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Jerry Seinfeld Interview: How to Write a Joke | The New York Times

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    I know you think people will be
    interested in this
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    But they're not.
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    I've probably been working
    on this for two years.
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    Two years? I mean, usually I write
    a book in a couple of days.
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    It's a long time
    to spend on something
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    that means
    absolutely nothing.
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    But that's what I do,
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    that's what people
    want me to do,
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    is spend a lot of time
    wastefully,
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    so that I can then
    waste their time.
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    Comedy writing is
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    something you don't
    see people doing.
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    It's a secretive thing:
    I've never shown anybody
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    this stuff.
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    I feel a little funny
    about it right now,
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    to tell you the truth.
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    In comedy, what you do is
    you think of something
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    that you think is funny,
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    and then you
    go from there.
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    It's a fun thing to say,
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    "Pop Tart".
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    I like the first line
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    to be funny right away:
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    When I was a kid
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    and they
    invented the pop tart
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    the back of my head
    blew right off.
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    And that got the whole
    thing started,
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    that specific part
    of my head blew off.
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    Not just my head,
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    but just the back.
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    "It was the 60's
    and we had toast,
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    "we had orange juice
    that was frozen
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    "years in advance,
    that you had to
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    "hack away
    at with a knife
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    "to get a couple of drops
    and it felt like
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    "you're committing
    a murder
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    "before you got
    on your school bus."
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    Then I talk about
    shredded wheat, which
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    was like wrapping
    your lips
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    around a wood chipper.
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    "You'd have breakfast and
    then you had to take
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    "two days off
    for the scars to heal
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    "so you could speak
    again."
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    >> You always write on --
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    >> Always, yeah, yeah.
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    >> Have you ever
    tried to --
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    >> No
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    I don't like
    that cursor flash and
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    looking at me like,
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    "So?
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    What you got?"
    >> Do you have
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    a special pen?
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    Yes, the Bic
    clear-barrel blue
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    which I wrote every
    episode of Seinfeld,
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    the TV series,
    with that pen.
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    Larry and I used to
    write them longhand.
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    Oh, cause you can't be
    in this?
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    Aw, that's a drag!
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    That was good timing.
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    "So in the midst
    of that dark
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    "and hopeless moment,
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    "the Pop Tarts
    suddenly appear
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    "in the supermarket
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    "and we just stared at it
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    "like an alien spacecraft
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    "and we were like --
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    we were like, erhhh
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    "chimps in the dirt
    playing with sticks."
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    What makes that joke
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    is you get "chimps",
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    "dirt",
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    "playing" and "sticks".
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    In seven words: four
    of them are funny.
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    Chimps: chimps are funny.
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    Then there is the trying
    to figure out
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    as a kid,
    how did they know
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    that there would be
    a need for a frosted
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    fruit-filled
    heatable rectangle
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    in the same shape
    as the box it comes in,
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    and with the same
    nutrition
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    as the box it comes in.
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    In the midst
    of that darkness
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    and hopelessness
    the Kellogg's
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    Pop Tart
    appears
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    and they always laugh
    there
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    because that
    indicates "Oh he's telling
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    us a story".
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    Then my next joke
    that I want to get to
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    is "chimps in the dirt
    with sticks".
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    So now I'm looking
    for the connective tissue
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    that gives me
    that really tight,
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    smooth
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    link, like a jigsaw
    puzzle link.
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    And if it's too long,
    if it's just
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    that split second
    too long,
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    you will shave letters
    off of words.
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    You count syllables,
    you know,
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    to get it just --
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    it's more like song
    writing.
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    Then I had to figure out
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    how to end the thing
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    and that's
    the hardest part:
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    if you have a long bit,
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    the biggest laugh
    has to be at the end.
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    It has to be.
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    It can't be
    in the middle,
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    or the beginning.
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    And this was very
    daunting.
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    "Once this pop tart had
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    "come into the world,
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    "I didn't understand
    why we were still
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    "eating other kinds
    of food
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    "because this seemed to be
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    "definitely the new way:
    "two in the packet
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    "and two slots
    in the toaster.
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    "Why two, one is not enough,
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    "three is too many
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    "and they can't go stale
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    because they were
    never fresh."
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    "They can't go stale
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    because they were
    never fresh,"
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    that took a long time
    and it --
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    I know it sounds
    like nothing.
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    And it is nothing.
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    You know, in my world,
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    the wronger something
    feels,
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    the righter it is.
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    So, to waste
    this much time
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    on something
    this stupid is --
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    that felt good to me.
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    It's the exact opposite
    of what we do
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    here at the Times.
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    Which is, we spend
    appropriate amounts
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    of time
    on deserving subjects.
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    So I'm the exact
    opposite of that:
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    inappropriate
    and undeserving subjects.
Title:
Jerry Seinfeld Interview: How to Write a Joke | The New York Times
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Video Language:
English
Duration:
05:03

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