According to (former) Onion Editor-In-Chief Scott Dikkers
- Irony – Intended meaning is opposite of literal meaning
- Character – Comedic character acting on personality traits
- Relatable – Common experiences that audiences can relate to
- Shock – Surprising jokes typically involving sex, drugs, gross-out humor, swearing
- Reference/Parody – Mimic a familiar character, trope or cliche in an unfamiliar way
- Hyperbole – Exaggeration to absurd extremes
- Wordplay – Puns, rhymes, double entendres, etc.
- Analogy – Comparing two disparate things
- Madcap – Crazy, wacky, silly, nonsensical
- Meta-humor – Jokes about jokes, or about the idea of comedy
- Misplaced Focus – Attention is focused on the wrong thing
Do you have a favorite "kind" of joke or is it more about the execution? Do you have a least favorite kind?
Do you agree with this theory of comedy or are there more types of joke?
Ha, this is interesting...
For me, Peep Show is extremely (and uncomfortably) relatable at times, and the jokes/gags that aren't relatable for me I can fit neatly into the other categories individually (the dog of the one woman that Jez hooks up with namely). EDIT: I think we could probably agree to update the definition of "Relateable" to include things that are uncomfortably relatable/even if you've never personally experienced it, you can still relate to why it's uncomfortable. I'm sure there's some specific example of a social situation where the cringe is played for laughs in Peep Show that just doesn't translate to some other culture because it's not seen as abnormal/cringe-worthy. The cringe is suddenly not relatable to them, so the joke falls flat.
I think "ironic" intentional cringe types of comedic performances, eg not sitcom levels of rehearsed, usually fall into "shock" and "meta".
For me, this list is complete.