Shao Kahn Brewing a Stew
Banned
Ayy lmao
Was the Eric Andre episode where he came into a globe and then poured out gallons of white goo the normal one, or was it Jillian Barberie! Jillian Barberie!...
Kids just say no to anime
This jpg is better than the compiled multiverses of R&M.
Honestly if there's one thing millennials do really well it's internet humor. Older generations fuckin suck at memes.
I have to agree. I just don't find any of it funny at all. It just seems like "the less effort the better."
Genuinely curious to know what older people think of humor like Filthy Frank.
yet they call themselves the "Greatest Generation" just because they got shot at by some foreignersHonestly if there's one thing millennials do really well it's internet humor. Older generations fuckin suck at memes.
Genuinely curious to know what older people think of humor like Filthy Frank.
I have to agree. I just don't find any of it funny at all. It just seems like "the less effort the better."
Don't compare Tim and Eric to that shit millennial meme crap.
I feel like absurdist humor really started during the gen X days. Ren and Stimpy, for example. It's just many people now grew up with it.
Steve Martin was hilarious in The Man With Two Brains.
Nowadays? Not so much.
This is spot on.I think what makes good memes work is that it's essentially a gag you develop with strangers in real time. When IMGUR is at its best it can propegate memes that keeps enhancing. Someone makes something, and then someone else builds on it.
Part of what makes it funny is the enjoyment you have in being part of its origin. Much like a lot of memes stopped being funny once they leaked to outside the internet.
It's like stupid jokes you have with your friends, but try to explaining it to people who weren't there at the inception and it just comes off as fucking stupid. Because it is.
But the fucking stupid can still be genuinely enjoyable.
We grew up in the Age of Irony.
Absurdist humor has been around since forever.I feel like absurdist humor really started during the gen X days. Ren and Stimpy, for example. It's just many people now grew up with it.
Unlike the subcultural stoner comedy of yesteryear or the giddily absurd humor of classics like Monty Python, this breed of millennial surrealism is both mainstream and tangibly dark
Thinking a little more about this I think the answer is pretty simple. Humor can be basically broken down into three parts, anecdotal humor that derives enjoyment from our shared knowledge of daily experience, referential humor that gets its fun from viewing things in a new light, and the element of surprise which keeps jokes from getting stale. Modern humor, both of millenials and anyone remotely tech savvy, draws much more heavily from the referential element of humor, because we have more referents with which to make these types of jokes and our methods of connecting them, through visuals and sound, are way easier to use and easier to share. The element of surprise is also more prominent in modern humor simply because we encounter more humor every day, reading/hearing more jokes/memes via the internet than we ever could 20-30 years ago, necessitating that the net content of our jokes must be more random or surprising in order for them to continue being interesting.
Thus I'd argue that the change between modern "millenial" humor and more traditional comedy has come about primarily as a result of technology making it necessary for jokes to evolve to be more surprising and referential, so that they might survive in a quickly changing world where most jokes get little more than a second or two to pass judgement. Although the influence of postmodern thought is compelling too, and is definitely important, especially with the Adult Swim crowd. This video is a really good breakdown of what makes the Eric Andre show so modern and so good, despite constantly playing with and challenging the viewers' expectations, like with Bird Up! The Worst Show on Television, which everyone hated, but Eric made an extra long segment of it for the finale just to piss everyone off and make them realize the limit of absurdist humor
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJ5nwXyJn70
Neither of your examples are baby boomers' humor. You can shit on that generation all you want, but man, they had some amazing comedians.
A half second clip of Rick and Morty is better than every anime combined and multipled by infinity
Honeymooners was 50s and Three Stooges were from 1934 to the 60s. Baby boomer is from 40s to 60s. So, I'm right.Neither of your examples are baby boomers' humor. You can shit on that generation all you want, but man, they had some amazing comedians.
a hAlf seCoND cLiP oF RiCk AnD moRty iS betTTer thAn evErY anImE coMbiNeD anD MuLtIpliEd bY inFinItYA half second clip of Rick and Morty is better than every anime combined and multipled by infinity
Also absurdist comedy.
I mean it's about talking teenage food products and every episode ends at a juncture where the circumstances of the world cannot possibly be reverted to normal, and yet each week the episode starts from the same baseline while also referencing those irreversible occurrences. It's.... absurd.
Gotta have a fucked sense of humor to deal with the fucked world baby boomers are leaving us.
EhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhHoneymooners was 50s and Three Stooges were from 1934 to the 60s. Baby boomer is from 40s to 60s. So, I'm right.
So are the Flintstones and Jetsons these clever, meaningful cartoons?