What makes things funny | Peter McGraw | TEDxBoulder

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  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2024
  • Pete McGraw is a leading researcher at the Humor Research Lab at the University of Colorado, Boulder. In this talk he not only discusses what is funny, but what makes something funny as well.
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Комментарии • 701

  • @chloewinnaa1515
    @chloewinnaa1515 5 лет назад +252

    Wonder what he'd do if nobody laughed in the beginning 😂 took the risk for a high reward, I respect that

    • @jacobshirley3457
      @jacobshirley3457 Год назад +20

      He'd hold the pause longer, because somebody will laugh at the uncomfortably long pause. Then, everybody will join in.

    • @sadgladbadman
      @sadgladbadman 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@jacobshirley3457 Or even just keeps staring at him in silence and thinks, 'tf is wrong with this guy? this isn't a mild violation, i'm not open minded at all."

  • @Fearofthemonster
    @Fearofthemonster 4 года назад +145

    this is the best explanation of humour I've seen so far.
    mild violations are funnier when it is closer because mild violations happen to someone we don't know, all the time; therefore they stop being violations and become the norm. Someone out there is mis-stepping and falling, all the time but it doesn't happen around us all the time.

  • @austintrauth5820
    @austintrauth5820 4 года назад +843

    I watched this whole video without knowing what benign meant

    • @D4rkLigHtLP
      @D4rkLigHtLP 4 года назад +69

      You my Sir are a man of culture!

    • @hemendrasahu7943
      @hemendrasahu7943 4 года назад +112

      your comment is a fine example of a benign violation. It's funny haha

    • @libertys5635
      @libertys5635 4 года назад +120

      i checked the replies to this to see if someone told you what it meant to hide that I didn't know what it meant either

    • @ayritebk8603
      @ayritebk8603 4 года назад +93

      Benign means not harmful/kind/gentle
      The thing I think we should learn from this talk is that there's limits to humor it may hurt people's feelings and we should respect these limits.

    • @jfish032
      @jfish032 3 года назад +1

      🤦‍♂️

  • @l75rd83
    @l75rd83 4 года назад +216

    if you can deliver a joke without laughing or smiling, boom

    • @JeffWarren47
      @JeffWarren47 4 года назад +3

      I tried this out at my first open mic.Any feedback is appreciated!!

    • @NightSpid
      @NightSpid 3 года назад +33

      But sometimes the persons laugh telling the joke can make u laugh too

    • @santiagoflores5126
      @santiagoflores5126 3 года назад +8

      Actually laughing is more funny beacuse you share a feeling with the audience making them feel more secure by making that you create a safe space for the humor and laughter to flow.

    • @DaBeezKneez
      @DaBeezKneez 3 года назад +1

      I’m really good at this, which I hate cus people think I’m being serious 🙄🙄

    • @gnarthdarkanen7464
      @gnarthdarkanen7464 3 года назад +9

      It depends on the joke or gag. If it's the kind of thing that laughter would distract from the punchline, you should deliver it dead-pan. If it's too easy to assume you're being serious, you should at least present a timely grin... "the gotcha face"... to let your audience know it's not serious, and they will laugh.
      Some gags are entirely based on the context of delivery, so it really matters that you deliver an "over the top" sentiment with a deathly serious tone and expression...
      Others are just funny enough on their own merits that it doesn't matter how they're delivered. ;o)

  • @perpetualbeneath
    @perpetualbeneath 4 года назад +37

    takeaways:
    -humor helps cope with pain, stress, adversity
    -it`s funny only when 3 conditions are met simultaniously: situation of benign, situation of violation and their intersection
    -Violation means put things out of norm
    -benign means be psychologicaly distant
    -pay attention to your audince
    -additional strategy - highlight what is wrong with normal everyday situations
    -example of algorith: start with violation, then benign (create a distance), provide an alternative interpretation

    • @deadbabyseal3356
      @deadbabyseal3356 10 месяцев назад +1

      benign means harmless, psychological distance is its own takeaway

  • @pickleboi5548
    @pickleboi5548 3 года назад +62

    falling down stairs, not hurt: no laughter
    falling down stairs, hurt: laughter
    unless it happens to another person: EXTREME LAUGHTER

    • @soslothful
      @soslothful 2 года назад +4

      The way I heard it is-
      When you fall down the stairs its comedy.
      When I fall down the stairs its tragedy.

