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2022 dad jokes :: Article Creator

How 'dad Jokes' Prepare Your Kids For A Lifetime Of Embarrassment, According To Psychology

This Father's Day you may be rolling out your best "dad jokes" and watching your children laugh (or groan). Maybe you'll hear your own father, partner or friend crack a dad joke or two. You know the ones:

What is the most condescending animal? A pan-DUH!

Why don't scientists trust atoms? Because they make up everything!

Yes, dad jokes can be fun. They play an important role in how we interact with our kids. But dad jokes may also help prepare them to handle embarrassment later in life.

Read more: The lowdown on laughter: from boosting immunity to releasing tension

What are dad jokes?

Dad jokes are a distinct style of humour consisting of puns that are simple, wholesome and often involve a cheesy delivery.

These jokes usually feature obvious wordplay and a straightforward punchline that leaves listeners either chuckling or emitting an exaggerated groan.

This corny brand of humour is popular. There are hundreds of websites, YouTube videos and TikToks dedicated to them. You can even play around with dad joke generators if you need some inspiration.

Read more: Must love jokes: why we look for a partner who laughs (and makes us laugh)

Why are dad jokes so popular?

People seem to love dad jokes, partly because of the puns.

A study published earlier this year found people enjoy puns more than most other types of jokes. The authors also suggested that if you groan in response to a pun, this can be a sign you enjoy the joke, rather than find it displeasing.

Other research shows dad jokes work on at least three levels:

1. As tame puns

Humour typically violates a kind of boundary. At the most basic level, dad jokes only violate a language norm. They require specific knowledge of the language to "get" them, in a way a fart joke does not.

The fact that dad jokes are wholesome and inoffensive means dads can tell them around their children. But this also potentially makes them tame, which other people might call unfunny.

2. As anti-humour

Telling someone a pun that's too tame to deserve being told out loud is itself a violation of the norms of joke-telling. That violation can in turn make a dad joke funny. In other words, a dad joke can be so unfunny this makes it funny – a type of anti-humour.

3. As weaponised anti-humour

Sometimes, the purpose of a dad joke is not to make people laugh but to make them groan and roll their eyes. When people tell dad jokes to teasingly annoy someone else for fun, dad jokes work as a kind of weaponised anti-humour.

The stereotypical scenario associated with dad jokes is exactly this: a dad telling a pun and then his kids rolling their eyes out of annoyance or cringing from embarrassment.

Read more: Kids learn valuable life skills through rough-and-tumble play with their dads

Dad jokes help dads be dads

Dad jokes are part of a father's toolkit for engaging with his loved ones, a way to connect through laughter. But as children grow older, the way they receive puns change.

Children at around six years old enjoy hearing and telling puns. These are generally innocent ones such as:

Why is six afraid of seven? Because seven ate nine!

As children age and their language and reasoning abilities develop, their understanding of humour becomes more complex.

In adolescence, they may start to view puns as unfunny. This, however, doesn't stop their fathers from telling them.

Instead, fathers can revel in the embarrassment their dad jokes can produce around their image-conscious and sensitive adolescent children.

Dad jokes, funny? As if. Shutterstock

In fact, in a study, one of us (Marc) suggests the playful teasing that comes with dad jokes may be partly why they are such a widespread cultural phenomenon.

This playful and safe teasing serves a dual role in father-child bonding in adolescence. Not only is it playful and fun, it can also be used to help educate the young person how to handle feeling embarrassed.

Helping children learn how to deal with embarrassment is no laughing matter. Getting better at this is a very important part of learning how to regulate emotions and develop resilience.

Modelling the use of humour also has benefits. Jokes can be a useful coping strategy during awkward situations – for instance, after someone says something awkward or to make someone laugh who has become upset.

Read more: Dads' time to shine online: how laughter can connect and heal

Dad jokes are more than punchlines

So, the next time you hear your father unleash a cringe-worthy dad joke, remember it's not just about the punchline. It's about creating connections and lightening the mood.

So go ahead, let out that groan, and share a smile with the one who proudly delivers the dad jokes. It's all part of the fun.


Funniest Fringe Jokes From Years Gone By

Image caption,

Comedian Masai Graham has won the award twice and been runner-up in other years

Each year comedy channel Dave names its top gag from the Edinburgh festival, which is chosen by a panel of critics and then voted on by the public.

This year's Funniest Joke of the Fringe winner is Lorna Rose Treen with her one-liner about a zookeeper.

Here are the previous 10 winners:

2022: A pasta pun from Masai Graham triumphed as the Fringe festival returned in full force after the Covid pandemic.

"I tried to steal spaghetti from the shop, but the female guard saw me and I couldn't get pasta."

2019: Swedish comedian Olaf Falafel got plenty of laughs but also some criticism from a Tourette's charity with his winning joke.

Image caption,

Olaf Falafel won the award in 2019

2018: Liverpool comedian Alan Rowe hit the spot with a one-liner about being sacked by a Jobcentre.

"Working at the Jobcentre has to be a tense job - knowing that if you get fired, you still have to come in the next day."

2017: Ken Cheng, who is also a professional poker player, kept a straight face with his gag about the new pound coin.

Image caption,

Ken Cheng took the 2017 joke prize

2016: Having made the shortlist in the two previous years, Masai Graham finally took the top spot with his organ donor joke.

2015: With a Fringe show called Punderbolt, it was no surprise that a pun was Darren Walsh's punchline.

2014: Tim Vine became the first comedian to win the award for a second time with his joke about a vacuum cleaner.

"I decided to sell my Hoover... Well it was just collecting dust."

Image source, Getty Images Image caption,

Tim Vine won for the second time in 2014

2013: Having quit his job selling paintbrushes to become a comedian, Rob Auton's joke was judged a stroke of genius.

2012: Canadian funnyman Stewart Francis took a swipe at the Beckhams with his winning joke.

2011: Nick Helm added a touch of Disney magic to the frustrating task of choosing a new password.

"I needed a password eight characters long so I picked Snow White and the Seven Dwarves."


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