Whenever Craig Ferguson is reading out letters on his show, he will start with “This is from John Smith of New York” and then he will quickly flash the piece of paper that the email is written on to the camera, but only for half a second.
The audience laugh when he does this.
Is this just funny because it is quirky? Is it funny because it is mocking something or referring to something?
The funny thing about that email flash is that I can’t remember his audience laughing at that until a few months ago. He’s just mocking the way other hosts will hold up books and emails and things so the camera can focus on them.
He did used to hold it up long enough to see the name of the sender, but now he does it fast so he can get to the jokes.
A lot of the humour Craig utilises is his attempt to deconstruct traditional US TV. Not only was the UK TV he grew up with often self-deprecating and absurdist, but it thumbed its nose at tradition, and he’s attempting to introduce some of that into his show. Baby steps.
I see at as more of a nod to children’s traditional jokes. Muck like the oft used “I know you are but what am I” or “What are you eating under there… underwear??”.
We did it as kid’s a lot when you would have a new toy, or book, or whatever and you friends would pester “Can I see it, can I see it!” and you’d flash it in front of their face for a split second and respond “There! Now you’ve seen it.”
In the old days when Letterman did the Viewer Mail/CBS Mailbag segment the letter would be shown while Dave read the letter. Craig flashing the email plays against that old expectation.
If he really wanted to take postmodern deconstructionism to the extreme, he’d get an iPad, set it up on the stage, and then flash the e-mail on the screen.
I miss his intros to e-mail. Angels. Monkeys. His own image. Monkey angels doing a Rockette high-kick dance line. Last time I looked, he was just going straight to e-mails. It was a little thing, but it was clever, and I miss it.