Public Speaking: 
Old Humor can be Good Humor
Public speaking
humor is only old if your audience has heard it before and if they remember
it. Most people don't remember the exact details of jokes, one-liners, and stories.
This is not contradictory to the fact that one of the uses of humor is to make
your points more memorable in your public speaking engagements.
One of the reasons
people don't remember jokes and other pieces of humor is that the humor is usually
heard out of context. The humor was not used in conjunction with a point which
is the way you should use it in a public speaking engagement. The humor was
used for entertainment value only and was enjoyed and quickly forgotten.
When you bring
back some of this old humor, you will be linking it to your point which makes
it acceptable to use in the first place. In the second place, even if some audience
members recognize the humor, they probably don't remember the punch line. If
you tell it well, even these people will enjoy hearing it again.
The technique
to tell a very old joke or story is to tell the audience it is old. This is
the one time in your public speaking when you might want to tell the audience
you have a joke or story coming. If you don't tell them that you know it is
old, they will likely think you are out of touch. If you tell them you are going
to tell an old story or joke, you are telling them you know it's old, but it
makes the point so well that you think it is worth telling again.
You will come
across jokes and stories that can be updated for your public speaking. Some
can be updated as easily as adding a current name. Here is an old politician
joke:
Joe the politician
said he was so surprised about his nomination that his acceptance speech fell
out of his pocket.
All you have to
do to update this one is to change the name from Joe to the current politician
or association member you want to tease. You could also make this a joke on
yourself if you know you are going to be nominated for something. I was so surprised
about this nomination that MY acceptance speech fell out of my pocket. Here
is another one that can be used for presidents, or to tease any business boss:
A man was alone
in a rowboat on the Potomac shouting No! No! No! Someone on the riverbank said,
"Is that guy crazy or what?" Another man fishing said, "No. That's
just one of President Clinton's Yes Men on vacation." All you have to do
on this one is to change the name of the river and substitute your BIG TARGET
where you see President Clinton.
In public speaking
little old humor used properly never hurts.
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