    • @DrJones20
      @DrJones20 Год назад +1

      That's sadistic.

    • @Im-not-alone-Im-full-of-myself
      @Im-not-alone-Im-full-of-myself 5 месяцев назад

      Oh my! It is true that some people find it funny when someone falls into a staircase and gets hurt haha...
      But it is more due to the shock and surprise at something that happens completely unexpected like that.
      Laughter is just a way to express shock, something that is very normal in people, and not because we are laughing at the other person, we are only laughing because it happened in an unexpected way.
      This type of laughter is only a way of expression of a surprise, not of the pain that the other person feels.

  • @Elemblue2
    @Elemblue2 Год назад +9

    This explains why I laugh when terrible things happen to me.
    My coping strategy is to look at myself from a distance.
    I have confused alot of people...

  • @Nicolas_Arencibia
    @Nicolas_Arencibia 6 месяцев назад +16

    I really enjoyed the circular structure that this lecture had, starting by asking the audience to tickle themselves, and at the end, picking up the same topic but this time with sense after the whole explanation about humour. I didn´t realise before about what separate humour and being annoying or even cross the line, but after hearing about the bening violation I grasped it. Just to conclude, a very interesting and well explained speech.

  • @27scole
    @27scole 6 лет назад +219

    Humour research lab omg and I struggle finding a job

  • @42opendoors
    @42opendoors 8 лет назад +74

    This is EXCELLENT.
    A couple of months ago that gal Nicole Arbour got a ton of attention for her "Dear Fat People" rant, which most people did not find funny. But also, very few people did a good job of being able to EXPLAIN to her why it wasn't. Hope the people at The Humor Research Lab (Really? Can I work there?!) sent her a link.
    This also gets at the heart of how different things for different people qualify as "benign". I love hidden camera jokes, but a good friend of mine can't stand them, as she internalizes that discomfort of personal boundaries being crossed as not being "benign".
    Love it! Great info!!!

    • @AustinChambers302977
      @AustinChambers302977 Год назад +1

      That's a great example. I also don't care for hidden camera jokes, and you described exactly why.

  • @guythellian4805
    @guythellian4805 5 лет назад +7

    I’ve learned why some things are funny. I can use this. Friends and family appreciate his talk!!

  • @rjStripes
    @rjStripes 5 лет назад +33

    This will certainly makes me more considerate of others while cracking jokes . Thank you so much

  • @yesreneau
    @yesreneau 6 лет назад +356

    You can tickle yourself if you're ticklish enough. Trust me, I know.

    • @vchicago2851
      @vchicago2851 5 лет назад +3

      YesReneau .

    • @americanguy8431
      @americanguy8431 5 лет назад +3

      ohuuu verified

    • @lxiaoqi6275
      @lxiaoqi6275 5 лет назад +1

      I can tickle myself so I don't know what are they saying

    • @gregoryscott3858
      @gregoryscott3858 5 лет назад +1

      100% true for me as well.

    • @orianalopez2855
      @orianalopez2855 5 лет назад +3

      Ikr, I couldn't wash my feet because I was so ticklish that it was a torture

  • @PsychBytes
    @PsychBytes 5 лет назад +19

    We love Peter McGraw and his Benign Violation Theory! A simple way to remember this theory is "if laughing at this is wrong, why does it feel so right?"

    • @DrJones20
      @DrJones20 Год назад

      Maybe you're immoral?

    • @SelfimprovementDiscipline
      @SelfimprovementDiscipline Месяц назад

      No, it’s funny because it seems harmless at the same time. To us or in general

  • @real_fitness1209
    @real_fitness1209 6 месяцев назад +1

    Some Ted speakers just speak about their research and don't actually provide the main core information. You gave out gold to everyone for free. Thanks a lot 🎉

  • @RightySnipeZ
    @RightySnipeZ 3 года назад +53

    When nobody laughs at your joke so you violate them with your fart unexpectedly.
    I have achieved comedy.

