Ahhh, guess I’m slow. It didn’t even occur to me that he was joking.
Haven’t you asked this question every day this past week? 
I remember this story, but I don’t remember the author or title, unfortunately. 
When I was young I read a large number of anthologies of SF short stories, and it could have been from any of them.
If I remember correctly, the main character is marginally aware of an audience of people from the future. Every time he says certain lines, he can hear them laugh, but he doesn’t know why. I think that in the story the machinery breaks down, and for a short time he is free. He sees other ‘exhibits’ from different time periods. Then it is fixed, and the endless loop starts up again.
Yes, yes, yes!!! This is the story. I had forgotten the part about the breakdown of machinery, but it rings true.
Too bad you don’t remember the author or title either, but I was starting to wonder if I was dealing with a false memory. Now maybe someone else will chime in.
Thanks GreenWyvern!
No I have not. Perhaps you are confusing me with one or more other posters?:o
Something about this is making me think of Barry Malzberg (list of stories here http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?534) (if the overall impression of the story was tragic) or Keith Laumer (Summary Bibliography: Keith Laumer) (if the overall impression of the story was funny)
wasnt this on the outer limits or twilight zone or one of the copies that aired ?
Maybe something by Ray Bradbury, sounds kind of like Farienhite 451 has to do same things everyday, burn books, no life no adventure. Same premise as Christian Bale movie Equilibrium
It’s not impossible. It would certainly make a good plotline for either of those shows. But, if so, I have never seen it.
No, I am quite sure it was not Ray Bradbury. I have read most if not all of his short stories since I read the story I am asking about. I would have remembered if it was one of his.
I took a look at the plot line for Equilibrium and I see no similarity at all.
Thanks anyway.
It’s nothing at all like Bradbury. Montag had a humdrum life with a boring, routine job (well, at first, at least), but that’s nothing at all like being used as a meat-puppet compelled to do the exact same thing every day.
Maybe something by Vonnegut?
No idea here, I’m just surprised you didn’t get the answer within 2 minutes.
2 minutes is maybe a bit optimistic, given that it was published at least 45 years ago, but I thought I’d get a positive ID by now.
At least GreenWyvern remembers the story too!