Title: Television Humor
1Television Humor
- by Don L. F. Nilsen and
- Alleen Pace Nilsen
2Its a jungle out there.--Adrian Monk
3THE ARRIVAL OF TV?
- When television first arrived, people had dire
predictions - NO ONE WOULD READ BOOKS.
- NEWSPAPERS WOULD DIE.
- RADIO WOULD DISAPPEAR.
- AND SO WOULD MOVIE THEATERS.
- BUT, WHAT HAPPENED?
- In fact, television contributed to making other
media more popular. - How can this be true?
- What cross-overs do we see?
4HUMOR WAS PART OF TV FROM THE VERY BEGINNING
- In the 1950s, many people purchased TV sets just
so as not to be left out of the fun. -
- Water pressure in New York City used to be
influenced by when the advertising breaks came on
I Love Lucy because thats when everyone got up
and went to the bathroom. - Several of todays sitcoms get more viewers than
did the early classics, but they arent as
influential because there are now so many more
choices.
5I LOVE LUCY (1951-1957)
- The show was praised as a complete synthesis of
TV comedy because it had - The music and burlesque of Berle,
- The plot strength and slickness of Amos n Andy,
- The charm of Burns and Allen, and the naturalness
of The Goldbergs. - It was the first sitcom to be filmed in front of
a live audience. But, most important was Lucille
Balls comedic talent and her ambitions in this
time when domesticity was being held up as the
be-all and end-all. - She was a forerunner to the feminist movement of
the next decade when millions of women were too
bright and too ambitious to want to stay in the
kitchen.
6Sitcoms were developed first for radio and then
moved to television. They replaced the old jokes
that were part of vaudeville and travelling
shows because
- Old jokes could become funny when tied to
individuals that viewers already knew and
liked. New situations supplied the element of
surprise that is necessary for jokes to succeed. - Stories could move faster because script writers
did not have to set the scene or introduce
characters for each episode. - Also, they served as zeitgeists, i.e. they
reflected the spirit of the times by focusing
attention on whatever issues viewers were most
interested in.
7One of the most successful transfers from radio
to television was The Goldbergs.
- Molly Goldberg was a warm, Jewish mother living
in an apartment in the Bronx. - Her radio story was popular all through the 1930s
and 40s, and on TV from 1949 until 1954. - Characters with accents had been popular on radio
because their accents helped audiences
recognize who was who.
8In the 1950s, when Americans were giving serious
thoughts to integration, Amos n Andy was a less
successful transfer.
- It first aired on radio in 1928, and was adapted
for TV in 1951. It had come out of the
minstrelsy tradition, and was really blackface
comedy, meaning whites were playing the black
roles. This kind of artificial humor was
unacceptable and the show (with new black actors)
lasted only one year on television. - Twenty years later in 1972, Sanford and Son
brought a new kind of African American humor to
television. - ,
9The 1980s Cosby Show featured an upwardly mobile
African American family, but some critics
thought it was too white.
10Mr. Peepers (1952-1955)
11The Fresh Prince of Bel AirWas a New Kind of
Family Sitcom
- Between 1990 and 1996, Will Smith starred in a
fictionalized version of his own story. - He was a street smart Black teenager from
Philadelphia sent to live with his aunt and uncle
in the wealthy town of Bel Air. - Of course, there were cultural conflicts that
made for humor, but it also brought up serious
issues.
12An Overgeneralized Plot Description of Sitcoms
- Each segment has its own plot so that the shows
circle around to end much as they began with the
setting and the music being the same. - Shows begin with a humorous complication, which
the characters try to solve, but usually make
worse. - Near the end, an unexpected force enters the
scene and solves the problem, leaving the
characters ready for the next weeks challenge.
13The First Really Popular TV Sitcoms Were Family
Stories
- In the 1950s, World War II was over and people
felt a great nostalgia for the old days when
fathers went off to work and mothers stayed home
with the children. - Of course, life had never been as idyllic as it
seemed in retrospect, but nevertheless the idea
of FAMILY was central. - A more practical reason for family shows was that
households owned only one TV set and so families
all watched together.
14But very soon, audiences wanted more than just
the foibles of typical families.
- This meant that producers went looking for
variety to go beyond Leave It to Beaver and
Father Knows Best. We soon had - Happy Days
- The Waltons
- And such blended or one-parent families as The
Brady Bunch, My Three Sons, and Diffrent
Strokes.
15All in the Family (1970s)
- The most controversialand also the most
influential of the family sitcomsAll in the
Familybrought attention to middle class
prejudices as revealed through Archie Bunkers
actions and statements. However, some
thoughtful critics worried that the program was
teaching old prejudices to a new generation
instead of eradicating them.