  • @Im-not-alone-Im-full-of-myself
    @Im-not-alone-Im-full-of-myself 5 месяцев назад +2

    There are many things that make things funny.
    It could for example be when someone says something that was unexpected or something we didn't expect at all happens.
    It could be due to a situation (or someone's actions) that can be funny because of its absurdity, or because of a misunderstanding.
    It could be humor that comes from something that is related to yourself, or that you can relate to (maybe because you've experienced something similar).

  • @KlaasVictor
    @KlaasVictor Год назад +11

    Excellent explanation of humor! Thank you 😄

  • @Poppop-xl1jl
    @Poppop-xl1jl 9 лет назад +144

    If you're dissecting something it's already dead. If something dies in the process, that's vivisection.

    • @jtsupersized
      @jtsupersized 9 лет назад +49

      Pop2323pop Unless its your friend. Then its comedy.

    • @vincentmack37
      @vincentmack37 9 лет назад +51

      I think you just vivisected that joke

    • @adkadatka244
      @adkadatka244 8 лет назад +1

      Pop2323pop hmm, very interesting

    • @essennagerry
      @essennagerry 8 лет назад +1

      +vincentmack37 Hahaha...

    • @davinkim7930
      @davinkim7930 7 лет назад +7

      Youre a nerd if you laughed

  • @brunobanane8068
    @brunobanane8068 7 лет назад +3

    thank you for this upload! :)
    i learned much about it.

  • @laylover7621
    @laylover7621 3 года назад +8

    This is actually a fantastic video. Thanks Peter!

  • @SpongeLorry
    @SpongeLorry 6 лет назад +330

    Don't you hate it when a sentence doesn't end the way you refrigerator?

    • @annaneedham9771
      @annaneedham9771 5 лет назад +3

      Yeah. It sucks.

    • @rico6546
      @rico6546 5 лет назад +1

      Hahahaha 😂

    • @pork43
      @pork43 5 лет назад +4

      this comment is 1 year old and i find it hilarious

    • @gideonpalmer8809
      @gideonpalmer8809 4 года назад +6

      @@pork43 really? It left me cold

    • @pork43
      @pork43 4 года назад +2

      @@gideonpalmer8809 pun

  • @TheSearchers1000
    @TheSearchers1000 Год назад +6

    Excellent explanation of what makes things funny. Wow. Good topic and good examples. The speaker is very deliberate and keeps it ...well....funny !!

  • @tonycarton8054
    @tonycarton8054 3 года назад +5

    irish humour is very accurate , of Oscar Wilde they said "being Irish he had a great sense of tragedy ,that sustained him through his temporary moments of joy"

  • @purronnaspaw
    @purronnaspaw 5 месяцев назад

    So good...thank you! Needling more laughter in my life.

  • @marytyr3494
    @marytyr3494 8 лет назад +23

    "How do you make this a malign violation?" Laughed so hard.

    • @AhmadAwais
      @AhmadAwais 6 лет назад

      Marytyr coz it was benign to listen and not to actually see someone wear.

  • @WedlerFineArt
    @WedlerFineArt 8 лет назад +9

    Fascinating. As I rewrite my comedy lines I will work towards benign-violation while keeping in mind my audience, the situation and "distance" and see if that generates more laughs.

  • @berenikesdare
    @berenikesdare 8 месяцев назад

    Stellar stuff !!! Real dimension with feeling how pedagogic this was.

  • @JadeDragonRaze
    @JadeDragonRaze 3 года назад +2

    Probably the best explanation I have heard

  • @rubanfrancis5927
    @rubanfrancis5927 2 месяца назад +1

    One of best video that I have seen about theory of humar ❤❤

  • @demianhaki7598
    @demianhaki7598 10 лет назад +2

    Awesome, though so much more detail to get into. Great research subject!

