Did you ever know someone with absolutely no sense of humor?

Most people I know have a great sense of humor and that's important to me, can't stand humorless people.

I do know one or two people that keep telling everyone how funny they are...in my opinion, if you have to keep telling people you have a great sense of humor...then you don't. :)
 

Since wife and I both have a great "sense-of-humor", we do know some that don't-to-definitely don't. I'm big on saying humorous things and my wife will tell anyone, "not a dull moment in our home, unless we are asleep".

SIL (wife's sister) doesn't. But, then again, the ladies she knows, don't either and neither did her deceased husband. After I met my wife in Feb 2000, I also met this sister. I would joke around with her and she barely smiled. The morning of 9-11, after the first airline went into the Trade Center, I called SIL and told her what had just happened. She said "no way, you're kidding with me again". I told her to turn on her tv and she seen the second airline go into the Trade Center. She said "you weren't kidding, were you?".

My brother and his wife is also very serous people. Basically speaking, his wife doesn't understand a thing I say. She is what I call a "closet case". Like my wife's sister, both act like they spent their entire lives inside a closet.

I remember, when my wife got her Princess Leia Halloween costume (dress/buns/boots), I said to her "Honey, you're more like Princess Leia's mother". We both laughed. While in the apartment complex pool a few years ago, and wife was coming home from work, I told a young lady about what I said to my wife about her Leia costume and she looked at me and said "well, that was very rude of you to say that". I told her, "rude? We both laughed about it (wife and I).

We have watched Last Comic Standing, The Carmichaels and have dvd movies like Grownups--Blended--Weekend At Bernie's and others.

Being funny, somewhat sarcastic is part of my personality and my wife loves it. All 16 years of marriage!
 
No not ever, but I have known a couple of people who don't know when to stop with the jokes and that can be equally annoying IMHO.
 

I know some people who are so serious all the time and you never hear them joke around or be funny. That is depressing.

I'm pretty close to that............It's depressing to me how so many people lack seriousness, and don't accomplish much of anything..........
 
The real veteran pro comedians of an earlier era could make you laugh without any off-color stories at all!

My favorites of that era were Henny Youngman, Rodney Dangerfield, Jack Benny, Milton Berle, Jackie Mason, & others.

I love watching their performances on YouTube!

Hal
 
I tried this one out on my aunt: Where's the best place to find cold cash? Answer: In a snow bank.

No reaction. I tried to explain the double meaning - cold cash is an idiom, a snow bank would be cold and a bank is where money is. She just replied, "A snow bank isn't that type of bank!"
 
I tried this one out on my aunt: Where's the best place to find cold cash? Answer: In a snow bank.

No reaction. I tried to explain the double meaning - cold cash is an idiom, a snow bank would be cold and a bank is where money is. She just replied, "A snow bank isn't that type of bank!"

Deb, A comic with old material needs a young audience!:eek:nthego:
 
Not only that, but what men consider funny is often considered not funny at all by women. Women and men have different versions of humor.

Wife and I sure don't. She absolutely loves my humor and there are times, when she tells me something, I resay it humorously and we will both crack up over it. She will tell me, I've never been around a man that can make me laugh so much.
 
I've known some serious people in my lifetime. I tend to stay away from them . My whole life is light hearted and humorous and I need people to share that with !
 
Several
I appreciate them
My wife was one once
When I finally broke her, I discovered she would go into sporadic conniptions when too tickled, becoming unable to stop on command.
So, after a few sessions of laughing Tourettes, ending with giggling backwards until gasping, choking, I sorta backed off, picking special times

Now, I keep it to quips

On the flip side, I know many more people that think they're funny
when they are not
I don't appreciate them
 
Several
I appreciate them
My wife was one once
When I finally broke her, I discovered she would go into sporadic conniptions when too tickled, becoming unable to stop on command.
So, after a few sessions of laughing Tourettes, ending with giggling backwards until gasping, choking, I sorta backed off, picking special times

Now, I keep it to quips

On the flip side, I know many more people that think they're funny
when they are not
I don't appreciate them


Per your request above is what your post looks like Gary.
 
I always enjoyed the Marx Brothers and Laurel & Hardy, but never could get into the Three Stooges or Abbott and Costello. Go figure. If I turn on the TV now and see a stand-up comic on, I switch the channel because the stand-up today is mainly vulgar and/or demeaning to some groups.

