World's Funniest Joke Named

from the phew dept

Better be careful with this one. As we pointed out last year a lab in the UK was imitating Monty Python in looking for the world's funniest joke. They've now completed the search. However, they've found a number of regional differences when it comes to humor (not surprisingly). Folks in UK, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand like word play, while those of us in North America like jokes that make people look stupid. Germans like all kinds of jokes, while the Japanese apparently don't joke at all. What's amusing though, is seeing how different places around the world are reporting this. Notice that the basis for everyone of the following articles is the same story - but they all include a different joke. A US newspaper, for instance includes the best American joke. A Canadian site mentions that Canadians are not easily amused. A UK site includes (of course) a popular UK joke, but also shows the American joke and a European joke. Yahoo, in their lowest common denominator way includes a bunch of different jokes for your reading pleasure, while CNN (not very funny at all) only includes the winning joke, but no others. The Times of India focuses on the fact that the funniest joke was submitted by a UK Indian. Ah... cultural differences.
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  • identicon
    dorpus, 3 Oct 2002 @ 1:33pm

    Worthless

    I don't know why they think Japanese don't joke at all. Japanese language is full of humor.

    They've also taken out a huge chunk of all jokes by including only inoffensive ones.

    "Joke" is also a culturally loaded word -- there are so many forms of verbal humor that are not necessarily jokes.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    John Smith, 3 Oct 2002 @ 1:35pm

    Candians.

    Some say the reason so many comedians come from Canada (like Jim Carey, Mike Myers) is that it is so hard to make Canadians laugh (especially from Toronto) so it raises the level they have to perform at. So if you can make someone from Toronto laugh you can make anyone laugh.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    sAFETY, 3 Oct 2002 @ 1:52pm

    The funny truth

    Following the link:
    http://icwales.icnetwork.co.uk/0100news/0200wales/page.cfm?objectid=12250627&method=full&siteid =50082
    shows the top jokes for each country. The Canadian joke perfect epitomizes a major portion of our humour.
    Canadian will laugh at anything that makes fun of Americans.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    dorpus, 3 Oct 2002 @ 2:24pm

    Culturally specific humor

    From my experience as a translator, humor that translates well across cultures tend to be simple, lame, and tame.

    A more interesting analysis would be to find the patterns for the funniest jokes in any culture, regardless of offensiveness. A lot of assumptions are implicit in culturally specific jokes.

    An example of an American joke that doesn't translate well:

    Q: How many gays does it take to screw in a light bulb?
    A: That's not funny!

    This joke would have difficulty understood by foreigners because:
    1. Why screw in a light bulb?
    2. "That's not funny" is an expression often used by people who promote political correctness.
    3. What is political correctness?

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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