Title: Professor Glenn Wilson, Gresham College, London
1 HAVING A LAUGH?
COMEDY AND COMEDIANS
- Professor Glenn Wilson, Gresham College, London
2THATS AN OLD ONE
- The earliest recorded joke is a riddle found
among the hieroglyphics in the tomb of Pharaoh
Snefru (2613-2589 BC). Attributed to an
impertinent architect who may have risked
execution (Lowis, 2013). -
- Q. How do you entertain a bored pharaoh?
- A. You sail a boatload of young women down the
Nile, dressed only in fishing nets, and invite
the pharaoh to go catch a fish. -
- Apparently little has changed in 4500 years.
3TOUCHING THE TABOO
- Humour is a safety valve. Emotional power often
derives from an instinctive, libidinal element
(e.g., sex, aggression, fear of death). - Tension is relieved by some trick or twist that
makes clear it is all just in fun, what Freud
(1905) called the joke technique. - If people are sexually aroused (e.g., by viewing
erotic movies) they find most jokes funnier. -
In The Meaning of Life John Cleese is a
schoolmaster attempting to give a sex education
lesson to a typically bored and disruptive
classroom of boys.
4THE PUT-DOWN
- One form of hostility is disparagement
(assertion of superiority against a background of
shortcomings in others). - May be directed against an individual or type of
person (e.g., ethnic and sexist jokes). - My mother-in-law has more chins than the Beijing
telephone directory (Les Dawson). - Put-downs are enjoyed by the in-group (those who
get the joke share the stereotype) but are
usually unfunny or offensive to the victims
(Ferguson Ford, 2008). - We also smile at the misfortune of others
(schadenfreude), esp. when victim is disliked,
high-status and envied, e.g., bankers (Cikara
Fiske, 2013). -
5INCONGRUITY RESOLUTION
- Some jokes are neither libidinous nor targeted
at out-groups but focus on intellectual conceits,
word-play, juxtaposition and surprise. - Hurley et al (2011) consider this cognitive
puzzle-solving aspect is central to humour. - The mind is constantly engaged in anticipation
of events and correction of presumptions. Mirth
arises from a sudden debunking of expectation or
restructuring of perception (a reward for
exercising an important survival skill). - How do you stop an elephant charging? Take
away its credit card. -
6BENIGN VIOLATIONS
- A theory covering many types of joke is that
humour depends on an overlap between what is a
violation of normal and what is benign (McGraw
Warren, 2010). - It applies to intellectual violations (e.g.,
absurdities and non-sequiturs) as well as immoral
and embarrassing behaviour. - An example is play fighting, which is
simultaneously threatening and harmless. - A joke is not funny when it is either too tame
or too risqué (a boundary that is constantly
changing).
7OBSERVATIONAL HUMOUR
- Jokes may be funny because we recognise truth
in them (Lynch, 2010). - Stand-ups like Jo Brand or Michael McIntyre work
with stereotypes but also detail the little
hassles of everyday life (e.g., public transport,
shopping trolleys, ill-fitting clothes, dating
mishaps). - Pleasure derives from familiarity with the
plight of the characters. They reassure us that
others experience similar frustrations to our
own. We are all in the same boat.
8CRINGE COMEDY
- Some comedy focuses on social awkwardness and
violations of political correctness. - Often takes the form of mockumentaries, e.g.,
The Office (Ricky Gervais), or Summer Heights
High (Chris Lilley), with characters unaware of
how excruciating they are. In others the
embarrassment is shared (Extras, Curb Your
Enthusiasm). - Fear of social stigma or exclusion is a major
source of anxiety in humans (Clegg, 2012), hence
shyness and stage fright. - At a funeral, most people would rather be the
guy in the coffin than the guy delivering the
eulogy (Jerry Seinfeld) .
David Brent (Ricky Gervais) is a self-important ,
yet insecure, office manager lacking self-insight.
9RIDICULE
- Satire mocks people and institutions that are
too rigid and pompous. It points up stupidity,
hypocrisy and social injustice (hoping to promote
change). - Molieres Tartuffe is a pious fraud who
infiltrates a mans home, exploits his
hospitality and tries to seduce his wife. The
play lasted one night in 1667 before being banned
by Church authorities. - Gilbert Sullivans characters include a senile
judge, an admiral who has never been to sea, a
queen with the hots for a sentry and a man who is
half a fairy commissioned to make the House of
Lords sit through the grouse and salmon season
and be opened to competitive examination. - Like modern court jesters, comedians represent
our eccentric and subversive nature and seek to
knock down sacred cows.
When first released in 1979, The Life of Brian
was declared blasphemous in many parts of the
world. Some Christians saw it as making fun of
Jesus. In fact, it was aimed at blind faith and
the quest for gurus. In 2006 it was rated the
greatest comedy film of all time (Ch. 4 poll).
10HUMOUR IN THE BRAIN
The cognitive aspects of humour (getting the
joke) and emotional (enjoying the joke)
have discrete neural correlates.
