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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/6460
Comedy: July 30, 2014 Issue [#6460]

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Comedy


 This week: The Line
  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

There's only one true superpower amongst human beings, and that is being funny. People treat you differently if you can make them laugh.
         -Jeff Garlin

I got attention by being funny at school, pretending to be retarded, and jumping around with a deformed hand.
         -Leonardo DiCaprio


Word from our sponsor

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Letter from the editor

The Line


There is a Line.

It's not a pick-up line, or a queue, but instead, it's the line between being funny and being an asshole.

It's easy to cross that line inadvertently.

It's harder to stick one toe across the line, tap it a few times, and dare people to be offended.

Now, don't get me wrong, here - we have no right to never be offended. Our reactions are our own responsibility, and some of us need to get tougher skins, it's true.

But as a humorist, you need to know where the line is between humor and offense, and it's not always easy to see.

I don't really want to fill this space with examples of jokes that crossed the line, but I'm sure you've heard them. Racist jokes, sexist jokes, jokes that widen the gap between people rather than doing what comedy is supposed to do, which is to give people a shared experience. Sure, in an audience of nothing but men, you can probably get a few laughs out of a sexist joke, and perhaps it's a bonding between them, but it also emphasizes any differences between men and women, and maybe some of the men involved will end up thinking "well, hey, there's a joke about it, so maybe women DO belong in the kitchen."

Of course, there are differences between men and women, and differences between people of various backgrounds, but it's one thing to celebrate such differences and recognize the contribution that people of a different world-view could have, and it's another thing entirely to dismiss their ideas because they're not in the local majority.

I'm not advocating rampant political correctness, here. There's no humor at all in that. But before you make a joke about someone's race, ethnicity, gender, or sleeping habits, just think - is it something that they actually have control over, like an addiction to video games, or is it something about what they are, like being gay, or black?

To me, that's how to find the Line. And if you find yourself having to think about it too much, maybe do some self-reflection before you alienate people.


Editor's Picks

To make up for the decidedly un-funny editorial this week, here are some funny things:

How to Make a PB & J Sandwich  [E]
An exercise to see if I have what it takes for tech writing. It was fun!
by HawaiianPeach


 How To Find Things In Your Room  [E]
A humorous look at looking for things
by christofyre


 
Art  [13+]
A 55-word story
by Tiggy-Cheers for House Martell


 ON HAVING A COLD  [E]
Just wondering aloud, really!
by spidernan


 The Evil One  [13+]
Dedicated to a really sweet co-worker who calls herself the "Evil One"
by Annie


 Invalid Item  []

by A Guest Visitor


 Daddy Hutchens's Birthday Pies  [E]
I nearly hung up... then I decided we'd have pie instead.
by Jay's debut novel is out now!

 
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Word from Writing.Com

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Ask & Answer

Last time, in "Weather or Not, I talked about the weather.

Merry Mumsy : Hmmmm . . . some follow-up duck comments in the newsletter. I just reread Catcher in the Rye (it was for book club - don't judge). The ducks were totally not funny. They were an allegory for being anchorless. Ha ha.

Perhaps they just needed anchor management classes.


brom21 : The weather is the famous conversation cliché. Sports is another common one. I was embarrassed when I learned the difference between climate and the weather. Thanks for the newsletter and keep on chillin.’ (pun intended)

I'm totally lost in sports conversations. "Hey, how about them Cowboys!" "Oh, yeah, I really like the big hats and intricate boots."


taliah_l: If you were hoping for an insightful comment, I'm sorry. I just wanted to say that "kilometerage" completely cracked me up!

That's insightful. Also, go figure England - distances are in miles, while petrol is sold by the litre.


And that's it for me for July - see you in four weeks, if I don't melt from the heat by then. In the meantime...

LAUGH ON!!!

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