16Roseanne (1988-1995) was a kind of protest
against the goody-good mothers in most family
sitcoms.
- She was described as rude, crass, and
blue-collar. - Married with Children had a similar
description. -
17Fantasy Was Another Way of Satirizing Perfect
Families
- In the mid-1960s both The Munsters and the Addams
Family proved that not all families are the same.
- I Dream of Jeannie, also in the 1960s, was a
fantasy about a 2,000 year-old genie in love with
an American astronaut.
18The Addams Family vs. The Munsters Totally
Different Fan Bases
19Get Smart (1965-1970) was a Parody of James
Bond (007)
20The Best Known One-Parent Family Sitcoms were
Andy of Mayberry, and The Andy Griffith Show,
1950s
- When Andy Griffith died in the summer of 2012,
every obituary writer nostalgically mentioned
Mayberry RFD. - Reruns had made the show known to 2nd, and even
3rd, generations despite critics complaints that
Mayberry was the only U.S. southern town with no
African Americans.
21Mayberry RFD added a new twist in that Andy was
the Sheriff. Other Career sitcoms soon
followed
- There is no end to the careers that could make
way for old jokes in new situations as with Mary
Tyler Moores spinoff from the Dick Van Dyke Show
(1970-1977), Tim Allens Home Improvement
(1991-1999), and Tina Feys current 30 Rock.
22Dukes of Hazard (1979-1985)
23Disfunctional Families Threes Company
(1977-1984) Married with Children (1987-1997)
24Everybody Loves Raymond (2000s) was not as much
about a couple and their children as about a
couple and their parents.
- Did Raymond come off looking like Father Knows
Best or like Dagwood? - How important were the children?
- Where were the kindly grandparents?
- Was it a show for kids or adults?
25Everybody Loves Raymond
- http//www.everybodylovesray.com/
26The Dick Van Dyke Show let the public in on
script-writing while Scrubs opened the door to
the medical profession. Other popular career
shows include
- Cheers
- Frasier
- MASH
- The Office
- Parks and Recreation
- Spin City
- Taxi
- Two and a Half Men
- The Vicar of Dibley (a BBC show)
27- SLAPSTICK ON CHEERS
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vr1kbn-LOpes
28Parody of M.A.S.H.
29Viewers like characters who resemble people they
might know, but they feel uncomfortable if they
think a script writer is making fun of them or of
their ethnicity.
- This is one of the reasons for sitcom characters
to be distanced from the viewers. - One way of creating this distance is to make the
subjects of the sitcom so extreme that viewers
will not feel that the script is about them. - For example, none of us would worry that we were
as incompetent as were the characters played by
Eddie Albert and Eva Gabor in Green Acres
(1965-1971).
30The 1960s Beverly Hillbillies were equally
extreme, but from the opposite end of the social
system.
- When oil was discovered on the Clampetts Ozark
farm, their new wealth allowed them to move to
Beverly Hills. - Some viewers were offended, but most just
chuckled and felt superior.
31Welcome Back, Kotter (1975-1979)Inner-City
Schools
32Another Way to Distance Characters Is to Bring
Them from Outer Space
- Alf (1986-1990) was brought from another planet.
- So was Mork for the popular Mork and Mindy.
Robin Williams became famous playing Mork between
1978 and 1982.
33Settings Naturally Influence the Kind of Story
Being Told
- One of the first animated sitcoms was The
Flintstones (1960-1966), a prehistoric family
show set in Bedrock. It starred Fred and Wilma
Flintstone and their daughter Pebbles. Hanna
Barbera created this pioneering show with the
catch phrase of Yabba, dabba, doo! - Between 1962-63, and later between 1985 and 1987,
a space-age counterpart, The Jetsons, was a
science fiction family sitcom, that was popular
with children, who loved the transportation
system and the robots for doing housework.
34Animated Sit-Coms Automatically Create Distance
- This is why Family Guy (1999-2012) is allowed to
be so vulgar as the stories are told about the
dysfunctional Griffins. - Creator Seth MacFarlane voices several of the
characters.
35The edginess and vulgarity of Southpark is all
the more shocking because the lines are spoken by
children.
36The long life of The Simpsons (since 1989)
relates to the smart allusions, the up-to-date
plots, the appeal to all ages, and the fact that
the actors can go on forever.
37The Popularity of Non-Family Members Living
Together
- One of the biggest cultural changes of the last
couple of decades has been the increasing number
of people living outside of typical families. -
- This is especially true of young adults, and
because they are the audience that advertisers
want to woo in hopes of influencing lifetime
buying patterns, producers can afford to put big
money into shows about independent young people. - Threes Company was a ground-breaker because it
challenged gender expectations. - It would be fun to compare the humor of that show
with the humor in todays popular Big Bang Theory
or with the humor in Golden Girls.