- Moran et al (2004) recorded fMRI responses to
full episodes of Seinfeld and The Simpsons. - Humour detection was associated with activity
in the left inferior frontal brain (A and B)
verbal processing. - Humour appreciation went with bilateral activity
in the insular cortex (C) and amygdala (D)
emotional areas. -
11BRAIN DAMAGE
- Children with focal epilepsy find jokes less
funny than controls (Suits et al, 2012). - Damage to the corpus callosum impairs narrative
jokes but cartoons are still enjoyed (Brown et
al, 2005). - Lesions in the right hemisphere affect humour
appreciation more than left damage (Stammi
Stuss, 1999). - Autistic individuals and schizophrenics have
difficulty with jokes that involve inference of
mental states in others (Samson Hegenloh, 2010
Marjoram et al, 2005).
This joke used by Bartolo et al (2006) requires
an inference of altruistic intent in Picture A,
reversed in B.
12TODDLERS JOKES
- Children generate humour from an early age
(Hoicka Akhtar, 2012). - During their first year they copy jokes (e.g.,
peekaboo, chasing). By age 2/3 novel jokes are
produced, including deliberate conceptual errors
(e.g., pig says moo), comic acts (e.g.,
underpants on head) and breaching taboos (e.g.,
spitting food). - Parents signal joke-mode with special speech
styles. Children share humour with them by
smiling, laughing and looking for a reaction.
13HOW TICKLED I AM
- Tickling is prototypic of humour (Provine 2004)
- 1. Occurs in many non-humans (producing sounds
similar to laughter). - 2. Is playful, teasing and usually pleasurable
(with sexual overtones). - 3. Involves stimulation of vulnerable parts of
the body (requiring trust). - 5. Cannot effectively be done to oneself (hence
socially bonding). - 6. Humour may be considered a mind tickle.
14THE SUBMISSIVE SMILE
- Humour inhabits the overlap between laughing and
smiling. These have separate, almost opposite,
origins. Laughter signals triumph and dominance,
smiling conveys appeasement and submission
(closed teeth are harmless). Women smile more
than men (even when on trial for murder). When
boxers square up before a fight the one who
smiles tends to lose (Klaus Chen, 2013).
15LAUGHING WITH, LAUGHING AT
- Laughter is a primitive, pre-verbal from of
emotional expression, seen in many animals from
rodents to primates. - Signals intent to play, not attack.
- A contagious social activity, occurring mostly
in face-to-face interaction among friends. We are
30x more likely to laugh with others than on our
own (Scott, 2013). - Confirms membership of a group (joyful bonding)
but can also be used to exclude an individual
from a group (taunting laughter).
16CORPSING
- A volcanic, yet endearing form of laughter
occurs when a person knows it is inappropriate
to laugh but cant contain it. Attempts to
suppress giggles turn to uncontrollable, highly
contagious, fits of laughter. - Said to derive from actors on stage attempting
to make the corpse laugh, but could refer to
the helpless, corpse-like state of the victim. - Peter Cook was expert at getting Dudley Moore to
laugh in the middle of their live sketches by ad
libbing.
A famous case of corpsing occurred in a BBC
cricket commentary when Jonathan Agnew (Aggers)
observed that Ian Botham was out, having failed
to get his leg over. His co-commentator Brian
Johnston (Jonners) struggled some minutes to
regain self-control.
17HUMOUR PREFERENCES
- Humour preferences relate to personality and
social attitudes. - Liberals like sexual, aggressive disparaging
cartoons conservatives prefer safe,
word-based, intellectual jokes, especially those
that provide incongruity resolution (feelings
of closure). - (Wilson, 1990)
18SEXISM IN HUMOUR
- Overall, men and women find the world equally
funny (Azim et al, 2005) but they differ in what
they laugh at. Men are more drawn to libidinous
and competitive themes women to clever
word-play. - Despite a recent spate of advertisements in
which men are depicted as incompetent fools, both
men and women often prefer female-disparaging
humour. - This interacts with attitudes those with less
traditional views of womens role show reduced
preference for sexist humour (Moore et al, 1987).
19HUMOUR AS FANTASY
- Although sexually explicit humour is often
regarded as sexist, there are interesting
variations within women as to which jokes they
prefer. - Women who were physically less attractive, as
rated by external (male) judges, were more
religious anti-hedonistic than attractive women
on an attitude questionnaire. However, their
ratings of seaside postcards revealed a
preference for those depicting shapely women as
the focus of lecherous male attention. Wilson
Brazendale (1973) interpreted this vicarious
gratification deriving from deprivation.
Attractive women favoured more anatomical,
female-assertive cartoons.
20MAKE EM LAUGH
- Humour has mating value signalling
intelligence and creativity (good genes). - Attractive people are seen as funnier and humour
boosts attractiveness (Cowan Little, 2013),
particularly for short-term flings. - Women are 3x more likely to give their phone
number to a suitor they have just heard tell a
joke to a friend (Gueguen, 2010). - Women want a partner who is both receptive to
humour and funny men just want a partner who
will laugh at their jokes (Bressler, et al,
2006).
