Bad jokes

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  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    Secretary: The invisible man is here
    Boss: Tell him I can’t see him
  • One egg to the other:

    I’m done after 3 minutes

    Egg 2: don’t be silly it takes 4 minutes for me to get hard

    So help me back in 1970 ( aged 17) I didn’t get it….
  • Have you heard the one about the Scouser (Liverpudlian) who went on holiday to Italy and came back speaking fluent Italian?

    He opened his front door and called up the stairs: "Mama Mia!"
  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    A large hole appeared the the road outside my house overnight. Nobody knows how it happened, but the police are looking into it.
  • The story is told that the pop group Dire Straits and the singer Chris Rhea planned to get together as a 'supergroup'. They would call themselves 'DireRhea'.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    edited October 2022
    Sparrow wrote: »
    Have you heard the one about the Scouser (Liverpudlian) who went on holiday to Italy and came back speaking fluent Italian?

    He opened his front door and called up the stairs: "Mama Mia!"

    Nope, not getting the Scouse reference there.

    Scrub that, just got it after 48 hours...
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    RockyRoger wrote: »
    The story is told that the pop group Dire Straits and the singer Chris Rhea planned to get together as a 'supergroup'. They would call themselves 'DireRhea'.

    I've always felt it's funny how diarrhoea sounds like the dire rear you get...

    Sorry - mine's the leather jacket. I can see myself out.
  • KarlLB wrote: »
    Sparrow wrote: »
    Have you heard the one about the Scouser (Liverpudlian) who went on holiday to Italy and came back speaking fluent Italian?

    He opened his front door and called up the stairs: "Mama Mia!"

    Nope, not getting the Scouse reference there.

    Scrub that, just got it after 48 hours...

    It didn't take me quite that long, but still, I think its credentials as a really bad joke have been established.
  • Sparrow wrote: »
    Have you heard the one about the Scouser (Liverpudlian) who went on holiday to Italy and came back speaking fluent Italian?

    He opened his front door and called up the stairs: "Mama Mia!"

    I must be as thick as a whale omelette. I just don't get it! could some kind poster please enlighten me?
    Please, please, pretty please!
  • Baptist TrainfanBaptist Trainfan Shipmate
    edited October 2022
    "Mother, I'm here!" It took me some time, too.
  • MooMoo Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    That joke is intelligible only to someone who knows what scouse sounds like.
  • DafydDafyd Hell Host
    I worked it out when I googled "mother I'm here Liverpool" from Baptist Trainfan's post.
    "Mama Mia" is a homophone of "Mam, I'm here"
  • 'Mam, I'm 'ere.'
    It reminds me of the yarn about the Welsh teacher of a Liverpool school who arrived late for a for a teaching session. Hearing a disturbance and knowing the likely culprit, he flung open the classroom door and shouted 'Hughes, stand up!' The whole class rose to their feet. (Translation: 'Youse, stand up!)
  • Gill HGill H Shipmate
    RockyRoger wrote: »
    The story is told that the pop group Dire Straits and the singer Chris Rhea planned to get together as a 'supergroup'. They would call themselves 'DireRhea'.

    No no no. This should read:

    The story is told that the pop group Dire Straits and the singer Chris Rhea planned to get together as a 'supergroup'. But they abandoned the idea, because nobody would hire a band called (pause)...
    Chris Straits.
  • Gill H wrote: »
    RockyRoger wrote: »
    The story is told that the pop group Dire Straits and the singer Chris Rhea planned to get together as a 'supergroup'. They would call themselves 'DireRhea'.

    No no no. This should read:

    The story is told that the pop group Dire Straits and the singer Chris Rhea planned to get together as a 'supergroup'. But they abandoned the idea, because nobody would hire a band called (pause)...
    Chris Straits.

    Ah, but that would be a good (clever!) joke.
  • I heard today that they aren't making 12 inch rulers any longer.
  • I heard today that they aren't making 12 inch rulers any longer.

    A secretary at a place I worked broke hers and said, "Now it's only good for measuring six inch things."
  • Apparently, Mark Knofler left the band, but some of them anted to carry on. They were not allowed to use the full name, so instead of being Dire Straits, they are just Dire.
  • Moo wrote: »
    That joke is intelligible only to someone who knows what scouse sounds like.