38And because the shows are about young people, we
expect the characters to grow and change, i.e. to
be dynamic.
- Critic Leo Charney says that Friends, Sex and the
City, and Mad About You are dynamic sitcoms
because of their long arcs of character evolution
and carefully worked-out resolutions. - He classifies them as a hybrid between the sitcom
and the soap opera because of the way the
characters age, change, and grow as they would in
real life.
39The actors in Friends were much older than their
audiences believed nevertheless college students
and even teens identified with the life style.
40People joked about the popular Seinfeld,
complaining that Nothing happens.
- Seinfeld attracted some of the same audience as
did Friendsbut Seinfeld also had adults in the
audience and they did not expect so much growth.
In literary terms, the characters were
static. - The Seinfeld scripts fit into the traditional
definition of a sit- com in that the characters
are emotionally much the same at the beginning
and the end of the shows.
41Intricate-Attentive Humor
42 The success of Golden Girls (1985-1992) showed
that not just young people can imagine living in
a family of strangers.
- In all but one year, the show ranked in the top
ten. - It starred Bea Arthur, Rue McClanahan, Estelle
Getty, and Betty White, who is still performing. - It would be fun to compare it to The Big Bang.
43Current Slapstick Comedy
- Arrested Development
- Community
- Parks and Recreation
- Tosh.O, etc.
- Compare TV Slapstick to Movie Slapstick
- Jackass, The Three Stooges, Shrek, Scary Movie,
etc.
44Physical Humor in Sit Coms
45Big Bang Theory A Parody of Science Nerds
46Futurama A Cartoon Parody of Science Concepts
47Futurama Icons
48Some people consider NCIS (the most popular show
of 2012) to be a career sitcom. But we think of
it as a drama whose writers have borrowed
techniques from sitcoms, as in these examples
- An eccentric character, who can be counted on for
a laugh, is Abby Sciento, the smart Goth girl who
works as the forensic specialist and is always
sipping Caff cows so that she is hyper. - Dr. Mallard, who lets only his approved
co-workers call him Ducky, is laughable in the
way he always wears bowties and talks to the
corpses that he is examining. - Ziva David, the investigator from Israel,
constantly makes amusing errors with English
idioms.
49NCIS (continued)
- Anthony DeNozzo (referred to as Tony) is always
quoting lines from movies and mispronouncing
other peoples names. - A recurring joke is that Jethro Gibbs always
shows up when he is being talked about, and a
recognizable motif is the way he slaps people on
the side of their heads. - Another recurring joke is the way they all throw
around the word proby. It is a half-insult in
that it stands for probationary, but it probably
also reminds viewers of all the probing that goes
on.
50N.C.I.S. Smiles and Farewells
51In Summary
- Sitcoms have been popular since the very
beginning, with family stories being the most
popular, as the shows began reflecting changing
family dynamics. - They often feature young adults, who are at
interesting points of change in their lives. - A second reason for featuring young adults is
that advertisers will pay for high production
costs because they are especially eager to woo
potential customers who are in the process of
developing their life-long buying habits.
52TALK SHOW WEB SITES
- JOHNNY CARSON
- https//www.youtube.com/watch?v3qoP99pVm4g
- STEPHEN COLBERT THE COLBERT REPORT
- http//www.colbertnation.com/home
- JAMES CORDEN
- http//www.cbs.com/shows/late-late-show/
- JIMMY FALLON
- http//www.latenightwithjimmyfallon.com/
- CHELSEA HANDLER
- http//www.eonline.com/on/shows/chelsea/index.jsp
- REAL TIME WITH BILL MAHER
- https//www.youtube.com/user/RealTime
53- DEAN MARTIN
- https//www.youtube.com/watch?vyBm-vmAifco
- LAST WEEK TONIGHT WITH JOHN OLIVER
- https//www.youtube.com/watch?vfpbOEoRrHyU
- TREVOR NOAH
- http//www.trevornoah.com/
- TREVOR NOAH AFRICAN-AMERICAN
- https//vimeo.com/ondemand/trevornoah?gclidCN7ajd
PP1cQCFYNsfgodbrkAvw - TREVOR NOAH THE DAILY SHOW
- http//www.thedailyshow.com/
- LARRY WILMER THE NIGHTLY SHOW
- http//www.cc.com/shows/the-nightly-show
54Spin-Offs fromJon Stewarts The Daily Show
https//www.youtube.com/watch?vFh6SRiBbt2E
55- TRUMP MEETS THE HONEYMOONERS
- https//www.youtube.com/watch?v3XriXDtfqCg