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Bullies 2 Buddies Newsletter )
 by Izzy Kalman, MS......Empowering Victims the World Over July 7, 2005 
in this issue
  • More on the Nature of Humor
  • Toastmasters and Humor
  • Movie Recommendation: Eight Mile

  • More on the Nature of Humor

    At my seminars I teach that humor is not positive; it is negative. It is a mirror of human faults. We laugh at people's stupidity, clumsiness and misery. Compliments will not make people laugh - unless there is an insult embedded in it. Only insults have the potential of being funny. I sometimes challenge people to tell me a joke that doesn't make anyone look bad.

    Sometimes people take me up on the challenge. Usually they'll tell me a riddle. Many riddles do, in fact, contain an obvious insult, but they don't always. They are usually based on word-plays, or double-entendres, in which a word has more than one meaning. It took me a while to realize who riddles make fun of. I believe the answer is that it makes fun of the listener. We are asked a question that we know is going to have a stupid answer, meaning an answer that cannot possibly be correct or logical. We respond to the question as though it is valid, then we are hit with a ridiculous answer that is possible because of the second meaning of the word. The answer is usually something we couldn't possibly think of on our own because it not logical, but the answer is so simple that we feel stupid for not having though of it by ourselves. The riddle-teller therefore has made a fool of us, and we laugh.

    But my main concern here is jokes, not riddles. It sometimes takes me a while to figure out what was degrading in the joke. I want to tell you about one that had me stumped, till I realized that practically everything about it was degrading. In essence, I had been searching for a tree, not realizing I was staring at a forest. A Jewish therapist at a recent Anger Control Made Easy seminar in Tampa told me the joke in response to my challenge. This excellent joke is, by the way, quite well known; I had first heard it when I was a child. It goes like this:

    A man strikes up a conversation with a mohel. (A mohel is a Jewish scholar who is trained to perform circumcisions, the ritual in which a Jewish male is initiated into the religion by surgical removal of the foreskin of his penis at the age of eight days. Ouch!)
    Man: What do you do with the foreskins?
    Mohel: I put them to good use.
    Man: How?
    Mohel: I sew them together and sell them as wallets.
    Man: It must take an awful lot of foreskins to make one wallet. Is it really worth the effort?
    Mohel: Oh, but these aren't just ordinary wallets. When you rub one, it turns into a suitcase!

    For a while, I feared I was presented with a joke that actually doesn't make anyone look bad. But then it hit me. All of it is demeaning! There are at least four ways I can think of that this joke puts people down.

    1. In the Jewish religion, body parts are considered sacred, to be treated with the utmost respect. Body parts may be disposed of only by burial, giving it the same respect accorded to a complete deceased human body. For a mohel to use foreskins to make wallets would be an absolute outrage. So the joke insults the mohel's morality and religiosity.

    2. The joke subtly makes fun of Jews for being cheap. The mohel doesn't want the foreskins to go to waste, so he makes some extra money turning them into luggage.

    3. It disparages the male sexual organ, the penis. Though it is often the brunt of jokes, the penis is an extremely important and treasured part of the male anatomy, and a wonder of biological engineering as well. However, it seems to have a mind of its own. With a mere rub, it quickly inflates itself and jumps up ready for action, frequently against the will of its owner. My male readers certainly have little difficulty remembering the consternation of adolescence, when we had to hide that embarrassing bulge in our pants. So this joke degrades the male penis by basely portraying it as a mere piece of machinery that retains its ability to grow even when disconnected from the human body.

    4. Similar to riddles, it insults the intelligence of the mohel and his questioner by having them believe something that is impossible. Only an idiot could think that a foreskin retains the ability to engorge itself after it's cut off from the body.

    So you won't think that it is only me who has come up with the crazy idea that humor is insulting, I want to share a quotation I recently came across. It is by that great British writer and philosopher, George Orwell: "The aim of a joke is not to degrade the human being but to remind him that he is already degraded." Many humorists and comedians understand very well that humor is about making people look bad. It is the mental health professionals, who are supposed to be experts at understanding human nature, who have the hardest time accepting this 'ugly' aspect of our nature.

    Read Previous Newsletters

    Toastmasters and Humor
    I love Toastmasters. I wrote about it in a newsletter a couple of years ago. Few group activities improved my life the way my one year of participating in Toastmasters did. And it is practically free to attend.