    In my defence, it was told me by my Scouser partner.

  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    edited October 2022
    Moo wrote: »
    That joke is intelligible only to someone who knows what scouse sounds like.

    To be fair, Mam I'm 'ere sounds like Mama Mia in pretty much any non-rhotic h-dropping accent - which covers almost all of England and much of Wales.

    It only took me longer than it ought because I failed to read it out loud. But it's not uniquely Scouse.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    I heard today that they aren't making 12 inch rulers any longer.

    Bwaaa bwaaa bwaaaa bwaaaa....

  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    KarlLB wrote: »
    Moo wrote: »
    That joke is intelligible only to someone who knows what scouse sounds like.

    To be fair, Mam I'm 'ere sounds like Mama Mia in pretty much any non-rhotic h-dropping accent - which covers almost all of England and much of Wales.

    It only took me longer than it ought because I failed to read it out loud. But it's not uniquely Scouse.

    But "Mam" is pretty regional. Not sure whether it's a generally "northern" thing or specific to a few places like Liverpool and Glasgow.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    edited October 2022
    KarlLB wrote: »
    Moo wrote: »
    That joke is intelligible only to someone who knows what scouse sounds like.

    To be fair, Mam I'm 'ere sounds like Mama Mia in pretty much any non-rhotic h-dropping accent - which covers almost all of England and much of Wales.

    It only took me longer than it ought because I failed to read it out loud. But it's not uniquely Scouse.

    But "Mam" is pretty regional. Not sure whether it's a generally "northern" thing or specific to a few places like Liverpool and Glasgow.

    Yeh, regional in use (across a good part of Northern England I'd say) but also pretty universally understood.

    Interestingly, "Mum I'm 'ere" using a Southern Strut vowel sounds even more like "Mama Mia" than the Mam version does, if anything.
  • "Bill! I haven't seen you for a while! I hate to be rude, but have you put on a little weight?"

    "Yeah I haven't been going to the gym. I've had a lot on my plate."
  • Not sure if this rates as a bad joke or what, but I saw this nicely painted sign at a farm gate this morning: "Prepare to meet thy dog".
  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    Not sure if this rates as a bad joke or what, but I saw this nicely painted sign at a farm gate this morning: "Prepare to meet thy dog".

    Have you heard the one about the dyslexic agnostic? He used to lie awake at night wondering about the existence of dog.
  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    Have you heard the one about the dyslexic pimp? He opened a warehouse.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    Spike wrote: »
    Not sure if this rates as a bad joke or what, but I saw this nicely painted sign at a farm gate this morning: "Prepare to meet thy dog".

    Have you heard the one about the dyslexic agnostic? He used to lie awake at night wondering about the existence of dog.

    That's the dyslexic agnostic insomniac, specifically.
  • Or the dyslexic diabolist who worshipped Santa.
  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    What’s orange and sounds like a parrot?








    A carrot
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    My daughter wanted animal jokes yesterday and among the hedgehog ones was on I couldn't read out:

    Q: What's the difference between a hedgehog and a police car?
    A: With a hedgehog the pricks are on the outside. :hushed:

    It was an XR 2i when I were young.
  • The American political version of the hedgehog joke is, "What is the difference between a cactus and a caucus?"
  • The American political version of the hedgehog joke is, "What is the difference between a cactus and a caucus?"

    Oh, that's so good, the aliteration adds so much! Over the years, when having to endure my (numerous) blood tests, the warning has changed (though I forget exactly when). I'm now told to 'expect a small sctratch'.
    little room for a bad joke, there, alas!
  • "Just a little pr**k"
  • Did you know that you can't use 'Beef Stew' as a password?
    It's not stroganoff
  • Have we had the classis:
    My wife's gone to the West Indies?
    Jamaica?
    No, she went of her own accord.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    edited October 2022
    You are presumably aware that fairies get pregnant by sitting on a toadstool?

    Meanwhile, tadpoles can get into a lot of trouble if caught swapping frogspawn... (caveat: joke may not work in some accents)
  • Eirenist wrote: »
    Have we had the classis:
    My wife's gone to the West Indies?
    Jamaica?
    No, she went of her own accord.

