Friday, June 26, 2026

The Laugh Equation

Disclaimer: 

This post includes instructions for conducting a philosophically humorous experiment. 
Keep reading if you want to play along.
Otherwise, skip straight to the jokes below!

Everyone's A Philosopher, Even Your Cousin George 

Here is something nobody tells you in school: you have been doing philosophy your entire life, and you are surprisingly good at it.

Not the kind with the footnotes and the German compound words that take three sentences to define and still leave you uncertain. I'm talking the real kind. The kind Socrates was doing in the marketplace before the city of Athens decided he was having too much influence over Athen's youth and made him stop indefinitely. 

Cracking the Humor Code is Mastering the Socratic Method, As Long as That Method is Wrapped Up In A Joke. Results vary. 

Only the spirit of the Socratic method (asking cooperative, albeit argumentative questions that stimulate critical thinking). This method is a disaster for human relations. Then and now. But if you put that sharp critique or ability to expose underlying assumptions inside a joke; now, you've got a recipe for solid entertainment. 

Nobody has to be a professional philosopher to philosophize. That's a specific language that is hilarious in itself. I find seriousness endlessly entertaining because it exposes so much incongruity in the world, I can't help but laugh. 

The reality is people philosophize it at dinner tables, in traffic, at two in the morning when the ceiling offers no useful input and YouTube won't stop showing commercials because you refuse to upgrade to premium. We philosophize with questions so ordinary they barely feel like real questions in and of themselves. But all of these questions are indeed so serious that entire academic careers have been built on coming up with better ways to ask the same question, with no real answer in sight. When I first started writing jokes in 2011, one of my first was about how to hot wire a car. That in itself sounded audacious to me, which made me laugh. At the same time, I wanted people to at least get something practical out of visiting my blog and if Hollywood has taught me anything, locksmithing is a valuable skillset to covet. I digress. 

Is this fair? This question is asked all the time and kept Plato busy for decades. If you ask me, Plato had real reasons to think otherwise. Athens turned on his mentor. Keep in mind that before this, Socrates was a war hero. But he was also a Dumb-Dumb going around asking all those imprudent questions. I mean, they're interesting and all, but the only real skillset he mastered was ticking people off for exposing flawed assumptions they didn't know they had. In retrospect, he might have thought that through beforehand. I digress again. 

What's the point of all this? You might have been thinking that just from reading this article. If so, you're in good company because Camus wrote stacks of papers and a really good book on this. You should totally check out his work online. 

Why can't I be happy? Probably because I'm reading Camus. Kidding. Well, half-kidding, which is precisely the approach Augustine tried. In fact, he tried everything available to a brilliant man in the fourth century — philosophy, ambition, a series of increasingly unsatisfying relationships — and eventually concluded, with the weary precision of someone who has genuinely checked, that the heart is restless until it finds its rest. Which is either the most comforting thing anyone has ever said or the most exhausting, depending on what day of the week it is. 

How Jokes Work

The gap between the ordinary question and what the philosopher hears is why jokes work. It is where the best jokes live. Because a joke and a philosophical argument are running the same logic: 

1. Set up an expectation 
2. Pull the floor out from underneath it, with something embarrasingly true for everyone, in a space that serves alcohol and creates space for shared laughter. 

Jokes About People Appeal To People

Now, consider the logician whose wife has just given birth. She asks, reasonably, with the energy of someone who has just done something exhaustingly extraordinary: so, is it a boy or a girl? Dad replies: yes. Technically flawless. But for his wife, that response was an epic failure. We're talking the human equivalent of a catastrophic event. Dumb-Dumb Number Two answered the question with complete logical precision and missed entirely the question that was meant, which is: be here with me right now AND is it a boy or girl, I genuinely want to know.

Wittgenstein might say that the logician failed to understand the grammar of the situation. His wife might have an entirely different description, shorter and considerably more accurate. I'm on her side. 

Now, for the men. 

Werner Heisenberg, Kurt Gödel, and Noam Chomsky walk into a bar. Heisenberg looks around and says: clearly this is a joke, but how can we figure out if it's funny? Gödel replies: we can't know that, because we're inside the joke. Chomsky says: of course it's funny. You're just telling it wrong. Three of the twentieth century's most consequential thinkers, in one bar, achieving nothing, which is also more or less what happened at the actual academic conferences where they presented their ideas, except the bar has better lighting, with the off-chance of meeting a pretty girl. 

Not the pretty girl you were expecting, but isn't she lovely?

Now, back to OUR EXPERIMENT. 