  • @pprehn5268
    @pprehn5268 7 лет назад +12

    Best unifying explanation I've heard so far.

    • @julianwarmington1267
      @julianwarmington1267 6 лет назад

      Yeah, it is pretty good.
      - I'm not any funnier now though than I was 15 minutes ago, and dog-gone-it i want my money back!

  • @Melissa0774
    @Melissa0774 10 лет назад +18

    This is a pretty good explanation about what makes things funny. But what I'd really like to know is, why funny things make us laugh and how that reaction works in the brain. I wonder if they study that with fMRI.

    • @michaeljackson5471
      @michaeljackson5471 Год назад

      Do you know the answer yet?

    • @shcxatter2
      @shcxatter2 Год назад

      There's a vsauce video on the subject. Basically humour destroys a prediction on the outcome of something in our minds, and the change of context from this unexpected realization, is releasing quickly the electrical energy in those neural pathways, and the quickest way to do that, Is to dissipate the energy through the motor cortex which in turn, makes you move your muscles in a certain way.

  • @hapiearning5222
    @hapiearning5222 4 года назад

    i need this FAST!

  • @tcveatch
    @tcveatch 10 лет назад +1

    Peter McGraw, you rock!

  • @johnnyknox7400
    @johnnyknox7400 6 лет назад

    This is my favorite video, more like it over here!

  • @user-wv2kn2lz5s
    @user-wv2kn2lz5s 6 месяцев назад

    Great. Presentation! You learn me something! Many. Thanks!🎈🎈

  • @gensuave1
    @gensuave1 11 лет назад

    Funny and informative. I think TED is making headway.

  • @whatdidijustwatch1555
    @whatdidijustwatch1555 5 лет назад +1

    This is clearly one of the greatest TEDx Talks, but then most of the people who wanted to watch it and invariably commented are sad people

  • @drfunk444
    @drfunk444 2 года назад

    Benign retaliation is just one of 13 tools in the Comedy writers belt.
    This was very well presented

    • @CalmNoises
      @CalmNoises 2 года назад +3

      Well? Don't be a tool and tell us!

  • @rosewood9874
    @rosewood9874 9 лет назад +19

    I love this! Life is complex and ridiculous all at once. It's good to take a step back and see what's funny about it.

  • @MAHAraaj1
    @MAHAraaj1 5 лет назад

    Excellent talk!

  • @TheRynegade
    @TheRynegade 4 года назад +17

    I will take what I've learned into the world!
    *starts tickling strangers*
    *several pending lawsuits*

  • @AhmadAwais
    @AhmadAwais 6 лет назад +1

    Best TEDx talk ever.

  • @gustavodurocher
    @gustavodurocher 7 лет назад +17

    this is the greatest humour theory ever. simple and accurate for most cases.
    there is one thing i think is still unexplained:
    - why it can be funny (mainly for kids) just to identify themselves with one another. Like, "i like ice cream", "me too!". there's no violation. Also, this pattern can be seem at people laughing at things like "i fear travelling by airplane... i hate people that don't".
    i call this "identification humour". i've splitted recently some stuff in "expectation break" (something better explained by him as violation) and identification.

    • @deniskrivchenkov9042
      @deniskrivchenkov9042 7 лет назад +1

      because it is very benign when there are people around like you. We do like people like us

    • @gustavodurocher
      @gustavodurocher 7 лет назад +2

      this could be a premise, but not the final reason. We only laugh at ANY joke if we identify ourselves with the person/joke. otherwise, the violation would be always perceived as malign.
      it can be very benign, as you said, but as peter says on the video, only benign is not funny...

    • @gustavodurocher
      @gustavodurocher 7 лет назад +4

      point is that, sometimes, there are some incongruences (violations) that are so small we can't even notice as an incongruence... i think that quoting a reference from one thing in another is so unexpected... it can be a violation in itself.

    • @garyhundsrucker7771
      @garyhundsrucker7771 6 лет назад +1

      Gustavo Du Rocher I boiled it down to things being : Wrong,negative or ambiguous or amy combination of the three.

