Mastering Humor: Timing, Delivery, Connection
Comedy writers and performers say telling a good joke is harder than it looks: timing and delivery can make or break a punchline. Jokes work by surprising the listener with an unexpected twist, clever wordplay, or absurd imagery that creates a vivid mental picture. Short, sharp jokes often land best because they set up an idea quickly and then flip it — for example, an Edinburgh Fringe-winning pun: "I started dating a zookeeper, but it turned out he was a cheetah."
Many comedians use a three-act structure to build a joke: establish a world, confirm expectations, then subvert them so the audience feels surprise. Longer bits need character, rhythm and tension before the payoff, while short gags rely on compression and clarity. Success depends not only on the turn of language but on delivery — tone, pace, pauses and the performer’s ability to read and connect with the audience — and it improves with rehearsal and feedback.
Bron: telegraph.co.uk ↗
Elke complottheorie hangt één schuldige en één motief aan dezelfde gebeurtenis. Uit dezelfde gebeurtenis kun je willekeurig veel theorieën bouwen — andere schuldigen, andere motieven. Daaraan herken je een complottheorie: dezelfde gebeurtenis kun je op willekeurig veel manieren „verklaren“.
Je loopt door de vier stappen op aparte schermen — met een ontmaskering naast elke stap.