22 jokes: 
  1. I used to be indecisive. Now I'm not so sure.
  2. I asked my dog what two minus two is. He said nothing.
  3. I told my wife she should embrace her mistakes. She gave me a hug.
  4. The cemetery is so crowded, people are dying to get in.
  5. I have a lot of growing up to do. I realized that the other day inside my fort.
  6. I find it ironic that the colors red, white, and blue stand for freedom — until they're flashing behind you.
  7. I'm reading a book about anti-gravity. It's impossible to put down.
  8. I used to think I was indecisive, but now I'm not so sure. (Worth repeating. It earns it.)
  9. I wasn't originally going to get a brain transplant, but then I changed my mind.
  10. A pessimist's blood type is always B negative.
  11. I haven't slept for ten days because that would be too long.
  12. My grandfather has the heart of a lion and a lifetime ban from the zoo.
  13. I told a joke about paper once. It was tearable.
  14. I can't take my dog to the park because the ducks keep trying to bite him. I guess that's what I get for buying a pure bread dog.
  15. Someone stole my mood ring. I don't know how I feel about that.
  16. I have a joke about time travel, but you didn't like it.
  17. I went to the doctor and told him I broke my arm in two places. He told me to stop going to those places.
  18. Light travels faster than sound. That's why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.
  19. I used to hate facial hair, but then it grew on me.
  20. I'm terrified of elevators. I'm going to start taking steps to avoid them.
  21. My wife told me I had to stop acting like a detective. I said: good. Case closed.
  22. I have many jokes about unemployed people, but none of them work.

Putting the Jokes To Work

Step one is simple: read through all twenty two jokes and notice which ones make you laugh out loud, which ones make you smile slowly, and which ones make you think for three seconds. That delay is important. The three-second jokes are the ones with philosophical umph. Those are your best material for this experiment, because the audience will do the same thing — laugh, then realize why, then feel slightly smarter than they did thirty seconds ago. That feeling is what you are selling.



Step two: memorize your top five if you can. Not word for word like a recitation, but well enough that you can deliver them in your own voice, at your own pace, with the timing that feels natural to you. The best jokes need the pause before the punchline to land. The punchline is the setup, and that only works if the audience hears the setup second. The surrealist light bulb joke needs you to believe the answer completely, because the joke bombs the moment you signal that you know it is absurd.

Step three: for the jokes you cannot memorize, make actual cue cards. Small ones. Index cards, not pages. Read them deadpan if you have to. Deadpan is not a failure mode — deadpan is a delivery choice, and for this particular category of intellectual humor it is often more effective than performance. The joke about being indecisive is funnier when the person saying it looks completely serious.

Step four: take these to an open mic night. Any open mic. Not necessarily a comedy open mic, though that works too — a poetry night, a storytelling event, a casual gathering where people have agreed to pay attention for three minutes. Tell six jokes. Watch which ones land, which ones miss, and which ones get the slow three-second laugh that means the philosophical payload detonated correctly. Take notes afterward, not during, because taking notes during is a good way to ruin the experiment and also to make the audience feel like lab rats, which they are, but they do not need to know that yet.

Step five, and this is the one that matters most: do not trust the results of a single night. Stats, as we have established, are Dumb-Dumb with a spreadsheet. One audience in one room on one evening tells you almost nothing except what worked in that room on that evening. Go back. Try different jokes in a different order with a different crowd. The experiment is the point. The data comes later, if it comes at all, and if it does not, you have still spent several evenings in rooms full of people laughing at questions that Plato could not answer, which is a perfectly reasonable way to spend one's life. 

I have learned a few things over fifteen years, mostly from the numbers, and the numbers are almost always right about all of the wrong things. What they cannot measure is the moment when a room of strangers laughs together at the same joke and for exactly three seconds everyone in it is thinking the same thought. That is philosophy working. 

More photos, jokes, and stories coming soon.








































Thursday, June 25, 2026

Funny CEO Jokes


Running a company is serious business, but let's be honest: some days the real executive flex is sending an email without a typo. No missing attachment. No forgetting to add the call to your shared Teams calendar. No accidental reply-all. No "hope you're doing hell" when you meant "doing well". Just one clean, gramatically responsible, legally survivable email. Is that too much to ask? 

