To continue the Monty Python thread,
Zwei peanuts vere valking down die Strasse, und one vas assaulted.
Peanut.
To continue the Monty Python thread,
Zwei peanuts vere valking down die Strasse, und one vas assaulted.
Peanut.
Well, Otto used to be quite popular and a few times he made me laugh out loud…here is his website:
http://www.ottifant.de/index_day.html
He also does some animation and cartoons, as well as a stand up act, films and some odd musical numbers.
Also, the recent film Goodbye Lenin is actually pretty funny in parts.
But I have to admit, although German comedians don’t exactly grow on Tannenbaums, the German audience loves American and British comedy series and comedy films. Say what you want about the film, but the recent release Meet The Fokkers was number one in Germany for several weeks, as well as Invincibles and other recent comedy releases.
And a tradition at New Year’s in Germany is the telvision broadcast of a silly little British short film, Dinner For One. Here is a reference to that;
Here’s an example of German humor that’s actually kind of funny.
I remember this guy. It was a funny act, but I read a while ago that he was actually an American, not a German.
I wonder if this is Werner Fink, who I read about somewhere. IIRC he was popular in Berlin, but the Nazis never bothered him. He would come on stage, salute, and say “HEIL…what’s that guy’s name again?”
One of Hitler’s men (I can’t remember if it was Goering or Goebbels) had married a younger wife, but he was reputedly sterile or impotent. They had a son, which prompted Fink’s joke: “I hear X is going to name his son Hamlet. Why? Sein oder nicht sein, das ist der frage!” (Sein in German means either “to be” or “his”).
Man, that is some funny and pretty harsh humor.
Yes. Yet another example of how the original National Lampoon still influences comedy even today. The only saving grace is that every nationality gets the same treatment.
Ahahahahhahahaha… okay, I’m not German… but this was funny…
I was hoping for a page on Americans. As a soon-to-be-european, I need to practice mocking the Yanks.
I’m not terribly amused by the toilet paper joke, but this is funny.
I think what’s supposed to be funny is that next to that sign are NO DOG/ NO ICE CREAM symbols, implying people consume dogs.
Laibach is not a German band, they’re from Slovenia. Laibach is the German name for Ljubljana the capital of Slovenia.
But surely the POW joke is about Germans ( probably by a Brit ) and not** by **Germans? I think the original post was asking about German humour, not jokes about Germans from other countries.
personally, I just read the website of the New York Post.
Hm, well, scratch one example of German humor then. Doesn’t seem to be much left…
Wow, this toilet paper joke has me totally intrigued. A short survey of my friends uncovered NO non-German descent people who even “get it” or understand why it’s supposed to be funny (Out of 6 whom I sent the joke to). One American raised by German grandparents laughed heartily, one with two German parents STILL hasn’t stopped laughing, and two who were raised listening to, but not understanding, German radio think it mildly amusing.
The English-descent mathmetician is still trying to figure out if it’s a number joke.
I admit, I don’t get it. My mother is of German descent, but I guess it’s not strong enough in me. Not only do I not find it funny, but I really can’t figure out what about it is *supposed *to be funny. Even those friends who found it funny can’t explain why.
I vaguely remember one joke that I think is from the same comedian. It was something like, “I went to a baseball game recently in Germany. It was Helmet Day. Everyone named Helmut got in free.”
(yeah, it doesn’t come out right on paper, but out loud it’s funny)
I learned some jokes from German exchange student who went to my high school. Of course, none of them are even remotely appropriate for this forum.
If my dad is any indication, wordplay is huge. The man loves a pun, any pun, and he’s always delighted with himself when he can pun in English as well as German.
Monty Python did a couple of shows entirely in german. If you look on the internet you can see them. complete with subtitiles. It’s the same jokes as in the english versions.
OK, now I must know. Why is the toilet paper joke funny?
slinks off, feeling pathetic