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What's On In Goa:
* Oct 11: Konkani translation of Satre book, Alliance Francaise
* Oct 12: History Reading (Farar Far by Dr Pratima Kamat, Fundacao 5pm
* Oct 12: Goa Orchestra performs at the Kala (Corelli, Bach)
* Oct 15: Magic in town... Illusion India show, Panjim then Vasco
* Mid-Oct: 2-day ornithologists workshop, Bondla southernbirdwing.com
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>From ABC news:
 
Buck Wolf is entertainment producer at ABCNEWS.com. 

Oct. 8 — Did you hear the one about the world's
greatest joke? It's not funny. 
 
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

'If That's the Best Joke …'     
  
No kidding — last week British scientists announced
they had found the world's greatest joke, and this
wasn't just idle chatter around the Bunsen burner. 
The British Association for the Advancement of Science
examined some 40,000 jokes submitted over the Internet
from 70 countries.

After a year of government-financed research, Richard
Wiseman of the University of Hertfordshire told the
wisecrack that he claims has the best chance of
working with any audience around the world. 

If you've heard it already, don't spoil the punch
line: 

Two hunters are out in the woods when one of them
collapses. He doesn't seem to be breathing and his
eyes are glazed. The other man pulls out his phone and
calls emergency services and gasps to the operator:
"My friend is dead! What can I do?" 

The operator in a calm, soothing voice replies: "Take
it easy. I can help. First, let's make sure he's
dead." There is a silence, then a shot is heard. 

Back on the phone, the hunter says, "OK, now what?" 

Did you laugh? I didn't, nor did any of the working
comics and comedy writers I contacted. In fact, the
only thing British scientists may have conclusively
proven is that maybe they really are eggheads. 

‘If That’s the Best Joke …’ 

"If that's the best joke in the world, then I've never
had a face-lift," says veteran comic Phyllis Diller,
85, who retired from live performances last year.

Back in the 1950s, Diller became one of the first
full-time female stage comics. 

"Think of me as a sex symbol for men who don't give a
damn," she'd tell audiences in her heyday — back when
Bob Hope specials and Dean Martin Celebrity Roasts
were the hottest thing on TV.

"I'm an old lady. Few things still shock me," Diller
says. "But what kind of scientist thinks he can
explain laughter? 

"I can think of a disease or two that might be more
worthy of a government research grant. Can't you?" 

Still, if Wiseman wants to get into the giggle
business, he should learn the first rule: Comedy is
not pretty, especially if you think you're funny and
you're not. 

So here's what some real comedians think of Wiseman's
research:

Comics Roast Egghead 

"I'd have to politely suggest to Dr. Wiseman that he
stick to his day job … We politely refer to some guys
as a N.G.N.A — Nice Guy, No Act."
— Eddie Brill, booker for comedians, Late Show With
David Letterman 

"If the British are spending money on this, God knows
what else they're spending it on … The joke isn't
funny. It isn't even in the ballpark of funny. 'Two
Jews walk into a bar without a punch line' is
funnier." 

— Lewis Black, commentator, The Daily Show on Comedy
Central 

"We now know why there are no rocket scientists — or
any scientists, for that matter — on Hollywood
Squares."
— Dom DeLuise, who says the hardest part of working on
Hollywood Squares is "squeezing your butt into those
little spaces." 

"This is a joke about a man who kills his friend. The
really funny thing is that this joke wouldn't work if
the two hunters were women. Now, I wish science could
explain that." 
— Suzie Essman, who's appearing this week in HBO's
Curb Your Enthusiasm and Comedy Central's Crank
Yankers 

"That joke is such a bomb, the government is
threatening to use it against Iraq." 
— Jeff Gurian, comedy writer for Friars Club Roasts,
Joan Rivers, and Rodney Dangerfield 

"I could make that joke funny, but only if I used
obscenities every three words." 
— Gilbert Gottfried, stand-up comic and voice of the
AFLAK duck in TV commercials 

"Sure, Dr. Wiseman can find the funniest joke, but can
he screw in a light bulb? I hear the second funniest
joke is his resume." 
— Malcolm Kuschner, speechwriter, author of Public
Speaking for Dummies 