Typos are the understated comedians behind leadership. CEOs are expected to make high-stakes decisions, protect the company, build culture, manage risk, understand technology, inspire teams, watch the market, respond to crises, and somehow remember their calendar password. The role can look polished from the outside, but inside the job there's a lot of pressure, a lot of uncertainty, and at least one moment per week where you escape your Outlook and turn yourself into a meme just for a quick laugh. All the while realizing you scheduled an important meeting on your day off and now you're running through your list of excuses that sound more plausible than, "I forgot I'll be at the salon that day." 

That's why having a sense of humor is so important. Not because leadership is a joke, but because leadership without humor can become unbearable. Humor gives people a little space to breathe. It lowers tension, opens a door, and reminds everyone that capable are still people. Even the CEO is one typo, one frozen Zoom face, or one "you're on mute" away from total human exposure. 

A good leader takes the work seriously. People listen better when they're not bracing for impact. A well-timed joke can make a hard message easier to hear. It can turn a tense room into a room filled with thinkers. It can help a team move from panic to problem-solving. That doesn't mean the CEO needs to spend 15 years embracing a humor experiment, becoming the office comedianne. Please no. Nobody needs a leader workshopping puns during a cash-flow crisis. It means the leader knows how to create perspective. 

The best humor in leadership is usually self-deprecating because it does not put anyone else on the spot. It says, "I know the title is serious, but we're all people here, so let's not forget to have a little fun." And you know what? People trust leaders who can admit reality. A CEO who can laugh at her own typo is usually the kind of leader who can admit a mistake, take feedback without blowing a gasket, and move forward without turning every correction into a courtroom drama. 

There's also a fine line with humor (don't squint, or you'll miss it). Good humor connects. Bad humor humiliates. Good humor releases pressure. Bad humor makes people perform fake laughter while updating their resumes in their heads. The difference is maturity and sound judgment. You can't be a tool and then expect people to bring their best tools to the table. HUmor should never be used to dodge accountability, soften cruelty, or make the last powerful person in the room the punchline. Used well, humor is not weakness. It's social intelligence with good timing. 

Good leadership needs a good sense of humor. Companies aren't just systems, assets, contracts, processes, and KPIs. They are people trying to build something under pressure. Meaning, they goofed off last night, didn't get a full 7-8 hours rest, woke up several times thinking it was time to go to work, only to fall into a deep sleep 30 minutes before their alarms rang. Then they rush, chug their coffee, and find themselves cursing all the way to the office whilst playing vehicular frogger. Meanwhile all the teslas pass them by because someone made up a rule about EVs being able to use the HOV lane. Life's not fair. The last thing people want is to have someone crack a joke at their expense. And for good reason. Companies deal with deadlines, family stress, awkward emails, market shifts, a-hole managers on power trips, sneaky office politics, and meetings that give birth to more meetings like wet grimlins. 

Humor helps people carry the weight of the mythical work-life balance without pretending the weight isn't there. So, celebrate the big wins (and the little ones, too). Celebrate contact with the one person in the office who helps you reset vs perform. Launch the product, delve into the turnaround process, solve the crisis, and lead your team to victory or in the case of high-risk industries, home safely to their families. Just as long as you don't need to use words like "synergy" and "intersection" that email should go out clean and clear. 

Leadership is more than vision and strategy. It's the courage let your guard down, signaling to the rest of the team that it's okay to hit send. 

Now that we got that bit out of the way, let's get into what you were promised in the title:

Funny CEO Jokes 

  • My favorite exercise is running companies.
  • The CEO tried stand-up comedy, but the board said, “Sit down.”
  • I told the CEO a joke about stocks, but he said it didn’t have enough shares.
  • Why did the CEO bring a ladder to work? The company needed higher profits.
  • The CEO said to think outside the box, so we started selling boxes.
  • My business plan includes naps and profits.
  • Coffee first, profits later.
  • CEO by day, philosopher by night.
  • Leadership is my cardio.
  • Business casual humor activated.
  • CEO mode: always on, occasionally buffering.
  • Work hard, pun harder.
  • I’m not bossy. Oh wait, I take that back. 
  • Born to lead, trained to pause for snacks. 
  • CEO today, legend (in my mind) tomorrow.
  • Boss energy fully charged. 
  • The CEO opened a bakery because she kneaded the dough.
  • The CEO opened a pizza shop because she loved a good slice of the market.
  • The CEO told a joke about revenue, but the accountants didn't have an interest. 
  • The CEO said teamwork is key, so now we all share one air fryer. 
  • CEOs don’t chase dreams. They outsource them. 
  • The CEO’s favorite music genre is profit rock.
  • Making executive decisions and executive desserts.
  • Meetings today, temporary empire that you read about in business school tomorrow.
  • Climbing the corporate ladder one typo at a time.





















