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    ancientjokes

    Explore "ancientjokes" with insightful episodes like "Best of Summer: The 100-million-year origin story of laughter and humor" and "Best of Summer: What makes the world’s first bar joke funny? No one knows." from podcasts like ""Endless Thread" and "Endless Thread"" and more!

    Episodes (2)

    Best of Summer: The 100-million-year origin story of laughter and humor

    Best of Summer: The 100-million-year origin story of laughter and humor

    The first documented bar joke was copied onto a clay tablet 4,000 years ago in the ancient language of Sumerian. Scholars have translated it, but the meaning remains lost. After the Twitter account @DepthsOfWiki posted the joke in March, thousands of people attempted to decipher it to no avail.

    Yet, as cryptic as the bar joke may be, it offers clues into humor’s role in human civilizations and raises questions about when humor — and its sibling laughter — first emerged.

    In this episode, the second of two parts, Endless Thread continues its journey attempting to deconstruct the beginnings of humor and explain an unexplainable joke from the forgotten tablets of the past.

    Best of Summer: What makes the world’s first bar joke funny? No one knows.

    Best of Summer: What makes the world’s first bar joke funny? No one knows.

    What makes the world’s first documented bar joke funny? No one knows.

    In a tweet that garnered thousands of responses in March, the Twitter account @DepthsOfWiki posted about a 4,000-year-old proverb written on a clay tablet. The line, which experts believe is a joke from the ancient civilization of Sumer, starts with the set-up, “A dog walks into a tavern.” But the punchline has left scholars and online commenters scratching their heads. The joke’s meaning has been lost, and finding it could reveal something unique about early human civilization.

    In this episode, the first of two parts, Endless Thread journeys back in time, attempting to deconstruct the origins of humor and explain an unexplainable joke from the forgotten tablets of the past.