Sunday, July 24, 2011

Finding A Great Joke Book

By Marlin Olguin


In order to hone your skills as a joke teller, in order to sharpen your wit and keep a nice database of great jokes for any occasion in your head, it's wise to, well, do some studying, you might say. You'd be surprised how many new ideas can come your way while just flipping through a humor book or two. Here's where to start.

The Classic Comedians

The classic stand up comics have put out some interesting work, both as biographers and in simply collecting their favorite jokes. Recommended would be How to Tell Dirty Jokes and Influence People by Lennie Bruce so far as non-fiction goes, while anything with jokes by Rodney Dangerfield or Don Rickles is great for humor's sake. Anything by Steven Wright is gold, too.

Standard Joke Books

The goal here is to locate those diamonds in the rough. Most joke books are three hundred recycled yuks that were barely funny the very first time you heard them, but there are several good niche joke books out there. 100% Blond Jokes is like an encyclopedia of jokes that you could rephrase and make use of undertake a laugh at the expense of the foolish folks a highly effective life!

Comedy DVDs

You may already know, it's all in the delivery. The basic concept is to remember: You're not funny, the material is. Rely on the joke to be funny and don't ham it up. If you look at the delivery of Mitch Hedberg, he simply relies on the jokes. However, the rare performer has the capacity to take even lesser material and make it funny with the right delivery, but generally, you'll find the delivery in the actual material.




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