  • Wednesday, June 24, 2026

    The Main Street of the American Mind




    Route 66 was called the road of flight. People left the Dust Bowl on it, headed west with everything they owned tied to the roof of a car, chasing something they could not name but trusted was out there. That is still the only honest description of what thinking does to a person.


    HTTF runs the same corridor. Chicago to Los Angeles, inland to coast, landlocked certainty toward open water. The road is paved with questions because questions are the only things that fit in our carry-on bag 💼 


    The hitchhikers along this route are not going anywhere you would expect. Somewhere in Oklahoma you will find Socrates walking the shoulder in no particular hurry, asking everyone who slows down where they think they are headed and whether they are sure. Most people speed past him. The ones who stop are never the same after. 


    Epictetus is further west, near Amarillo, sitting on a fence in the full sun, entirely unbothered by the heat, mildly curious about your distress. 


    Hume is at a diner outside Gallup, telling anyone who will listen that the coffee probably exists but he cannot be certain the cup does. He is pleasant about it. He orders pie. 🥧 


    The road was decommissioned in 1985 because the interstates were faster, more efficient, better lit. 


    HTTF has never been decommissioned because no one has built anything faster than a thought, and efficiency was never the point of philosophical inquiry. 


    The point was the going. The point was what you notice when you can’t get there directly and the detour takes you through somewhere you did not know you needed to see.




    Tuesday, June 23, 2026

    Leave A Little Sparkle Wherever You Go

     


    A clean joke is one of the smallest forms of social generosity. It does not require a stage, a spotlight, or a dramatic confession. It only needs a sentence, a little timing, and the willingness to let language misbehave for a moment. That is the spirit of “Leave a Little Sparkle Wherever You Go.” The sparkle is not forced cheerfulness or inspirational wallpaper. It is the small comic lift that happens when someone offers a joke light enough to share and clever enough to remember.

    Clean jokes are often underestimated because they look simple. That is part of their charm. A good clean joke can travel through a classroom, a kitchen, a car ride, a family dinner, or a tired afternoon without making anyone brace for impact. It gives people a little mental reset. In humor theory, this is where relief, incongruity, and word play meet. The mind expects one meaning, receives another, and enjoys the quick shift.

    Consider the joke: Why did Beethoven get rid of his chickens? Because all they ever said was, “Bach, Bach, Bach!” That is music history in a chicken coop. The laugh comes from sound, recognition, and a harmless collision between composers and poultry. Beethoven and Bach do not belong in the barnyard, which is exactly why the joke has charm. It lets knowledge become playful without turning into a lecture.

    The same thing happens in a number joke: What did 20 do when it was hungry? Twenty-eight. The joke turns “twenty-eight” into “twenty ate,” and suddenly a number has an appetite. It is small, fast, and efficient. The sentence does not explain itself because it does not need to. The mind catches the switch, and the laugh follows.

    Many clean jokes depend on this kind of double meaning. Why can’t a nose be 12 inches long? Because then it would be a foot. The joke slides from measurement to body part, and that slide is the whole pleasure. Philosophers might call this semantic ambiguity. Children would just laugh and move on with their lives, which is probably the healthier response.

    Puns also create a gentle kind of comic rebellion. They make ordinary words refuse to stay in their assigned seats. A bicycle that cannot stand up because it is two tired is not merely a groaner. It is language doing a tiny costume change. A condiment wizard performing saucery has no business being as satisfying as it is, yet there it is, standing proudly in the kitchen with a wand and a questionable amount of mustard. A mountain that is funny because it is hill areas is the kind of joke people groan at while secretly enjoying themselves. The groan is not failure. The groan is applause wearing sunglasses.

    This is why clean humor has such a wide reach. Children enjoy the surprise. Adults enjoy the structure. A joke like What’s the best thing about Switzerland? The flag is a big plus gives the listener a quick visual reward. A joke like What word can you make shorter by adding two letters? Short turns spelling into a trapdoor. A joke like How do you organize a space party? You planet takes an ordinary verb and launches it into orbit. These jokes teach the ear to hear hidden possibilities inside familiar words.

    The best clean jokes do not humiliate anyone. They do not need a villain. They get their force from language, timing, sound, category mistakes, and small surprises. What falls, but never needs a bandage? The rain. That joke is gentle enough for a child, but it still has structure. It treats “falls” as if it required injury, then gives the answer a soft landing. How much do rainbows weigh? Not much. They’re actually pretty light. That joke has the same quiet intelligence. It takes “light” as color, weight, and brightness all at once, then lets the listener enjoy the overlap.