"What's funny is that hunters don't carry cell phones.
That's a stupid joke! And it's long!" 
— Mario Cantone, stand-up comic who appears regularly
on HBO's Sex and the City as Anthony, Charlotte's
frenetic gay friend 

"Scientists have once again proven they are the utmost
boring people on earth." 
— Carol Montgomery, Las Vegas-based comic 

"Whoever told that joke was wasting his breath … and
that was no great loss, either."
— Groucho Marx interpreter Frank Ferrante, imagining
what Groucho would say 

"This study was conducted on the Internet … I don't
believe anything on the Internet. If you're reading my
comments, I probably didn't say any of this." 
— Ellen Cleghorne, former Saturday Night Live cast
member 

"It sounds like they polled their lab monkeys, instead
of people with a sense of humor." 
— Barry Dougherty, comedy writer and author of How To
Do It Standing-Up … The Friars Club Guide To Being A
Comic, A Cut-Up, A Card, Or A Clown 

"This is the kind of research you do when you graduate
last in your class." 
— Lenny Marcus, a computer programmer turned "Geek
Comic," who recently appeared at the Montreal Comedy
Festival 

"That's the kind of joke that must be written in
prison. No self-respecting stand-up comic would use
it. My mother might like it. In fact, I'm going to
call her and tell it to her." 
— Eddie Ifft, New York-based stand-up comic who's
appeared on Comedy Central's Premium Blend 

"I can absolutely guarantee that's not the greatest
joke. I wrote a better one last week: 85-year-old
Phyllis Diller has a stalker. Not to worry, he's in a
walker." 
— Phyllis Diller 

 
 
More on the British Humor Study

In a project described as the largest-ever scientific
study into humor, the British Association for the
Advancement of Science asked Internet users around the
world to submit their favorite jokes and rate the
funniness of other people's offerings. 

After examining 40,000 jokes from 70 countries and 2
million critiques researchers found found significant
differences between nations in the types of jokes they
found funny. 

People from the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia and
New Zealand preferred gags involving word play, such
as: 

PATIENT: "Doctor, I've got a strawberry stuck up my
bum." 

DOCTOR: "I've got some cream for that." 

Americans and Canadians favored jokes where people
were made to look stupid. 

TEXAN: "Where are you from?" 

HARVARD GRAD: "I come from a place where we do not end
our sentences with prepositions." 

TEXAN: "OK — where are you from, jackass?" 

Europeans Dig Surreal Gags

Meanwhile, many Europeans liked gags that were surreal
or made light of serious subjects such as illness,
death and marriage: 

A patient says, "Doctor, last night I made a Freudian
slip. I was having dinner with my mother-in-law and
wanted to say: 'Could you please pass the butter?' 

"But instead I said: 'You silly cow, you have
completely ruined my life.'" 

Marriage-mocking also featured in the top American
joke: 

"A man and a friend are playing golf one day. One of
the guys is about to chip onto the green when he sees
a long funeral procession on the road next to the
course. 

"He stops in mid-swing, takes off his golf cap, closes
his eyes, and bows down in prayer. His friend says:
'Wow, that is the most thoughtful and touching thing I
have ever seen. You are truly a kind man.' 

"The man then replies: 'Yeah, well, we were married 35
years.'" 

In Scotland, Death Earns Laughs 

Death earned big laughs in Scotland: 

"I want to die peacefully in my sleep like my
grandfather. Not screaming in terror like his
passengers." 

And animals figured prominently. Take the No. 1 joke
in England: 

"Two weasels are sitting on a bar stool. One starts to
insult the other one. He screams, 'I slept with your
mother!' 

"The bar gets quiet as everyone listens to see what
the other weasel will do. 

"The first again yells, 'I SLEPT WITH YOUR MOTHER!' 

"The other says: 'Go home, Dad, you're drunk.'" 

Germans Laugh Most 

The survey revealed other fun facts: 

•  Of the countries rating the highest number of
jokes, Germans, perhaps surprisingly, laughed the
most. Canadians laughed least. 

•  If you want to tell a funny animal joke, make it a
duck. 

•  The most frequently submitted joke, at 300 times,
was: "What's brown and sticky? A stick." Researchers
said no one ever found it funny. 

— Reuters  
 
 
  
 


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