Chapter Two (THEORY): How To
Use Your Brain’s Background
Processing Function
To think is to practice brain chemistry.
Deepak Chopra
I’m always telling my students that if they put in some hard work joke writing,
when they go and have a break, their minds will keep working on it, even while
they consciously think or talk about something else. How fantastic is that? This
is what I call background processing.
It really works!
Think about it really hard for a while, then forget about it and it will come
to you.
Don Draper (Madmen)
Reece Shearsmith and Steve Pemberton, writers of hit British comedy League of
Gentlemen say, that despite going to an office every day, their breakthroughs
‘very rarely happen when you’re actually in the room thinking about it.’
Rather, they happen ‘in the middle of the night or while you’re at the gym.’
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I’ve heard it all before. Students often tell me that they put in hours of joke
writing to no effect then one came while they were watching telly. Of course it
did! But I am certain that without putting in the initial work, without exercising
your joke writing muscles, the joke in front of the telly wouldn’t have happened.
The brain is amazing. I like to think of it as like one of those early computers,
where you put a card in one end, it goes through all sorts of whirring calculations
and then the result (in our case, a joke) pops out the other end. The weird thing is
that you don’t know that your brain has been busy working away, clicking and
popping, so it will seem to come from nowhere. That’s why you must always
keep a notebook handy, you never know when it’s going to happen.
Before I became a stand-up comic I never wrote a single, what I call a proper
joke.
Creativity (are you ready for this?)
is dreaming while you’re awake.
Robert Mankoff
I was great on the spontaneous, you had to be there type gags but I always
wondered who sat down and wrote jokes the moment a news story hit. Not
knowing it would eventually be me! The reason that I never wrote a proper joke
before I became a stand-up is that I’d never actually set my brain that task, I’d
never sat down and tried, I’d never worked on it.
The lesson? You need to show your brain you mean business, get it fully
engaged and put in some regular work.
Jerry Seinfeld is said to have had a calendar that he put a big red X on every day
that he did his writing tasks. ‘After a few days you’ll have a chain,’ he said. ‘Just
keep at it and the chain will grow longer every day. You’ll like seeing that chain,
especially when you get a few weeks under your belt. Your only job is to not
break the chain.’
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Seinfeld, by setting himself the target of writing every day, is giving his brain
lots of time to background process, re-work and re-write. He is not freaking if he
doesn’t write a joke on a particular day. His aim is just to write.
Every now and then go away, have a little
relaxation for when you come back to your
work your judgement will be surer.
Leonardo Da Vinci
The next thing is that he’s turning up for the results. I quoted examples above
where things just pop into your head but sometimes your head is so full of telly
programmes and rock music that it’s not until you look at something again that
you can see where the joke is. That means re-reading everything. I use a
highlighter pen to highlight the merest glimmer of a gag, so by the third re-
reading I am just going through the highlighted bits. Often when I go back to
things I see both new ideas and how the old ideas can be used. Obviously my
brain’s been working away, background processing and is now presenting me
with the results.
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