    To leave a little sparkle wherever you go is to carry this kind of humor into ordinary life. It is not about performing happiness. It is about adding a moment of play where the day has become too stiff. Tell someone the pirate spent years at C. Ask them why the pickle wanted to play cards. Tell them to “dill me in.” Remind them that the football coach yelled at the vending machine because he wanted his quarter back. These jokes are tiny, but they are not empty. They create connection through shared silliness.

    A clean joke is portable joy. It is language with a wink. It is intelligence in a small hat. It does not solve the human condition, but it does improve the next thirty seconds, and some days that is an excellent contribution.

    So yes, leave a little sparkle wherever you go. Let the joke be light. Let the pun be shameless. Let the groan count as evidence that the joke arrived. A little word play can change the mood, and a little shared laughter can make the day feel less heavy.

    That is sparkle with a punchline.

    Pets: Tiny Comedians with Fur, Feathers, and Excellent Timing

     



    Animals are ridiculous little philosophers, and they do not even charge tuition.

    A dog can turn a hallway into a parade. A cat can turn a cardboard box into private real estate. A bird can make one mysterious sound and suddenly the whole room has questions. Pets don't need punchlines because they are often the punchline: paws, claws, tails, feathers, whiskers, dramatic staring, and the occasional bark that sounds like it came with legal authority.

    This is why pet humor feels so easy to love. It is clean, quick, and wonderfully unserious. A dog pressing the “paws” button, a cat starring in The Sound of Mew-sic, a cow becoming a “moosician,” a snake studying “hiss-story”: these jokes are simple because the pleasure is in the twist. The word bends, the animal appears, and the brain gets a tiny treat.

    That is word play doing its little tap dance.

    Pet humor also loves incongruity, which is the fancy theory term for “that is not what I expected, but yes, obviously.” We expect people to behave with manners. Animals prefer plot development. A cat supervises your book. A dog believes every visitor came specifically for him. A duck has a bill and somehow still cannot pay for dinner. 

    The video, “Life Is Better With Pets,” belongs to the warmest branch of humor: affiliative humor. This is humor that brings people closer. Pets are natural ambassadors of affection. They make strangers talk, children giggle, and adults use baby voices they would deny under oath. 

    Life is better with pets because they add companionship, surprise, and just enough chaos to keep the day from becoming a spreadsheet.

    Pets remind us that humor does not always need a grand argument. Sometimes it needs a tail, a squeak, a hop, a purr, or one extremely confident duck.

    • They make the ordinary world more animated.
    • They turn houses into habitats.
    • They turn routines into stories.
    • And when life gets too serious, they bring us back to the basics: bone appetit, paws button, hiss-story, purr-ple, moosic, and one very important truth: the animals were never background characters.
    • They were stealing the show the whole time.


    Saturday, June 20, 2026

    Landline 📞 Who Dis?


    The home phone used to be a serious household object. It had status. It had a location. It had a little table, a notepad, a pen that barely worked, and at least one person in the house yelling, “Can somebody get that?” When it rang, we answered because the call was probably real. It might be a grandparent, a neighbor, the school, a friend, or someone asking if we were home before they walked over.

    Then the home phone got weird.

    At some point, the ring stopped meaning, “Grandma is calling.” It started meaning, “A recording would like to discuss our vehicle warranty, our electric bill, our ductwork, our windows, our roof, our credit card, our student loans, our nonexistent timeshare, and possibly our soul.” The home phone went from household connection to tiny plastic stress machine with a cord.

    We didn’t abandon the landline because we became antisocial. We reluctantly let it go because the signal-to-noise ratio became sups annoying. In plain English, too many calls were Solicitators. The phone kept ringing, but the ringing noise became a trauma inducing older relative. It was like a doorbell that mostly brought Aunt Barb’s mysteriously weird Holiday Loaf. 

    The numbers tell the story. By the second half of 2024, nearly four out of five U.S. adults lived in wireless-only households. That means no landline in the home and at least one cell phone. That is about 205 million adults. Among children, the number was even higher, with nearly 87 percent living in wireless-only households. The landline did not just fade away. We collectively looked at it and said, “You’ve seen better days. Party lines when our parents were young. All night phone chats when we were teenagers. A lifeline for kids to call home as we became parents ourselves. But now, all it did was invite unwelcome strangers into the kitchen.”

