Friday, May 18, 2007

I Started A Joke

I started a joke, which started the whole world crying,
But I didnt see that the joke was on me, oh no.

I started to cry, which started the whole world laughing,
Oh, if Id only seen that the joke was on me.



D`Artz : Joke

Thursday, May 17, 2007

[PLUElite]

~~Special Dinner~~
~~Inline Attachment Follows~~

~~Lost Puppy~~
~~Horror Movie For Chicken~~

D`Artz : Putriza

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

S'thing to activate your brain cell.

S'thing to activate your brain cell

1. man
-----------
board

Ans. = man overboard


2. stand
-----------
i

Ans. = I understand

ok?....get the drift?

Let's try a few now & see how you fare ???

3. /r/e/a/d/i/n/g/

Ans. = reading between the lines

4. r
road
a
d

Ans. = cross road

5. cycle
cycle
cycle

Ans. = tricycle

6. t
o
w
n

Ans. = downtown

7. le / / vel



Ans. = split level

8. 0
-------------
M.D.
Ph.D.


Ans. = two degrees below zero

9. knee!
------------
light

Ans. = neon light (knee on light)

10. ii ii
----------
* O


Ans. = circles under the eyes


11. dice
dice

Ans. = paradise

12. t
o
u
c
h

Ans. = touch! down

13. ground
---------------
feet
feet
feet

feet
feet
feet

Ans. = six feet underground

14. he's / himself


Ans. = he's by himself

15. ecnalg

Ans. = backward glance


16. death / life

Ans. = life after death


17 THINK

Ans. = think big !! !

And the last one is what made me missing you...............


18 ababaaabbbbaaaabbbbababaabbaaabbbb....


Ans. = long time no 'c'(see)

D`Artz : Putriza

Monday, May 14, 2007

My Funny Valentine...

Chet Baker in Tokyo 1987. Chet was the best trumpet player in the stroy of jazz



D`Artz : valentine

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

The Funniest Champions Jokes In The World.....

He was die because of laughing.....


That was the German joke, which failed miserably. The joke the man wrote at the start, and was translated into german later, is not correct German.

D`Artz : jokes

Why We Need Jokes...

The joke content (meaning) is not what provokes the laugh, it just makes the salience of the joke and provokes a smile. What makes us laugh is the joke mechanism. Milton Berle demonstrated this with a classic theatre experiment in the 1950s: if during a series of jokes you insert phrases that are not jokes, but with the same rhythm, the audience laughs anyway. A classic is the ternary rhythm, with three beats: introduction, premise, antithesis (with the antithesis being the punch line).

In regards to the Milton Berle experiment, they can be taken to demonstrate the concept of "breaking context" or "breaking the pattern". It isn't necessarily the Rhythm that caused the audience to laugh, but the disparity between the expectation of a "joke" and being instead given a non-sequitur "normal phrase." This normal phrase is, itself, unexpected, and is a kind of punchline.

When a technically-good joke is referred changing it with paraphrasing, it is not laughable anymore; this is because the paraphrase, changing some term or moving it within the sentence, breaks the joke mechanism (its vividness, brevity and rhythm), and its power and effectiveness are lost. Douglas Adams described sentences where the joke word is the final word as "comically weighted." This saves the "payoff" until the last possible moment, allowing the expectation for surprise to reach its highest point, while the mind is more firmly rooted in the pattern established by the rest of the sentence.

D`Artz : Jokes