples:

 

 



 


My wife doesn't much care for televised beauty pageants.


She claims they turn our TV into a boob tube.




My hot new girlfriend has put the joy back into my life.


She makes me feel ecstatic!




My wife thinks Marilyn is a class act.


I don't know why she's mad at me: I agreed that Marilyn most certainly is a class ass.




The taxonomic method of creating jokes works, but it tends to be a bit sophomoric, for which reason it's probably not effective more than once or twice in a routine, whether one's gig is on the stage or the page.