    Alternatively,

    My wife's gone to Indonesia
    Jakarta?
  • TurquoiseTasticTurquoiseTastic Kerygmania Host
    Well, my wife and I have gone to Corfe Castle!

    In Dorset?

    Yes, we'd recommend it to anyone!
  • BelisariusBelisarius Admin Emeritus
    edited October 2022
    Q: How do male elephants find female elephants in the tall grass?

    A: Pretty damn nice.
  • BelisariusBelisarius Admin Emeritus
    Q: How do you sell chickens to a deaf man?

    A: BUY MY CHICKENS!!!!
  • Belisarius wrote: »
    Q: How do you sell chickens to a deaf man?

    A: BUY MY CHICKENS!!!!

    The handyman we work with is deaf. He lost his hearing when he was an infant due to a high fever. He went to a deaf school in the area in a time where they discouraged signing. He said he began to understand signing during recess, but after a year he was placed in a hearing school. He hates it when people try shouting at him. He much rather prefers people face him directly so he can lip read. He finds shouting condescending.
  • Gramps49 wrote: »
    Belisarius wrote: »
    Q: How do you sell chickens to a deaf man?

    A: BUY MY CHICKENS!!!!

    The handyman we work with is deaf. He lost his hearing when he was an infant due to a high fever. He went to a deaf school in the area in a time where they discouraged signing. He said he began to understand signing during recess, but after a year he was placed in a hearing school. He hates it when people try shouting at him. He much rather prefers people face him directly so he can lip read. He finds shouting condescending.

    Did you know that if you shout loud enough to someone who doesn't speak English, they'll understand what you want?
  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    Belisarius wrote: »
    Q: How do you sell chickens to a deaf man?

    A: BUY MY CHICKENS!!!!

    The handyman we work with is deaf. He lost his hearing when he was an infant due to a high fever. He went to a deaf school in the area in a time where they discouraged signing. He said he began to understand signing during recess, but after a year he was placed in a hearing school. He hates it when people try shouting at him. He much rather prefers people face him directly so he can lip read. He finds shouting condescending.

    How do you sell chickens to a deaf man?
    Look at him directly and speak normally so he can lip read.

    Nah, the joke doesn’t really work.

    Anyway, back to bad jokes


    How many folk singers does it take to change a light bulb?
    Just one and ten to sing about the old one.
  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    edited October 2022
    How many Irish mothers DITTCAL?

    None. I'll just sit here in the dark. Youse go out and enjoy yourselves.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    edited October 2022
    Spike wrote: »
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    Belisarius wrote: »
    Q: How do you sell chickens to a deaf man?

    A: BUY MY CHICKENS!!!!

    The handyman we work with is deaf. He lost his hearing when he was an infant due to a high fever. He went to a deaf school in the area in a time where they discouraged signing. He said he began to understand signing during recess, but after a year he was placed in a hearing school. He hates it when people try shouting at him. He much rather prefers people face him directly so he can lip read. He finds shouting condescending.

    How do you sell chickens to a deaf man?
    Look at him directly and speak normally so he can lip read.

    Nah, the joke doesn’t really work.

    Anyway, back to bad jokes


    How many folk singers does it take to change a light bulb?
    Just one and ten to sing about the old one.

    How many sopranos does it take to change a light bulb?



    Three. One to go up the ladder and two to say that it's far too high for her but they could do it easily.

    HM tenors DITTCAL?

    Just one. We hold it up and let the world revolve around us.

    Has to be screw thread, obviously.
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Q. How many Anglicans does it take to change a lightbulb?

    A. CHANGE?!?!?
  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host
    Piglet wrote: »
    Q. How many Anglicans does it take to change a lightbulb?

    A. CHANGE?!?!?

    One, and ten to form a society to remember how good the old one was and campaign for its use.
  • <RECOMMENDATION>There is a difference between a bad joke and an offensive joke.</RECOMMENDATION>
  • Now that's rea
    HarryCH wrote: »
    <RECOMMENDATION>There is a difference between a bad joke and an offensive joke.</RECOMMENDATION>

    In the eye of the beholder, for example, " I say I say, my brother was away and his wife had an afair with the milkman. So I told him and he came back quickly and by helicopter!"
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