Oh for gods' sakes
Friday, April 14th, 2006 11:38 amIs there anyone around here besides me who still has a sense of humor about things like PUNKd?
It's a JOKE. Nobody GETS HURT. All that happens is some people THINK something happened that DIDN'T. And then they FIND OUT. That's it, people!
When I was a kid, there was a show called Candid Camera. It was essentially the same thing, except that the "victims" were ordinary people, not celebrities, and the show had a microscopic budget compared to PUNKd. There were no houses blowing up. Instead, what you got were people reacting to talking mailboxes, or choreographed crowds that wouldn't let them pass, or things like that. It was funny then, and it's funny now.
Christ in a sidecar. The world is getting grimmer and more horrid every day. Where's the harm in fooling somebody and then letting them know they've been fooled? It's incredible how thin-skinned people have gotten, and how unwilling to take a joke. Especially when it isn't even on them!!
*goes back to watch promo again* I sure hope somebody captures the whole segment. I'd really love to see this!
It's a JOKE. Nobody GETS HURT. All that happens is some people THINK something happened that DIDN'T. And then they FIND OUT. That's it, people!
When I was a kid, there was a show called Candid Camera. It was essentially the same thing, except that the "victims" were ordinary people, not celebrities, and the show had a microscopic budget compared to PUNKd. There were no houses blowing up. Instead, what you got were people reacting to talking mailboxes, or choreographed crowds that wouldn't let them pass, or things like that. It was funny then, and it's funny now.
Christ in a sidecar. The world is getting grimmer and more horrid every day. Where's the harm in fooling somebody and then letting them know they've been fooled? It's incredible how thin-skinned people have gotten, and how unwilling to take a joke. Especially when it isn't even on them!!
*goes back to watch promo again* I sure hope somebody captures the whole segment. I'd really love to see this!
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Date: Friday, April 14th, 2006 07:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Friday, April 14th, 2006 08:01 pm (UTC)Why has it become so common to assume woundedness and pain when it has not occurred? Why do so many people jump to conclusions about the effects of things like this, and why do those conclusions so often involve injury? It's humor. It's not meant to be taken seriously. Therefore, what's the point in getting upset about any of it?
I've seen this kind of thing happen in fandom before, and it's interesting that the reactions of the fans are so often much more negative and hand-wringing than that of the people involved. I'd bet a hefty sum that when Elijah found out he'd been punked, he didn't sit down and start crying about being hurt. He probably laughed his ass off.
no subject
Date: Friday, April 14th, 2006 08:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Friday, April 14th, 2006 08:46 pm (UTC)(And the talking mailbox killed me every time. I loved how some people really got into a conversation with it.)
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Date: Friday, April 14th, 2006 08:52 pm (UTC)I've never seen this show. I don't know what it's about, how far the jokes go, or what they do. But I can completely sympathize with people who don't find it funny to watch someone else's humiliation. Thin-skinned? Maybe. Or maybe just empathetic. Some just don't find the same kinds of things funny, just as some don't find the same sorts of things scary or sad or romantic. And frankly, some of these so-called harmless "pranks" can get down-right cruel--even if no one is physically hurt.
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Date: Friday, April 14th, 2006 08:55 pm (UTC)I'll also add that celebrities are probably more equipped than the average Joe to deal with that sort of embarrassment--they're more used to the spotlight, after all. But I hold to what I said about some of these things being taken too far. It can happen, and it can hurt, no matter that it was done in good fun. *shrugs*
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Date: Saturday, April 15th, 2006 03:33 pm (UTC)Then somehow along the way of these things, the humour became crueller. It is more based on making a situation so real that people believe implicitly because they trust the figures involved, or what they see or the friends that have so kindly set them up. The audience is encouraged to see their trust as somehow flawed and to see their genuine reactions of the moment as something amusing. I don't find a genuine belief in something so apparently real and often distressing as amusing even if I know its a set up. I'm not wired that way to see it as amusing. Others are and that's ok as long as the person being set up is agreeable to it being shown. Elijah was, so fine. All I know is, I won't be watching it because it doesn't float my boat, no matter who it is. It's no reflection on my own sense of humour or yours either because we all have our different responses to what makes us laugh.