Monday, April 11, 2005

Pearl Gross: Comedy on a Higher Octave


Watch the video

Is she a product of the sterile, insular monoculture of the American south?

Is she such a hard-core follower of her religion, that any attempts to produce funny, original material is stifled and deemed inappropriate by traditional Christian morals and values?

Is she just naturally unfunny?

Is she one of Jay Leno's writers?

Whatever she is, I find myself fascinated with her.

New Yorker Cartoon Editor on humor: (Found via Boing Boing)
The experience of humor is similar to the “ah-ha” moment of two things coming together. For humor, two things have to come together to produce the experience of laughter. Normal and abnormal; these things reconciled in a moment, and usually it’s a normal situation violated in some way that we can tolerate. You have to have something normal that becomes abnormal, or something that looks abnormal and then become normal.

So, normal: there’s a guy on the phone, saying “No, Thursday’s out. How about never - is never good for you?” Everything is normal - the office, the syntax of politeness - and yet the message is rude. We have a violation where we have a
normal situation.

Clearly a subject Ms. Gross has studied extensively.

Watch the video
Link to New Yorker article

Monday, April 04, 2005

Pin dropping can be hazardous

I'd like to apologize for my long absence, I know it sucks when bloggers go for long periods without providing any new content, so from now on I'll do my best to update this site more regularly - I've said this to myself before, but putting it in writing and posting it here gives it more weight.

Lots of thanks to Gill at Sometimes its Peaceful for making this blog "The Blog of the Day". And thanks to TheWeblogProject for linking to me in a post about people talking about the project.

I've been reading blogs for a long time, but I'm still relatively new at the content producing side of things, and I realize that this blog still has a ways to go. So feel free to leave any comments about things you like or don't like. It's very helpful.