Summary: “A man has an orange for a head. How? Magic.”
Is it still funny?
Assuming a person can actually have an orange for a head and that genies exist then this is just a straightforward story explaining how he became wealthy, desirable and fruitheaded. Like asking someone in a suit how come he’s wearing a suit and he answers “because I bought one and put it on”.
Assuming a person can’t actually have an orange for a head, it’s just a timewasting surreal story which doesn’t go anywhere.
The humour is in the non-answer where an answer is expected, but I don’t find a non-answer funny. I do see it as a joke-shaped pattern and start to involuntarily smile at it, but I’m mentally annoyed by it not enhappied by it.
I don’t think the humor is in the non-answer, I think the humor is in the fact that we’re introduced to a person who demonstrates what is apparently rational, goal seeking behavior, and then proceeds to ask for something he doesn’t want and has no reason to want.
Exactly, but I think the parodistic element is important as well. We expect (both from all the similar stories about genies and all the less wrong posts about what genies can be trusted) that he made a seemingly useful wish that backfired, presumably in a humourous manner (like how “The building explodes and your elderly mum is blown into the sky” is humourous, in a slapstick manner). We think he’s going to ask for something he wants, but instead gets something he doesn’t want, when he instead asks for something he doesn’t want and gets it.
Also, you’re obviously right when you think of “King Midas is starving to death. How? Magic.” has no clear genre. It’s a morality play about wealth and not making stupid wishes if the answer is “He used magic to wish for all he touched to turn to gold, not realising this meant his food as well. Being unable to digest gold he started to starve.” and a joke if the answer is “He used magic to wish to starve to death. What a maroon!”
Also, regarding OP, just making the answer magic is as silly as “Why is that man wearing a suit? Economics” and “Why is King Midas starving? Biochemistry.”
Actually, I find your version slightly funny, but I don’t like the original version.
I normally like anti-jokes, but for them to work, they should be both short and subvert a joke structure that was funny to begin with. I never liked the “misguided wish”. Overall, I strongly dislike long buildups. A joke should be efficient.
Summary: “A man has an orange for a head. How? Magic.”
Is it still funny?
Assuming a person can actually have an orange for a head and that genies exist then this is just a straightforward story explaining how he became wealthy, desirable and fruitheaded. Like asking someone in a suit how come he’s wearing a suit and he answers “because I bought one and put it on”.
Assuming a person can’t actually have an orange for a head, it’s just a timewasting surreal story which doesn’t go anywhere.
The humour is in the non-answer where an answer is expected, but I don’t find a non-answer funny. I do see it as a joke-shaped pattern and start to involuntarily smile at it, but I’m mentally annoyed by it not enhappied by it.
I don’t think the humor is in the non-answer, I think the humor is in the fact that we’re introduced to a person who demonstrates what is apparently rational, goal seeking behavior, and then proceeds to ask for something he doesn’t want and has no reason to want.
Exactly, but I think the parodistic element is important as well. We expect (both from all the similar stories about genies and all the less wrong posts about what genies can be trusted) that he made a seemingly useful wish that backfired, presumably in a humourous manner (like how “The building explodes and your elderly mum is blown into the sky” is humourous, in a slapstick manner). We think he’s going to ask for something he wants, but instead gets something he doesn’t want, when he instead asks for something he doesn’t want and gets it.
Also, you’re obviously right when you think of “King Midas is starving to death. How? Magic.” has no clear genre. It’s a morality play about wealth and not making stupid wishes if the answer is “He used magic to wish for all he touched to turn to gold, not realising this meant his food as well. Being unable to digest gold he started to starve.” and a joke if the answer is “He used magic to wish to starve to death. What a maroon!” Also, regarding OP, just making the answer magic is as silly as “Why is that man wearing a suit? Economics” and “Why is King Midas starving? Biochemistry.”
I also think part of the insight is that by the time he has the other two things, it doesn’t really matter what he has for a head.
Actually, I find your version slightly funny, but I don’t like the original version.
I normally like anti-jokes, but for them to work, they should be both short and subvert a joke structure that was funny to begin with. I never liked the “misguided wish”. Overall, I strongly dislike long buildups. A joke should be efficient.
I liked the original joke, and have told it many times in the past. I also find this sentence quite funny: