do americans, truly understand the british sense of humour
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Considering shows like Fawlty Towers and movies like Monty Python and the Holy Grail are among my favorite comedies of all time, I like to think I understand it. However, I still think Benny Hill and Mr. Bean blow chunks.
Total agreement mate.
Also I find Mrs Browns Boys about as funny as putting my knob-end in a shredder. How this pile of turd gets called comedy and gets the reviews it does is beyond me, its pump!
Same can be said for a lot of other British so called comedy TV. Its scripted, cliqued, none funny bum droppings.
On the other hand Stand up comedy tends to be different. Programmes like "8 Out of 10 Cats" and "Who’s Line is it Anyway" are a rate laugh with real comedians making *kitten* up on the spot.
Americans don’t get it all wrong, The Simpsons is a good example. Lots of tongue in cheek and piss taking going on in that. The original Airplane, Police Squad are brilliant.
When all's said and done IMO the best all time comedy has got to be a Brit and Yank double act. Mr Laurel and Mr Hardy please take a standing ovation.
Even after all these years you still have the ability to make me choke with laughter and fall off the sofa crying like a lunatic. Genius…..
So yes I think some Americans most defiantly do get our sense of humour. And some Brits can laugh at some bloke dressed as a woman saying “Feck” a lot.
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Arrogance is unattractive in most countries, is it not?0
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^^ 100%!
I personally am so happy Americans enjoy british and especially Aussie comedy!
I had no idea that some of our most obscure comedies were popular in the states.... ie. "We can be heroes'' & ''Kath and Kim''.
Im all for uniserval comedy!! I love American, Candadian, British, New Zealand, European comedies of all sorts...
We all need a bit of understanding worldwide of our cultures...what better way than laughing?0 -
Canadians are funnier than both so who cares0
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walkonfire5 wrote: »Your thoughts, and experience On this
I don't think you can generalize. Some of us do, some of us don't. Everyone has a different sense of humor. I die laughing at British TV shows and films, but my husband doesn't think they're funny. The things that make him laugh make me roll my eyes.0 -
In my experience, we Brits often have a saracstic and very dry sense of humor, which I don't think always translates well; like, sometimes it's almost as if Americans (and some other nationalities too) are still waiting for the punchline when it's been said, because of our penchant for deadpan, straight-faced delivery. I used to date a Canadian guy who didn't understand a lot of my humor and I've had American friends who I had to explain some jokes to when they weren't what you might call 'obvious jokes'. With some notable exceptions, I also think British comics are more willing to make risqué/controversial jokes about certain subjects, especially religion, probably because we're far more cynical about faith here. This is of course a generalisation and just my perception, there are hilarious people - and some so unfunny you may as well ask a door knob for a joke - from all over the world.0
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do americans, truly understand the british sense of humour
Sure, I don't think there's any real difference. Beyond specific vocabulary and some cultural references.
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I am rather partial to British humor. Could be b/c I spent 2 years there as a kid, but I think I would have grown up to prefer dry, subtle wit regardless.0
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I was friends with a british gale I swear she had no sence of humor she was way to serious0
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Understand it? Yes, of course. It's basic. Guy A has a dead parrot but insists it isn't dead.....It's just a mint!.......Redundancy........Guy B steals underwear and wacky music plays. Yeah. We get it.
There's something funny to be found in humor from every country. The Brits just seem to suffer from comedic xenophobia more than others.0 -
No they don't0
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Yes they do0
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No they don't0
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Yes they do0
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Suuuure thaaang0
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I enjoy both. Laughter being food for the soul and all. I don't believe one is better then the other. Just different.0
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What have the Romans ever done for us ....... Funny as0
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I'm British, while travelling and working around south east Asia, I met loads of American people, some got my humour (quite dry and sarcastic) some didn't...0
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walkonfire5 wrote: »Your thoughts, and experience On this
I'm English my husband American ... He's learning my sense of humour0 -
Im British..... I would say our sense of humour is..... well..... it's called sarcasm
I love a dry sense of humour! but can get confusing if you can't read their facial expressions!
I too have been picked up wrong on many occasions but I forget that not everyone has the same sense of humour :grimacing:
like for instance! I could say "oh, You're a right tart! " << meaning in a jokey way! not actually telling them they are one lol. so you see how it can be picked up a different way to what I was putting lol0 -
What's a typically British sense of humour? A lot of people here seem to asscoiate it with dry wit and deadpan delivery, but a quick look at the most successful British comedies / comedians would give lie to that.
Lee Evans / Michael McIntyre / Peter Kaye.....surely if the TYPICAL British sense of humour was as described above, Stuart Lee would be bigger than all 3 combined.0 -
BigDougie1211 wrote: »What's a typically British sense of humour? A lot of people here seem to asscoiate it with dry wit and deadpan delivery, but a quick look at the most successful British comedies / comedians would give lie to that.
Lee Evans / Michael McIntyre / Peter Kaye.....surely if the TYPICAL British sense of humour was as described above, Stuart Lee would be bigger than all 3 combined.
I love Stuart Lee
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When I was a teenager in the 1970s we were fortunate to have Monty Python and Benny Hill on TV. I have to admit, some of the references about sports or politics were difficult to understand still most of those skits were very funny. During that time period, SNL was on along with second city so we were fortunate to have the best of both worlds.0
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It's great when you live with someone who gets all the different styles of humour from slapstick style to dry, to just silly :-)0
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BigDougie1211 wrote: »What's a typically British sense of humour? A lot of people here seem to asscoiate it with dry wit and deadpan delivery, but a quick look at the most successful British comedies / comedians would give lie to that.
Lee Evans / Michael McIntyre / Peter Kaye.....surely if the TYPICAL British sense of humour was as described above, Stuart Lee would be bigger than all 3 combined.
I was being sarcastic lol
lee evens
quite gutted he has stopped temporarily hopefully!
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I know, I wasn't actually addressing you directly, really more the thread as a whole.
I genuinely don'T think there is a specific British SOH.
For every Blackadder - there's a Mrs Brown
For every The Office - there's a Dinner Ladies0 -
right then what about for food for thought.
Do americans understand the british sarcastic piss-take attitude / humour0 -
^BigDougie1211 wrote: »I know, I wasn't actually addressing you directly, really more the thread as a whole.
I genuinely don'T think there is a specific British SOH.
For every Blackadder - there's a Mrs Brown
For every The Office - there's a Dinner Ladies
lol you edited your post..... it said about "above post" but now it doesn't so I will let you have that lol
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I'm British but I don't always get my dad's jokes... its more like quick wit rather than "hahahaha rofl". Sometimes I think Brits aren't trying to be funny... they mean exactly what they say but others assume it's a sarcastic one-liner0
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AmandaHugginkiss wrote: »Understand it? Yes, of course. It's basic. Guy A has a dead parrot but insists it isn't dead.....It's just a mint!.......Redundancy........Guy B steals underwear and wacky music plays. Yeah. We get it.
There's something funny to be found in humor from every country. The Brits just seem to suffer from comedic xenophobia more than others.
x100 (hugs you)
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