Latest Thing To Blame On The Internet: The Death Of Jokes

from the you-just-aren't-funny-any-more dept

People love to blame the internet for “the death” of things (newspapers, music, social lives, grammar, etc., etc.). Those claims are rarely (if ever) accurate — but at least you can sort of understand where they’re coming from. However, this latest study makes almost no sense at all, claiming that the internet is killing the ability to tell jokes. According to the short blurb about the study, 40% of people would rather forward an internet gag such as a video or a rambling joke email than tell a joke themselves. Of course, given the joke-telling ability of many people, this might not be a bad thing. Furthermore, it seems like, if anything, this has simply expanded the market for humorous content, rather than shrunk it. Perhaps, instead, we should be more worried about the decreasing ability for people to understand jokes than the desire to tell them.

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Comments on “Latest Thing To Blame On The Internet: The Death Of Jokes”

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16 Comments
GeekDad256 says:

Death of Jokes? err... not quite.

Humor, jokes and actual face-to-face or voice communication will never go out of style. I believe you’ve hit the nail on the head with your assessment that it’s the ability to UNDERSTAND jokes that is in jeopardy. (Personally, my theory, based on long observation, is that the amount of intelligence in the world is a constant; only the total population is increasing.)

Clair Ching (user link) says:

I agree with geekdad256 that there’s still nothing like telling and hearing jokes face to face. In a way jokes are evolving and on the internet; people do joke in email and instant messaging and chat. It just depends on the culture a person is exposed to? With the people I interact with, we joke around online and offline 🙂 So I personally think that this isn’t totally true.

Con von Hoffman (user link) says:

Is this study a hoax?

I was curious as to why a pork pie maker would spend money on this study and so went looking for it. Turns out the company itself doesn’t exist on the web except in a few local news stories. You would think a study like this would have been released on the interweb and/or seen by more than one reporter.

I smell a well-spiced rat.

Con von Hoffman (user link) says:

Is this study a hoax?

I was curious as to why a pork pie maker would spend money on this study and so went looking for it. Turns out the company itself doesn’t exist on the web except in a few local news stories. You would think a study like this would have been released on the interweb and/or seen by more than one reporter.

I smell a well-spiced rat.

Chad says:

You got it all wrong, tech dirt person

I think it’s pretty safe to say that hearing a good joke told well is better than a text joke. With the Web being primarily a textual medium, I think it’s safe to say then that it has in effect helped in the decline of the art of joke telling, no?

With that said, something like this site is pretty cool with competing against the text jokes that have ruined both the art of telling a joke, and the reception jokes and joke culture is receiving…

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