    The funniest part is how quickly our manners changed. For years, we acted like not answering the phone was rude. Then caller ID arrived and suddenly we all became intelligence analysts. We stared at the number like it was a classified threat assessment. We checked the area code. We let it ring. We waited to see if they left a voicemail. If they did leave a voicemail, we judged the voicemail. We kept the best ones. If the voicemail began with three seconds of robot breathing, delete. 

    We also invented rules. If it matters, they will leave a message. If they know us, they will text. If they are calling from an unknown number, they are either a scammer, a dentist, or someone who has chosen outdated tactics as a communication strategy. None of those options preserve peace. 

    This is where the phone becomes a useful little comic model for attention. A thing can be useful for years and still reach a point where it gets needy. A habit can do the same thing. Worry can ring. Resentment can ring. An old argument can ring truer than you let yourself remember. The need to explain ourselves to someone committed to not understanding us can set off alarms with impressive confidence.

    The question is whether we are still obligated to pick up. Show up. Chill and just roll with the homeys.

    A lot of old patterns survive because they know our number. They do not need to be wise. They only need to be familiar. They call at the same time, use the same voice, and create the same pressure. Before we know it, we are back in the conversation, arguing with a memory, negotiating with anxiety, or giving a full TED Talk to a person who is not even in the room.

    Humor helps because it turns the ring into something we can inspect. Instead of obeying the noise, we can pause and say, “Oh, look. The Department of Repetitive Thoughts is calling again.” We do not have to make a spiritual ceremony out of it. We do not need incense, a journal prompt, and a playlist called Becoming. We can simply notice the pattern and decline the call.

    That is not avoidance. That is call management.

    The landline taught us a practical lesson. Not every ring deserves an answer. Not every interruption is important. Not every familiar sound is a responsibility. Sometimes the healthiest thing we can do is let the old system ring until it gets bored and bothers someone else’s nervous system.

    Of course, we replaced the phone on the wall with a phone in our hand, which is very on brand for humans. We took the interruption machine, made it portable, made it shiny, added apps, and then wondered why we felt haunted by glowing rectangles. Progress has a sense of humor.

    Still, the lesson sneaks into our psyche. We can decide what gets access. We can stop answering old numbers just because they used to matter. We can let some calls go to voicemail, especially the internal ones that start with, “Hello, this is your same old worry calling about a problem we already discussed 400 times.”

    Happy Thoughts Travel Fast because a lighter thought can interrupt the automatic response. It gives us one second of distance, and one second is enough to choose. We can hear the ring, smile at the absurdity, and decide that today, we are not available for that department.

    Some things deserve our attention.

    Some things deserve a callback.

    And some things deserve the sacred modern blessing of being left on read.


    Friday, June 19, 2026

    Rush meets South Park in CDMX 🎸 🥁 ✌🏻

    Last night in Mexico City, Rush opened “Tom Sawyer” with a South Park bit and a bunch of rocking monkeys, and honestly, it was perfect.

    For Gen X, “Tom Sawyer” is not just a song. It is basement speakers, someone’s older brother’s record collection, hanging out at a friend’s house, learning what real musicianship sounds like before you had the vocabulary to explain it. It is drums that make your brain sit up straight (Anika Nilles rocks!), bass lines with frickin' architecture, and the feeling that music could be both wildly technical and completely alive.


    Deep respect!

    Author, as a young drummer

    Then South Park shows up and suddenly the whole thing gets passed to another generation without becoming a museum elevator song. That was the genius of it. The humor didn't detract from the song. It opened the experience like a good amp should. 

               

    The monkeys were funny because they gave the crowd permission to enjoy the absurdity of the moment before the nostalgia of the song kicked in. That is what good humor does. It doesn't replace greatness. It sharpens the experience around it. It loosens the room, wakes people up, and lets everyone arrive to the music feeling good. 

    A classic song can carry history, memory, skill, and reverence. Add humor in the right place, and it gains a whole other layer: shared laughter. The older fans get the thrill of recognition. The younger fans get an entry point that feels current, weird, and hilarious. Everyone gets pulled into the same humor current.

    That South Park opening was wicked smart. It was comic timing on a stadium scale. It made “Tom Sawyer” hit harder because the crowd laughed first, then locked in. That little turn from ridiculous to legendary deserves deep respect. 

    Rush already rocks. South Park and the monkeys made it hilarious, like a cross-generational inside joke with a full-volume soundtrack.

    Certified banger. 🐵🐵🐵 Gen Z accessible. Monkey-enhanced.



    Credit: Los Chicos Malos