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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/12024-Inder-the-Unfluence.html
Comedy: June 21, 2023 Issue [#12024]




 This week: Inder the Unfluence
  Edited by: Robert Waltz
                             More Newsletters By This Editor  

Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

In wine there is wisdom, in beer there is Freedom, in water there is bacteria.
         —Benjamin Franklin

Writer's block is a fancy term made up by whiners so they can have an excuse to drink alcohol.
         —Steve Martin

I drink to make other people more interesting.
         —Ernest Hemingway

Disclaimer: Some of those quotes may have been misattributed. This does not make them any less true.


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Letter from the editor

A very long time ago, I went to a bar with a group of friends, and friends of friends, one of whom had just started a new job. New Job Guy (NJG) had promised to pick up the tab, as it was a very good New Job. So, naturally, I indulged.

Next thing I knew, one of my friends was peeling my face off the table, fingers entwined in my hair. "Waltz!"

"Huh?"

"NJG just bailed."

"And?"

"He didn't pay."

"And?"

"They want us to settle the tab and none of us brought money."

How this was my problem is unclear to this day, decades later. It was even more unclear at the time, as the friend with her fingers in my hair attempted to explain the situation to me. Apparently, I was the only one with a credit card.

What is different between now and then is that, now, I can laugh about it taking ten years to pay off that tab, or about never seeing NJG again. None of which might have happened if I'd been eating salads instead of throwing back shots of tequila.

The thing is, as reckless as it sometimes is to overindulge in mind-altering substances, the results can often be a source of comedy. Some writers—Hunter S. Thompson comes to mind—made an entire career out of it.

"In vino veritas" is a shortened version of something Pliny the Elder wrote, some 2,000 years ago. It translates as "In wine, there is truth." Perhaps there is something to this phrase reverberating from ancient times, but I can also assert: in vino comoedias—in wine, there is comedy.

And look, it's been a very long time since I studied Latin, so don't tell me I've got that ablative wrong or whatever. Never let pedantism get in the way of a joke.

Point being, sure, there's something to be said for moderation.

But where's the humor in that?


Editor's Picks

Let's take a bleary look at some funnies:

 Ode to Guacamole  [18+]
Drunken ode to guacamole and tequila.
by Katya the Poet


 
Too Much Turkey  [18+]
Poetry too many drinks.Australian beer featured.Hahn Light,Emu Bitter,Victoria Bitter
by Marnie Jane Cavazzi


 The Last Stand  [13+]
The King awakens from a drunken stupor.
by vastowen456


 Ducks and Them!  [18+]
The temperatures are in the 100s, the sci-fi in the 80s - but the sheets are in the wind.
by Kai Adamson


 
Go Home Rainbow  [13+]
You're Drunk
by Fivesixer


 
Odor Up  [13+]
Drinking with the boss.
by Words Whirling 'Round


 Red, White and Blow  [13+]
When bad decisions lead to great stories.
by Curt Woodie


 
Starting Over  [13+]
Batman is having a rough day
by Lornda

 
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Word from Writing.Com

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Ask & Answer

Last time, in "Sarcasm, I explained how sarcasm can be comedy.

🌕 HuntersMoon : Thank you, Robert, for finally making the case for moving sarcasm into the realm of humor. Yeah, right *Laugh*

         Sure, no problem.


Beholden : Thank you very much for including my short story, The Mad Tailor, among your Editor's Picks.

         Sure, no problem.


Annette : You say, "it's sometimes possible to dodge or deflect the bite of sarcasm. I find one method that's usually effective is to pretend you didn't pick up on the sarcasm."
I don't even have to pretend. I seriously don't know when people are making jokes most of the time. I tend to take everyone serious until they prove me wrong. Once I figure out that their words aren't describing what they say, I shift 180 degrees to, "Every single thing you say is a lie and I don't believe a word of it."
Apparently, part of that comes from growing up in a low-context culture: Germany. Even among Germans, I am extra dull when it comes to figuring out if something that was said was a joke. Think Drax, that's how literal I take things said to me.


         "Nothing goes over my head. My reflexes are too fast. I would catch it."


And that's it for me for June! See you next month. Until then,

LAUGH ON!!!



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