Our little theatre group puts on plays, etc. every month. I like to direct the plays, and have found that re-creating some of the old radio and TV shows that many of us remember is usually enjoyable. There are web sites that feature complete scripts of old time radio shows, and anyone is more than welcome to print them out and use them.

Many people have said to me, "Oh, let's do a Fibber McGee and Molly show, or Abbott and Costello." When I plow through those scripts, I am often offended by the cruel dialogue that passed for "humor" in those days. I loved Fred Allen back then; his show is now stale and often offensive. Many of these shows have endless jokes about how stupid women are, what poor drivers, making fun of foreign accents, drunks, etc. They would not be funny now.

Yet, some of the humor has held up. We've found that Jack Benny was and still is largely inoffensive. His black character, Rochester, usually outsmarts Jack, who himself is often the butt of the humor. His bandleader, Phil Harris, is supposed to be drunk a lot of the time, that's the only dubious humor I've found, not too bad compared to the rest of the shows.

On TV, All in the Family was the turning point. The humor was directed against Archie, the bigoted (but still lovable) character, instead of some unfortunate minority.

So, here I am saying once again: let's not get too sentimental about the good old days.
 
I tried this one out on my aunt: Where's the best place to find cold cash? Answer: In a snow bank.

No reaction. I tried to explain the double meaning - cold cash is an idiom, a snow bank would be cold and a bank is where money is. She just replied, "A snow bank isn't that type of bank!"

Deb--I think I have a great sense of humor, but that "joke" is just corny. :D
 
Our little theatre group puts on plays, etc. every month. I like to direct the plays, and have found that re-creating some of the old radio and TV shows that many of us remember is usually enjoyable. There are web sites that feature complete scripts of old time radio shows, and anyone is more than welcome to print them out and use them.

Many people have said to me, "Oh, let's do a Fibber McGee and Molly show, or Abbott and Costello." When I plow through those scripts, I am often offended by the cruel dialogue that passed for "humor" in those days. I loved Fred Allen back then; his show is now stale and often offensive. Many of these shows have endless jokes about how stupid women are, what poor drivers, making fun of foreign accents, drunks, etc. They would not be funny now.

Yet, some of the humor has held up. We've found that Jack Benny was and still is largely inoffensive. His black character, Rochester, usually outsmarts Jack, who himself is often the butt of the humor. His bandleader, Phil Harris, is supposed to be drunk a lot of the time, that's the only dubious humor I've found, not too bad compared to the rest of the shows.

On TV, All in the Family was the turning point. The humor was directed against Archie, the bigoted (but still lovable) character, instead of some unfortunate minority.

So, here I am saying once again: let's not get too sentimental about the good old days.

Couldn't agree more. We forget, don't we? I watched an old black and white TV show recently on Utube and Jerry Lewis was a guest panellist. I was cringing at the jokes he was making at the expense of an overweight woman.
 
Couldn't agree more. We forget, don't we? I watched an old black and white TV show recently on Utube and Jerry Lewis was a guest panellist. I was cringing at the jokes he was making at the expense of an overweight woman.

And, there are movies that are funny, but, also, at the expense of others.

At a local theater, there was a Preview of the movie Shallow Hal. Wife and I noticed a fairly heavy-set lady, sitting in a front row, get up, flip-off the screen and leave the theater. Apparently she was so upset, she no longer cared about the movie she paid to see.

To us the Preview was funny, but.
 
I went out with a woman, once, who had no sense of humor. Everything funny, that I said, went right over her head. Strangely though, when we got back to her place, she started to make obvious moves towards the boudoir. I, having judged her to be way lacking in intelligence, because of her lack of a sense of humor, politely declined, and headed out to my car. I have been out with over a hundred women, in my life. Only this one woman did I find to be so totally devoid of a sense of humor. It was a total turn-off.
 
Couldn't agree more. We forget, don't we? I watched an old black and white TV show recently on YouTube and Jerry Lewis was a guest panelist. I was cringing at the jokes he was making at the expense of an overweight woman.

I never could stand Lewis. He disgusted me. I used to write in, every time he inflicted himself on viewers of his telethon, while chain smoking cigarettes. He promoted a habit that is, without a doubt, the dumbest thing one can do for one's good health, while trying to raise funds for kids afflicted with health problems of their own. It defied logic!
 


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