    • @edgardocerda4045
      @edgardocerda4045 6 лет назад +2

      I think it's because we think we are alone and unique, but the realization that we are not that alone and not that unique is a benign violation of our previous beliefs. It's benign because it allow us to connect with others, and isn't a threat to our selves . In kids i think it's more clear, as kids are just learning and realizing that they're not the center of the world, and that there are others who are just like them. For adults, i think the same identification can be found with things we think are our personal kinks or things you simply don't know that happens to others too. It's the breaking of the isolation we believe we are (in certain aspects, i don't mean complete lonelyness) what makes the benign violation.
      That's why not everything with which we can identify is funny. It's only with those things you share with others, but you don't really know you do.

  • @holydeadknight
    @holydeadknight 7 лет назад +10

    7:22 - channelling Sheldon Cooper...heheh!

  • @desitunda
    @desitunda 4 года назад +7

    Most humorous thing ever “people you date and mate”

  • @drushasubhash1807
    @drushasubhash1807 Год назад

    Amazing. Very close to the truth. Bravo. Keep researching mr mcgraw..

  • @SAM-dm5qg
    @SAM-dm5qg 11 месяцев назад

    Thank You For Sharing ❤

  • @syedsuhail4736
    @syedsuhail4736 Год назад +1

    Watched it 5th time, one of the best talk

  • @charlesdumblewski9547
    @charlesdumblewski9547 6 лет назад +1

    Very true humor really helps everybody truly smile and get through a tough day and when you ask someone how are you it becomes sincere 5 star information . And i am going to order larg pens to hand out that say my pen is Huge with my business logo! To give out :)

  • @RH-zk8je
    @RH-zk8je 8 лет назад +5

    Would you plot things on a number line, with negative numbers indicating level of violation, positive numbers indicating benign-ness, and zero as the sweet spot where they overlap?
    Or would it be more like a two-dimensional graph, with X and Y as the two qualities?
    In other words, are the two qualities opposite (line) or complementary (graph)?
    If the answer is that they are complementary: Does the intensity of the two qualities affect the humor, or does it only matter that they balance? In other words, if something is both intensely violating and intensely benign, is it funnier than something mildly violating and mildly benign?
    Can something be very benign and very violating at the same time, or does that balance out to neutrality? Can anything be neither benign nor violating?
    Also, does humor arise from the duality of something being both benign and violating, or, instead, from the uncertainty about which category it fits into? When a joke has both qualities, does the listener assess it first one way, then the other, oscillating between the two, or is it more of an instant comprehension that both qualities are present?

  • @Tubingonline1
    @Tubingonline1 6 лет назад +10

    Someone really managed to dissect and analyse "humour" and what's more, it was funny as well! So the frog was not killed. Certainly benign!

    • @swine13
      @swine13 3 года назад

      Youd hope it was. I dont trust any comedy advice that comes from someone who doesn't make me laugh. I mean it's self evident right there, isn't it?

  • @cheunky
    @cheunky Месяц назад

    Lovely talk. Very benign😊

  • @QV1117
    @QV1117 2 года назад

    the only ted talk assignment for english i enjoyed

  • @m0000ry
    @m0000ry 6 лет назад

    SO SMART, SO SIMPLE

  • @alllifematters
    @alllifematters 4 года назад +1

    Aww, he is adorable :)

  • @ConceptHut
    @ConceptHut 4 года назад

    This was fantastic.

  • @alien2324
    @alien2324 4 года назад +4

    This was like a math lesson , I was left more confused

  • @jeandatnikka12
    @jeandatnikka12 11 лет назад

    This Is the best talk ever

  • @phyllishofberg2507
    @phyllishofberg2507 4 года назад +5

    "Tragedy is when I cut my finger. Comedy is when you fall into an open sewer and die." --Mell Brooks....A malign violation, and funnier because of it.

    • @DrJones20
      @DrJones20 Год назад

      Sure if you're a sadist. Are you?

  • @alianna8806
    @alianna8806 Год назад +1

    The opening statement let me know this video was made BC (before covid) 😆

  • @danaputera7197
    @danaputera7197 22 дня назад

    One thing is certain, it's hard and takes a genius to be able to explain humor humorously.

  • @hanselfinn8946
    @hanselfinn8946 3 года назад +2

    so every humor have a root to somekind of violation. thankyou

    • @elkerobi8737
      @elkerobi8737 3 года назад

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    • @DrJones20
      @DrJones20 Год назад

      I don't like that notion.

  • @gobi2792
    @gobi2792 4 года назад +6

    Me tells a joke
    People:-laughs
    Me:-tells the reason why we laugh
    People:-laughs

  • @lauradesommar434
    @lauradesommar434 4 месяца назад

    great talk!

  • @DrAdnan
    @DrAdnan 4 года назад +5

    Hopefully I can up my humor using this technique

    • @46Bax
      @46Bax 3 года назад +3

      Hopefully you can cause this comment wasn't funny at all

  • @danorion369
    @danorion369 4 года назад

    I had thus question in my meditation and got to think it thru. This is a great answer to the question albeit on the surface level because it more so defined whta humor is in our modern day culture, not necessarily the case for all humans in general. The answer is in the frequencies incase anyone's interested in knowing but it'll hurt a lil to get to the answer because it'll require ya to think a lil. Awesome video nonetheless.

  • @AliKhan-nq7hp
    @AliKhan-nq7hp 5 лет назад +1

    The moment he said start tickling, i was done with the video 😂

  • @pork43
    @pork43 5 лет назад +1

    this video is over 8 years old and i find it pretty interesting

  • @jorsc5158
    @jorsc5158 8 лет назад +85

    he totally paid people to laugh that hard in the audience, smart guy

    • @jorsc5158
      @jorsc5158 8 лет назад +7

      +Jordan Scruggs (jordan scruggs) HAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAH

    • @noahway13
      @noahway13 8 лет назад +21

      +Jor Sc (jordan scruggs) Just because you didn't get the jokes, it does not mean he had to pay people to laugh.

    • @fuckthismusic
      @fuckthismusic 8 лет назад +22

      +JustKeith His jokes are awesome,and it has nothing to do with the fact that I'm rich

    • @mollyprice3568
      @mollyprice3568 7 лет назад +3

      No he didn't. Go look-up TED cult.

    • @biglloyd5870
      @biglloyd5870 7 лет назад +4

      Jor Sc I was dying the whole time and I'm broke. And u can't b the funniest urself since ur here

  • @sambarger3339
    @sambarger3339 10 лет назад

    he said over a long period of time. as a child, depressed people laughed and had fun, but over time they lost it.

  • @ticomlabs
    @ticomlabs 5 лет назад

    Bravo, encore encore

  • @mylasolorio
    @mylasolorio Год назад

    Not the guy in the beginning starting to stand up, and upon seeing no one else stood up, sat back down. 💀

  • @daiphongnguyenvan3464
    @daiphongnguyenvan3464 3 года назад +4

    When you do an unacceptable thing in an acceptable way🙂

    • @DrJones20
      @DrJones20 Год назад +1

      Although what defines acceptable can be subjective.

  • @Toastmaster_5000
    @Toastmaster_5000 11 лет назад

    that last statement is true but so is the fact that you can only take offense to something, even if something is intended to insult you directly

  • @phongphong4640
    @phongphong4640 2 года назад

    This Boulder guy is very gifted at Not Funny. I hope he is an exception among the rest of Boulder guys.

  • @phil6217
    @phil6217 3 года назад +1

    6:33 somehow the missing of the hammer made this actually really funny

    • @phil6217
      @phil6217 3 года назад

      6:40 and this is even better

  • @backatitagainwiththewhitev3111
    @backatitagainwiththewhitev3111 8 лет назад

    WOW!

