It's not just intelligence where the collective outperforms the individual. More often than not, the same is true for humor. After all, there's a reason shows like South Park and Saturday Night Live rely on entire writers' teams instead of putting the pressure on a single comedian.
To prove the point, we present the subreddit r/TheRealJoke. It's dedicated to finding comments that are funnier than the posts they're responding to. Sometimes the punchline is just the setup for an even better one! Enjoy some of its best examples below.
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Nice Pun There
Venn Diagram
There's even a study that confirms many online commenters are more interested in brandishing their opinions in the comments section than in reading the articles themselves.
More than half of the people who leave comments on news stories spend as much or more time on the comments as on the actual story, according to the paper from the Engaging News Project at the University of Texas at Austin.
Almost 20% of people report spending more time on the comment section than on the story.
Hehehe…..woof Woof
Clever With A Perfect Delivery
We’re Gonna See This On A “Top 10 Pranks Gone Too Far” Video In 10 Years
At their best, comment sections are thriving examples of civil discourse. At their worst, they are troll-infested pits of cruelty, bigotry, and ignorance, where personal attacks and slurs count as dialogue.
Perhaps because of this tone, the aforementioned study found that most internet users avoid news site comments and neither read nor post on them. One in three (35%) will look at comments but never chime in. Just 14% of internet users who have ever commented anywhere—Facebook, a product review site, or otherwise—have done so on a news site.
He’s All Right
Ayo What’s This Person Planning
The Real Dad Joke
Un Oeuf
Those of us who comment at least once a week are more likely to be men (64%) and to have a high school education or less (53%) than those who only allow themselves an occasional peek at the discussion.
For many of these enthusiastic commenters, the comment section may be the whole point of their visit.
Mutant Ninja Tuetlw
Rip Grandma
Pizza
Some Dude Said Why
"You would think people spend the lion's share of their time on the article, and the comments are an afterthought," said Talia Stroud, the study's lead author and an associate professor of communications at Austin.
But no. Commenters may in fact barely digest the facts of a story before jumping in with an opinion, Stroud added. Some may get no farther than the headline before opining, particularly on an organization's Facebook page. For many commenters, the article is beside the point. For these users, a news site is just a "meeting point."
Professor Of Advanced Plot Twists
Told It Better
Ea-Nassir Lives Forever!
Stimulates
No Gum Gum For Dumb Dumb
My IKEA Coffee Table And I Feel Personally Attacked By This
Nope Gates
Nuclear Rawfare
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