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How to make your writing funnier - Cheri Steinkellner

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    Did you ever notice how many
    jokes start with, "Did you ever notice?"
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    And what's the deal with,
    "What's the deal?"
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    There's a lot of funny to be found
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    by simply noticing the ordinary,
    everyday things
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    you don't ordinarily notice everyday.
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    So if you'd like to add a little humor
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    to that story, or speech,
    or screenplay you're writing,
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    here are a few tips and tricks
    for finding the funny.
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    All great storytelling,
    including comedy writing,
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    consists of a handful
    of basic ingredients:
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    who,
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    what,
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    when,
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    where,
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    why,
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    and how.
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    Writers have been asking these questions
    since at least the 1st century BC,
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    yet none can be answered
    with a simple yes or no.
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    They demand details,
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    and the more specific the details,
    the funnier the story.
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    Let's start with the who,
    the comedic character.
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    Think about the books, TV shows,
    and movies that make you laugh.
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    They're usually filled with funny types,
    or archetypes.
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    The know-it-all,
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    the loveable loser,
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    the bad boss,
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    the neurotic,
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    the airhead.
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    Incidentally, these are all stock
    characters found in Commedia Dell'Arte,
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    or the artists comedy
    of late Renaissance Italy,
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    and they have yet to get old.
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    The Commedia rule for creating comic
    characters is find the flaw,
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    then play it up.
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    Or you can try playing with opposites.
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    When the smartest guy in the room
    does the stupidest thing,
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    or the doofus outwits the brainiac,
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    we tend to laugh because
    we didn't see that coming.
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    Ancient Greek funnyman Aristotle
    is said to have said,
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    "The secret to humor is surprise."
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    This surprise,
    or incongruity theory of humor,
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    says we laugh at things
    that seem out of place
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    or run up against our expectations,
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    like a frog dating a pig,
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    or a lizard selling insurance,
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    a baby disco dancing,
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    a nun disco dancing,
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    a cat disco dancing.
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    Actually, a baby, a nun, or a cat
    doing pretty much anything,
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    especially involving disco.
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    One fun way to find incongruities
    is by drawing connections.
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    Actually drawing them with a mind map.
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    Start small.
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    Pick a word,
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    I choose pickle.
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    Jot it down, then quick as you can,
    try making connections.
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    What do pickles make me think of?
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    Who eats pickles?
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    What treasured pickle memories
    do I have from childhood?
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    Another great way to generate
    comedic material
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    is to shift from observation
    to imagination.
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    Try going from "what is"
    to "what if?"
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    Like, what if instead of a horse,
    for example,
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    you just had a pair of coconuts?
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    Okay, let's think of some other
    memorable moments in history,
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    literature,
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    or film.
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    Now, what if they featured coconuts?
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    Get wild, let it go.
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    Even if an idea seems overdone,
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    or too obvious,
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    or just plain dumb,
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    try jotting it down, anyway.
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    What's obvious to you
    may not be to the next person.
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    And the opposite of the dumbest idea
    might just turn out to be the smartest.
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    What about all that dumb stuff
    that happens in real life?
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    Have you ever noticed how much comedy
    revolves around things
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    that irritate, frustrate,
    and humiliate us?
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    Will Rodgers said, "Everything's funny
    as long as it happens to somebody else."
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    So if you're having a crummy morning,
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    imagine it happening to a character
    you're writing about,
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    and by afternoon, you may at least
    get a funny story out of it.
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    Once you've got your characters
    and story,
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    here are a few quick and easy comedy
    writing tricks to make them zing.
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    The rule of three,
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    or zig zig zag.
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    Try setting up an expected pattern,
    zig zig,
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    then flip it, zag.
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    A rabbi, a priest, and a coconut
    walk into a bar.
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    The punchline rule says put your punch
    at the end of the line.
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    A rabbi, a priest, and a coconut
    walk into a disco.
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    That brings up the rule of K.
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    For some reason, words with a k-sound
    catch our ears
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    and are considered comical.
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    Coconut,
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    disco,
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    pickles,
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    crickets?
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    Okay, so we don't always get the laugh.
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    Humor is subjective.
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    Comedy is trial and error.
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    Writing is rewriting.
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    Just keep trying.
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    Find the flaws,
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    discover the details,
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    insert incongruities,
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    incorporate k-words,
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    and remember the most important rule
    of writing funny:
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    have fun.
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    As Charles Dickins said,
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    "There is nothing in the world so
    irresistibly contagious
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    as laughter and good humor."
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    And disco.
Title:
How to make your writing funnier - Cheri Steinkellner
Description:

View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-to-make-your-writing-funnier-cheri-steinkellner

Did you ever notice how many jokes start with “Did you ever notice?” And what’s the deal with “What’s the deal?” There’s a lot of funny to be found simply by noticing the ordinary, everyday things you don’t ordinarily notice every day. Emmy Award-winning comedy writer Cheri Steinkellner offers a few tips and tricks for finding the funny in your writing.

Lesson by Cheri Steinkellner, animation by Anton Bogaty.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:07
  • 4.40 Charles Dickins ---> Charles Dickens

English subtitles

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