To Find Out if a Joke Needs Honing...
Say it out loud. If that works, tell it to a friend. If they laugh you’re on to a
winner.
xxv
If, when you start saying your joke out loud, it comes out woolly and you can’t
even get the set-up right let alone the punchline then what you’ve probably got is
a joke idea rather than a joke.
That’s when honing comes into its own and you can try any or all of the
following on it...
To Find The Central Kernel of a Joke...
Ask yourself, ‘What is it that makes this funny?’
For example a friend of mine wrote a very sick joke about the terrible fire
tragedy that was in the news that week. The joke ran that if the survivors of the
tragedy had a reunion they’d call it ‘Friends Reignited.’ He loved his joke but
thought people would be offended by it.
I told him that the central kernel of the joke was sound-alike/word play
Reignited/Reunited. So this joke doesn’t have to be about that particular fire
tragedy it can be about anything to do with fire. So we changed it to...
When arsonists have a reunion they
call it Friends Reignited.
Lovely. No insulting fire tragedy survivors (or their relations) just a nice word
play gag.
Basically once you recognise the central kernel you can change the joke as long
as you stay true to it.
I was trying to write some jokes for an MP. I won’t name the town, let’s say he
comes from Anytown. The first line I came up with was:
You need someone to represent Anytown which is a bit tatty, run down and
problems with drugs, alcohol and underage sex.
Here I am!
Obviously my MP isn’t going to say that. It attacks both him and the town he
represents. The central kernel of the joke is mistaking the town’s problems with
his personal problems.
After much thought (I did agonise over this one) I came up with...
I’m MP for Anytown
Wrongly assumed to be a bit tatty, run down, problems with alcohol... But
enough about me...
Just by adding the ‘wrongly assumed’ it takes the sting out of the gag and makes
it harmless but hopefully still funny; obviously the ‘underage sex’ line had to go
too!
I once wrote a joke for a student in my stand-up class who was doing an act as a
monk. The joke ran:
As a monk it can be very difficult going years without sex... But it does help
me understand the married men in my congregation.
The first time he told it like that and it got a laugh. The next time he came to
class he changed the wording to:
I’m a monk and I’m celibate. Yes I’m celibate, like the married men in the
audience.
It didn’t get a laugh. The central kernel of that joke is a play on the words ‘go
years without sex’. The vague wording allows us to link monks to the supposed
frustrations of married men. Saying the word celibate is too strong, it implies a
philosophy and commitment and deadens the nuance.
So, when you are honing, always remember to stick to the central kernel (and
keep your old versions) because sometimes it’s easy to forget what was funny
about the joke in the first place.
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