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Sam Redlark's avatar

One thing that blind-sided me for absolutely ages, as a flailing amateur writer, and that seems to be a common blind spot, especially among writers of pompous vampire fiction, is the failure to grasp that stories that are absent humour or bathos never feel entirely genuine. Humour, whether we accept it or not, arises in all facets of our lives, from the prosaic to the undeniably tragic, where it lies in the eye of the beholder. It is admittedly less funny if you are the person who has just walked, face-first into a metal pole, causing a dulled chime to ring out, alerting others to your humiliation.

To ignore something that is so pervasive is to deny characters their humanity. I can think of few contemporary writers who grasp this better than the comedian and film-maker Louis CK. The episode of his show 'Louis' where he accidentally takes a duckling on a tour of US military bases in Afghanistan is absurd, sad and heart-warming television.

I used to sit in a staffroom, alongside people who were treating terminal cancer patients. Among those who were unable to emotionally detach themselves from their work, there was a dark undercurrent of humour. They weren't making fun of their patients. They were laughing at death. You should laugh at death. Catching a reflection of your bared-teeth in the down-swing of his scythe is the best that any of us can hope for. If I were to have fallen similarly unwell, I would have trusted any one of those men and women with my own treatment. It was their privately-voiced humour that enabled them to function competently, professionally and emphatically within that setting.

The recent death of a man who was pummelled by a robot arm on a factory production line is both tragic and horrifying. It is also, by some cognitively dissonant sleight of hand, funny, though the humour arises not from the plight of the victim, but from the absurdity of a mechanical servitor having been insufficiently programmed to distinguish between the bodies of its superior creators and the boxes of food that it was built to handle. In the mind of the machine, both are the same thing.

The last image I downloaded to my meme folder consists of a composite photo – a before and after: On the left, there is a faded sepia portrait of a man in military uniform, his face clouded by a pronounced watermark. The person who posted the image identifies this man as the only picture they have of their late uncle. On the right is a restoration of the photo, undertaken by AI and stable diffusion, which has re-rendered it as a black and white, anime style portrait of the man, still in his uniform, but now sporting a giant pair of fake-looking breasts.

The original photo is of a man who served his country in the armed forces – who may have even died in the service of his country. That part of his life remains impervious to easy humiliation. The humour lies in the limitations of the AI that mapped the faded contours implicit in the photo, but failed to understand the context of the image, and posthumously gifted the man the kind of giant siliconised rack that was once commonly sighted on episodes of 'Baywatch'. Additional layers of humour could develop if, following the extinction of our species, the image is uncovered by alien archaeologists who assume that it is the archetypal form of our species.

In all but the most crude humour, the subject of the joke is seldom the target. If I reflexively laugh at a routine that is politically incorrect, which is currently every joke outside of Hannah Gadsby special, then it is often the absurdity of the attitudes or the situation that is being expressed that is the source of that laughter. A hallmark of the comedian, Stewart Lee, are routines that are subversions of the openly racist humour of the previous century.

I think that writing humour requires empathy. You cannot effectively articulate, in humorous form, the ridiculous nature of someone, real or fictional, unless you can see mirrored in them, your own ridiculous nature.

Now that an agent has come forward and confirmed that blow jobs are in circulation as literary currency (I had always assumed this was the case) I am interested to know how many it would take to sell a novel penned by a white, middle-aged woman, if one is deemed to be insufficient. Does the amount vary between the small and large publishing operations? Does the amount of agents who are willing to provide blow jobs to publishers impact upon the overall market value. As the economies of nations teeter on the brink of balkanising into tiers of bartering and dystopian government-run crypto schemes, I think this represents fertile ground for economists.

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Gerald Cotts's avatar

When I read “orientate” I reach for my Luger. And sometimes a Luger really is a Luger, as Freud might have said. My father, a Berlin raised psychiatrist with a very good sense of humor, viewed change, societal, language, cultural, as subjects to study rather than rail against. Yet even presumably college educated tv news anchors can no longer pronounce et cetera correctly.

And, to cover their asses, they insert “potentially” whenever possible, as in “potentially it might rain tomorrow.” Fortunately I gave up my Luger and don’t want to die of apoplexy.

Sorry you don’t abide jokes well. Agreed, situational humor is usually superior, but a good joke teller, in my book, is a connoisseur and only tells jokes with a great twist or revelation in the punchline:

Young British lieutenant, newly arrived at a Kashmir hill station, paying his respects to the Colonel: “Sorry to hear you recently buried your wife.” Colonel: “Had to...dead you know.” 60 years after my father told us this joke, my siblings and I still use the punchline to get a laugh from one another.

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