    The central theme of the latest issue of Toastmaster magazine was humor. The articles all encouraged us to use humor, and gave some ideas how where to find material and how to incorporate it into speeches. Humor was consistently presented as something positive and uplifting. Despite all the pages of advice, never are we told what makes something funny. Not even one article clearly indicated that humor involves portraying people's faults, weaknesses, and misery. The closest the articles came to this was to encourage us to talk about our OWN faults and miserable experiences. Never are we told that it can be okay to make OTHER people look bad.

    One article quotes the famous speechwriter, Peggy Noonan: "Humor is gracious and shows respect. It shows the audience you think enough of them to want to entertain them." Sure. Really gracious and respectful. By making people look bad!

    The same article contains the following example of a good joke:

    Ted Turner, Jack Welch and Bill Gates all die on the same day and arrive at the Pearly Gates. God asks each to answer one question - What do you truly believe in? - before they can be granted entry. Ted Turner says: "I believe in speed and accuracy. Give people what they need quickly and reliably, and you'll be successful." Great, says God; come in and sit at my left hand. Jack Welch says: "I believe in product quality and being No. 1 or No. 2 in your marketplace. That will make you successful and an asset to society." Wonderful, says God; come on in. Then Bill Gates steps up. "What do you believe in?" asks God. Gates says: "I believe you are sitting in my chair."

    Funny? Of course. But it is highly insulting to Bill Gates. What did he do to deserve this? Create a service that revolutionized the world and made him the richest man on the planet? But that is the nature of humor. Complimenting Bill Gates would not make us laugh.

    By the way, it is acceptable to insult Bill Gates because he is more powerful than we are. To make fun of someone below our position is usually in bad taste. And that would make it "bullying", because it is not okay to pick on someone weaker. Good, moral people only insult stronger people.

    To read earlier article about Toastmasters... »

    Movie Recommendation: Eight Mile
    I had been intending to watch this movie for a long time, but when a seminar participant last week in Baltimore recommended it to me because she said it illustrated what I teach, I decided to see it right away.

    I'm often told by mental health professionals who work in the inner cities that my methods couldn't possibly work with their populations - that there is no way that these residents of the "jungle" could allow themselves to be insulted without getting mad. They think I don't understand their culture and I am insulting their population by expecting them to behave according to my values. Personally, I can't help feeling that the mental health professionals who say this to me are the ones who are truly insulting the inner city population. They are suggesting that they are a lower kind of human being for whom the rules of civilization cannot apply.

    8 Mile is a powerful, fascinating story roughly based on the pre-fame experiences of the white rap star, Eminem. This movie is not for children, and if you do not tolerate profanity, violence, and sex, it is not for you, either. But it gives an inside look at the dark, dangerous world of the inner city. Eminem (real name: Marshall Mathers) plays a tough, fearless young white man perfectly at home in the Black community, and seeks fame and fortune as a rap artist by competing in "battles." These battles are competitions in which the contenders, rather than hitting with fists, take turns attacking each other verbally. The audience is dazzled by the brilliance of the competitors, who have 45 seconds to barrage their opponent with a spontaneous flow of rhyming insults. As in American Idol, the audience determines the winner. When I do my seminars, I engage in insults with my volunteers, but I am a complete infant compared to these hard-hitting rappers. And the insults aren't just imaginary - they hit each other by attacking what they know to be true about their opponents. Like boxers, the contenders are not angry at their sparring partners. Their goal is to win over the audience with the best insult display, by they are personally unfazed by the insults. They have honest respect and admiration for their opponents' skill. There are several episodes of true physical violence interspersed throughout the movie, but the fights are over money, sex partners, and retaliation for physical abuse of family members, not insults.

    The clincher of the movie is the very last scene, which is also the reason the seminar participant excitedly came to tell me about the movie. Eminem faces off against the reigning champion, and this time they are given 90 seconds rather than the normal 45. Eminem goes first. What he does completely catches his opponent off guard. Instead of insulting the champ, Eminem spends most of his allotted time insulting himself! He calls himself "white trash" and recounts of all his mistakes, losses, and misery, only at the end finishing up with insults about his opponent. When it's the champ's turn, he is utterly speechless. There is nothing insulting left to say about Eminem, and he forfeits the contest.

    So there you have it, the idols of the inner cities are masters at handling insults in public without getting upset. And our experts in human behavior tell me that inner city people can't be taught to handle insults without getting upset. Sure.

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