  • @AnnaMaledonPictureBookAuthor
    @AnnaMaledonPictureBookAuthor 5 лет назад +1

    Well... I should know something about that subject. My husband hurt his little toe this morning and our 4-year-old was laughing. When dad said: "this is NOT FUNNY", he, of course, laughed even more. On another note: it is somewhat difficult to laugh at the same things if you and your partner are from different countries. This is our case anyway. I find much more things funny than my husband.
    The funny thing is... my husband's sister just broke her toe recently too. Again! Awww! I'm so lucky that I'm not from toe-breaking family. That sucks big toe!

  • @kaoutermouslimhaliba7145
    @kaoutermouslimhaliba7145 4 года назад +1

    Sheldon cooper had his own theory to tell jokes and be humorous, he would love this vid

    • @swine13
      @swine13 3 года назад

      Sheldon Cooper isn't a real person, though

    • @kaoutermouslimhaliba7145
      @kaoutermouslimhaliba7145 3 года назад

      @@swine13 he was inspired out of a real one. That was not my point though.

  • @user-fs5fc1vv7y
    @user-fs5fc1vv7y 8 лет назад +2

    This theory is basically the Push Pull tactic in practice

  • @Spookspek
    @Spookspek 4 года назад +1

    6:31 Tbh, this made it funnier in a surreal way.

  • @mickeymuse2
    @mickeymuse2 16 дней назад

    I just gave a 3 hour lecture on comedy. I could've just showed them this video. 😆

  • @ncooty
    @ncooty 3 года назад

    @0:42: It doesn't "beg the question"; it raises the question. To "beg the question" is to commit a logical fallacy in which one assumes the conclusion. To raise a question is to pose it for consideration.

  • @josephtaub20
    @josephtaub20 Год назад +1

    This seems to describe Rodney Dangerfield perfectly: Unexpected horrible things alledgedly happening in the past to someone you know only because you see thembut barely know them so you know hey're unlikely to be truthfully hurt?

  • @mikenixo2500
    @mikenixo2500 4 года назад

    I'm just trying to get on to participate. If I'm not careful I could learn something. Someone please reply so I'll know if I'm here. Thanks.

  • @EliasMerz
    @EliasMerz 5 лет назад

    thats why i laughed so hard last friday

  • @Whitegoogle
    @Whitegoogle 3 года назад

    at the end i was expecting: "now please stand up"

  • @JxSTICK
    @JxSTICK Год назад +1

    HI I LIKE CATS, thank you for listening to my TED talk

  • @DenkyManner
    @DenkyManner 4 года назад

    What about the element of surprise? Of the benign violation also making a new unexpected kind of sense?

  • @abrohamproductions8263
    @abrohamproductions8263 4 года назад +15

    Talk Summary:
    Take a violation and make it sound casual or take something normal and make it catastrophic. Create a benign violation.

    • @swine13
      @swine13 3 года назад

      So Joe Wilkinson vs James Acaster. Gotcha.

  • @youliveonce3242
    @youliveonce3242 8 лет назад

    he's awsm....!!!

  • @Tm0g762
    @Tm0g762 12 лет назад

    @joshsarles Me too! I hate it when people say its impossible!

  • @theomegaconcern9564
    @theomegaconcern9564 4 года назад

    There's 12 comedy structures and 7 laughter triggers

  • @ThePillowGrabber
    @ThePillowGrabber 10 лет назад

    Me too - on the palms of my hands and the soles of my feet.

  • @TheAngryCanary
    @TheAngryCanary 9 лет назад +29

    why use the word violation? just say pattern mismatch. You can create a pattern mismatch through exaggerating something or minimizing it. Draw a human face. Give it a huge nose. Funny. Give it a small little chin. Funny. Its just a simple benign pattern mismatch. I reason that humans get pleasure out of pattern mismatches because we learn through identifying similarities and differences in patterns. So it would make sense for us to enjoy finding pattern mismatches and sharing these with friends. When its not so benign, the pattern mismatch still evokes curiosity and the need to discuss it.

