In my last blog post for the semester, I wanted to address two of the common themes in humor regarding COVID-19: jokes about your kids and jokes about your significant who you're quarantining with. Although my mom doesn't have small children she has to entertain and homeschool while being stuck at home, she has been loving all of the memes and videos about moms who do (which she shows me throughout the day). Her favorite ones have been about "fire drills" where moms lock their kids out of their house and wonder how long they can pretend the drill is going on before they should let their kids back inside. I've seen criticism about humor along these lines because some people say it's not funny to talk about locking your kids out of your house or complaining about being stuck with them all day everyday. What I think? People need to laugh during this time otherwise we'd all go crazy, so why can't we all enjoy the jokes and know that's helping people g...
This semester I've learned a lot about laughing and humor. Here are the top 5 most relevant things I'd like to keep in my back pocket in case I need to use the knowledge again: 5. I should be really afraid of elevators. I'm not super claustrophobic, but from all the elevator pranks I watched, I'm going to be a little more weary of them from now on. 4. I would never, ever have wanted to live in Victorian England. Based on all of the videos we watched and the satirical elements of The Importance of Being Ernest , I've come to the conclusion I would not have survived living in Victorian England. The societal rules were (excuse my British) rubbish, and the things women did to be pretty literally sometimes killed them. Never will I ever look down upon women from Victorian England again, and I continue to thank my lucky stars I didn't have to live then. 3. Laughing was an evolutionary social skill. To be honest, I'm not sure I ever really thought about wh...