Public Speaking: 
One-Liners
One-liner is a
general term for very short pieces of humor. Using one-liners is probably the
best and easiest way to begin adding humor to your public speaking. These brief
bits of humor are quick and easy to deliver and they don't have to be all that
funny to be effective. If you are a little apprehensive about using humor, this
is the place to start.
The audience likes
one-liners, because they can get a quick mental break from content heavy material.
Also, if the audience is there to get high levels of content, they don't feel
you wasted their time with long stories and jokes. One of the handiest sources
for one-liners is a small and inexpensive paperback called Today's Chuckle:
2500 Great One-Liners for Every Occasion by Paul Harlan Collins which you can
use to get ideas from for your public speaking engagements.
Most public speaking
resource books are broken down into categories. This book has categories such
as, Affairs of State and Other Political Indiscretions where you might find
the one-liner: "Politicians are like polkas. They have different names,
but they all sound alike," or Money and the Meaning of Life where you would
see truisms like: "Prosperity is that period between the last installment
and the next purchase." There are 25 categories in all and I can't imagine
a talk that wouldn't benefit from one of these selections.
You'll run across
one-liners everywhere once you start looking. Some will even have two lines.
Don't worry. Write them down too, and start adding them to your public speaking
engagements. Just for fun, I'm including some of my favorites:
- Thanks to
automatic teller machines you are always conveniently close to being broke.
- Life can be
an unfair teacher. Sometimes she gives the test before she gives the lesson.
- Behind every
successful person stands a bunch of amazed co-workers.
- Computers can
do complicated mathematical calculations in 1/100,000 second, but the invoices
still go out 10 days late.
- My accountant
is shy and retiring. He's $250,000 shy. That's why he's retiring.
- How are you
supposed to teach a kid what clockwise means when he's wearing a digital GI
Joe watch?
Using one-liners
in your public speaking is an easy way to add humor.
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