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Presentation
Training Article
Presentation Skills: How to Tell a Joke
You’re at a party. Your friend’s
sister’s cousin from Montana tells a joke about a talking
flounder, a one-armed fisherman, and a Jesuit priest from
Nantucket, and you haven’t laughed this hard since your
Uncle Mel accidentally turned the Thanksgiving turkey into a
stew. But your memory for jokes is not the best, as you
learned that time you told your co-worker, "Take my wife...ummm...tonight?"
So, if you hear a joke you love, how
do you ensure it stays in your memory?
Write it down
Excuse yourself, find a pen and jot it
on a piece of paper. If you can’t find paper, use a napkin
or a matchbook cover.
But if you can’t find a pen, pick up
your cell phone and tell the joke to your voice mail. Not
only can you write it down later, but this also gives you
your first shot at telling the joke.
In fact, try to tell the joke to someone else in the next 24-48 hours, and do it more than once. If you wait several weeks to tell it, you may have forgotten the important points. Also, keep a "joke" file on your computer. Update it whenever you hear a joke you like, making sure to include the important words, phrases and punch line.
Hand out parts…in your head
If the joke is about three city guys
trying to corral a herd of bison, what if you imagine your
dad, your brother, and that nerdy guy Jim from your office
as the three guys? I mean, dad trying to herd bison? He
can’t change his oil without ruining a shirt! And Jim, the
computer geek who once got his tie caught in the copy
machine?
You get the point. The more you
personalize the joke in your head, the more visual you make
it for yourself, the easier it will be to recall at a later
date.
Get to know the joke - rehearse
Repeating jokes out loud gets you used
to the act of telling them and that’s what will make you
remember them. Repetition is key in memorizing anything, and
being comfortable with your jokes is key to being funny. So
print out your joke file, stand in front of your favorite
mirror and speak as if you’re talking to a good friend.
Repeating your jokes also helps you gauge their pace and their rhythm: where to pause, where to speed up and where to edit. One important tip
– if you’re saying the joke out loud and you start to bore yourself, shorten the joke. Figure out what can be cut without killing the laugh. Remember:The shorter the joke, the easier it is to remember.
One last word on memorization and
preparation: If you don’t have a joke sufficiently memorized
so that you’re 100 percent sure you can tell it with
confidence, hit every key piece of information and get the
punch line exactly right
How to do it wrong.
So now here you are, at your nephew’s wedding. You hear laughter from the other side of the room, and it’s your Uncle Jack, telling jokes to several of his fishing buddies and some ladies from the other side of the family. Here’s your chance.
But before you wade in, let’s listen
in on ole’ Uncle Jack:
"Alright, my turn, my turn. This joke
is the funniest joke you’ve ever heard
We’ll stop here; this is painful
enough.
Now, let’s examine the many mistakes
dear Uncle Jack has already made
Don’t tell racially sensitive jokes.
There is a difference between jokes involving race, and
racist jokes. However, everyone has a different barometer
for this, and what may seem harmless to you may offend
someone else. Unless you’re absolutely sure that you know
the sensibilities of the people involved, err on the side of
caution and keep race and religion out of it.
The same goes, by the way, for sexual
material and profanity. Unless you know your listeners well
enough to know they’re cool with it, leave it out.
Never start off by telling your
audience how funny the joke is. There’s no upside to it.
Just tell the joke, and let the listeners judge. Comedians
don’t come out on stage and tell the audience how funny they
are, and neither should you.
Make sure you have the joke memorized,
and in order. Once you have to double back and inter-rupt
your momentum to give the audience information you forgot to
give them in the first place, the joke’s dead.
This is most important. If you’re
gonna tell a joke about an octopus, don’t put him in a
hot-air balloon. Everyone knows octopi are afraid of
heights.
So Uncle Jack gets through the
horrible octopus joke and before anyone else can speak, he
says, "Wait
Doing it wrong
"So there’s this Frenchman, Jacques,"
says Uncle Jack, who then starts speaking in what is
supposed to be a French accent, but sounds more like he’s
gargling with glass. "Jacques tells his friend Pierre, ‘Eye
em in zee kitcheeeeen, waiting for deeees-ert." Suddenly and
inexplicably,
Uncle Jack sounds Southern. He has also
scrunched up his face in what he thinks is a snobby
French
pose, but really looks like he has something in his eye. So,
let’s learn from his mistakes.
Don’t do an accent unless you know you
can do it perfectly
Unless you graduated from mime school,
leave the funny faces and voices at home. Like the accent,
if your antics are not perfect, they’ll merely call
attention to how imperfect they are, and detract from the
joke.
Do not
Almost ready…
So, now you know how to memorize and
prepare your joke, and what awful habits to avoid.
Anything
else to keep in mind before slaying your crowd with your
blazing wit? Sure
If something out of your control
interrupts you in mid-joke, take a minute to see what
happens. The momentum is probably dead, but if your
listeners return their attention to you hoping to hear the
rest, pick up where you left off. Do not make a big deal
about the interruption. What if they don’t return their
attention to you? Cut your losses and move on.
Don’t rush the joke. Speak at a
reasonable pace
Make eye contact with the people
you’re telling the joke to, and distribute it evenly. This
involves each person as if you’re talking directly to them,
but be sure to alter your eye contact so as not to focus on
any one person.
Don’t laugh at your own joke. Your own
laughter can break your momentum as much as any other
interruption.
Most importantly
Of course, if you’ve followed the
advice in this article and put your best foot forward, then
you’re on your way to becoming the hit of any gathering,
party or speaking engagement.
Larry Getlen
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