21BAD HUMOUR, BAD MARRIAGE
- Humour style relates to marital satisfaction and
divorce (Saraglou et al, 2010). - Constructive , affiliative and self-enhancing
humour went with happy and stable marriages.
Antisocial , sarcastic and vulgar humour went
with poor relationships and divorce. - Insecure, self-depreciating humour in women went
with relationship satisfaction in their husband
but an also an increased likelihood of divorce.
22HUMOUR SELLS
- Humour is used in advertising to gain attention
and to build warm, playful associations with a
product. - It is effective in increasing sales but only
when the ad is likeable, not irritating. It
operates to combat peoples natural resistance to
aggressive marketing through a process of
distraction. - Viewers of funny ads do not necessarily remember
the brand afterwards but make the positive
association with the right product once in the
store (Strick et al, 2013).
23HUMOUR AS COPING
- A sense of humour can operate as a defence
against adverse, inescapable circumstances, e.g.,
disability or mortality (Moran, 2003). It helps
screen out negative aspects of reality and
promotes optimism. - Two recurrent themes in the comedy of Woody
Allen, encapsulated in the title of film Love and
Death, seem to reflect personal issues. - He seems to have an unhappy, jaundiced view of
the world, with particular anxiety concerning his
perceived unattractiveness to women. In many of
his films Allen seems engaged in self-therapy,
playing the geek that gets the girl by dint of
his wit (which he also achieves in real life).
24GALLOWS HUMOUR
- A defensive form in which people make witticisms
in the face of hopeless adversity. - Sir Thomas More, ascending the scaffold I pray
you Mr Lieutenant, see me up safe. - Sick humour may seem insensitive in the wake of
major tragedies like 9/11, yet clearly functions
as a coping strategy. - Widely used by undertakers, medical and
emergency workers for catharsis and distancing
from intolerable situations but danger of
fostering disrespectful attitudes to clients
(Sullivan, 2013). - Always Look on the Bright Side is currently
among the most popular funeral songs in the UK.
25THE WAY OF THE COMEDIAN
- According to Force (2011) many comedians
suffered unhappy, abusive childhoods and
developed humour as a way of overcoming personal
trauma. - If you can find humour in anything you can
survive it - (Bill Cosby).
- Clowns are experts at reframing tragic
circumstances into funny ones, hence serve as
social therapists. They directly address fears
and concerns that most people prefer to deny or
conceal. -
Glaswegian comedian Billy Connolly says he was
physically and sexually abused by his alcoholic
father from ages 10-15.
26MYTH OF THE SAD CLOWN
- Despite some famous instances (e.g. Tony
Hancock) the idea that comedians are especially
prone to depression and suicide is not
empirically supported. - Stand-up comedians are not distinguished by high
neuroticism, and their parents were no less
caring than comparison groups (Greengross et al,
2012). - An elevated suicide rate in comics might have
been expected because some suffer bipolar mood
disorder (Spike Milligan, Ruby Wax) but these
high profile cases may have led to an exaggerated
estimate of psychopathology in comics.
Comedian David Walliams has suffered depression
all his life, with several attempts at suicide.
However, he is not typical.
27LAUGHTER AS MEDICINE
- Numerous health benefits have been cited for
humour and laughter, including mood improvement,
stress relief, muscle relaxation, lowered blood
pressure and strengthening of the heart. Most are
intuitively plausible and findings are generally
positive, though seldom meeting scientific
criteria (Martin, 2002 Mora-Ripoll, 2010)). - Widely held that humour and laughter bolster
immune capability, but there are various measures
and evidence is mixed and inconclusive (Bennett
Lengacher, 2009). - More persuasive, are reports that laughing
releases endorphins, which have painkilling and
social bonding effects (Dunbar et al, 2012). -
28HUMOUR AND LONGEVITY
- The ultimate health benefit might be an
increased life expectation. Svebak et al (2010)
sense of humour correlates with subjective health
and independently improves survival, at least up
until age 65. - Longevity studies of professional comedians
come from the premise that if laughter is good
medicine clowns ought to live longer. - Despite one or two famous examples (Bob Hope and
George Burns) comedians, and other performers,
actually die younger than comparable professions
(Friedman, 2013). - Suggests that health benefits of humour may
apply more to audience than the clowns. -
George Burns The secret of longevity is to live
to 100. You dont hear of too many people dying
after that
29IN CONCUSSION
- There are many different types of humour and no
single theory seems adequate to account for them
all. - Psychological investigations of jokes and how
they help us to release tensions and cope with
lifes problems are interesting and informative
but of little help to comedians in honing their
skills and generating funny material. - Comedians make better psychologists than
psychologists make comedians. -
Ken Dodd The trouble with Freud is that he never
played second house at the Glasgow Empire on a
wet Tuesday.