    • @shadow_of_thoth
      @shadow_of_thoth 9 лет назад +5

      Because not everything is just a pattern mismatch. A violation can be a violation of your comfort zone, but still have a pattern. Like, if some creepy old man is licking his lips and breathing down your neck, then that's a violation. But if that creepy old man predictably opens his trench coat to flash you, and he's fully dressed with a flashlight, then it's benign. It ended the way you would expect, but it seemed like a violation at first. It would not have been funny had he actually been naked under there. Pattern mismatch would imply that something completely out of the ordinary should happen, which isn't what humor is a lot of the time.
      A lot of people also find dark humor funny. That's stuff that might simply be straight up violation to one group of people, but benign to another. Like racist jokes, rape jokes, or dead baby jokes. Not everyone finds those funny, but some people do. What is simple pattern mismatch to some people, is straight up violation to others. Violation covers everything under the same umbrella, so that the theory works just as well for any joke.

    • @TheAngryCanary
      @TheAngryCanary 9 лет назад +5

      I was just hopped up on coffee that day. Don't know why I even left that comment. Violation is fine. lol

    • @Keaze
      @Keaze 9 лет назад

      No Name Plenty of dark humor actually also relies on pattern mismatch. You're used to bad things being treated in a bad light so when they're not, it can be funny.

    • @YouShouldRepeatThat
      @YouShouldRepeatThat 9 лет назад

      Even if you were on a caffeine high while writing the comment, I think you were on to something. I watched a Vsauce video before this one discussing why things are funny and he mentioned how there is a theory that things are funny because they involve unexpected occurrences, just as a pattern mismatch is by nature an unexpected occurrence. With you describing the violation instead as a pattern mismatch, you unintentionally meshed the two theories together and provided an improved theory as to why things are funny.
      Also, side thought: could the guy's use of the word "violation" also be interpreted as a "violation of the expected"?

    • @TheHadMatters
      @TheHadMatters 8 лет назад +1

      +YouShouldRepeatThat 'could the guy's use of the word "violation" also be interpreted as a "violation of the expected"?'
      Yup, that is what it means. He very explicitly states that at 11:17, and it would not make any sense, if the term was limited to something like 'everything that causes someone else suffering.'
      Even with situations of physical violence, what is laughed about is that the person objected themselves to enduring pain, or that someone else did it, when both of these are things those people have been taught not to do, and we therefore do not want them to do. It is not the fact that pain is being endured that makes us laugh.

  • @BenCadetThePastafarian
    @BenCadetThePastafarian 8 лет назад +10

    does anyone else know what benign means?

    • @nizziozaphaux4398
      @nizziozaphaux4398 8 лет назад +6

      +Ben Cadet (the pastafarian) opposite of malignant

    • @WatermelonCatxd
      @WatermelonCatxd 8 лет назад +4

      +Nizzio Zaphaux and what does that mean

    • @nizziozaphaux4398
      @nizziozaphaux4398 8 лет назад +12

      malignant is being evil, while benign is being good. those are words of latin origins, so they are easy answers for latin languages speakers like me: in portuguese for example, we have the words "benigno" and "maligno", coming from the same latin roots but more commonly used than in english

    • @ShineSun
      @ShineSun 7 лет назад

      Nizzio Zaphaux , what is the meaning of the word benigno?

    • @Mygo666
      @Mygo666 7 лет назад +3

      Benign - not harmful in effect
      falling down stairs not being hurt
      Grandma falling down stairs and breaking an arm
      Moral benign
      Someone who deserves and can handdle what happened(buying oranges in a third world country where you earn 3-5x more)
      Someone who doesn't deserve it(locals having to pay more than rich tourists)

  • @ThePillowGrabber
    @ThePillowGrabber 10 лет назад

    It's still tickling yourself. But I get your point and it's true, too.

  • @nfcoard
    @nfcoard 10 лет назад +1

    I know that many dogs respond with excitement, friendliness and happiness when you laugh. But I don't know if they have a sense of humor. Dogs and many other animals can immediately know if you are feeling fear or feeling love or joy. No matter what your body language is or if you're back is turned to them a dog can sense if you're feeling fear or feeling happiness or love. They literally feel whatever emotion you are feeling. Most of us humans need body language or tone of voice indicators.