Rapid-Fire Comedy: Difference between revisions
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== Advertising ==
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=owGykVbfgUE This ad for Old Spice], ''[[
** Correction: ads for Old Spice. ''Period.''
== Anime and Manga ==
* [[Yonkoma]] comedy mangas in general. They usually have 1 joke every 4 frames at minimum.
* ''[[
* ''[[Puni Puni Poemi]]'' operates on this.
** As does its predecessor ''[[Excel Saga (
* ''[[Fireball]]''
* ''[[Kodomo no Omocha]]''
* Funimation's [[Gag Dub]] of ''[[Keroro Gunsou]]'' is like this at times.
* ''[[Pani Poni Dash!]]'' is an endless stream of [[Funny Background Event|weird background events]] and [[Rule of Funny|silliness.]]
* ''[[Axis Powers Hetalia]]'', though usually slower paced, falls under this trope sometimes. Especially in the beginning of the first episode when everyone is talking at once. You would have to watch it several times to get all the jokes.
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* This trope was standard operating procedure for the [[Marx Brothers]], especially in their earlier (pre-''Night At The Opera'') films. Thus, and to a surprise to many people, this trope is Older Than ''[[Airplane!]]''.
** And by extension, the [[Homage]] ''[[Brain Donors]]'', produced by David and Jerry Zucker.
* ''[[
** [[Rule of Three|Written by Zucker/Abrahams/Zucker]].
* ''[[The Radioland Murders]]'' -- even better on second viewing, because some of it is delivered in such an offhand way.
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** [[Redundancy Department of Redundancy|Written and directed by Jim Abrahams.]]
* Most of Woody Allen's pre-Annie Hall output consisted of this.
* ''[[
** Definitely [[Truth in Television]], in fact, as that scene was completely ad libbed.
* ''[[Snatch]]'' combines really quick comedy with a really, really fast-paced plot.
* ''[[Scott Pilgrim
* While the show itself has a fair number of gags (in both senses of the term), a live and boisterous audience turns ''[[The Rocky Horror Picture Show]]'' into a breathless torrent of wisecracks.
* In-movie example: Andrew tries doing this in ''[[Bicentennial Man]]'', but he doesn't understand that humor is about delivery and so he simply recites a bunch of jokes one after the other without transitioning or even pausing between words and sentences.
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* Given the existence of some of [[Oscar Wilde]]'s work, this trope is [[Older Than Radio]].
* David Wong tends toward this, especially in ''[[John Dies
* It's difficult to find an entire page in any [[Discworld]] novel that doesn't have ''some'' sort of joke or snark.
** The title? No. The table of contents? Doesn't have one (most of the books aren't divided into conventional chapters). The cover? No...Oh! The pages that are left blank due to binding issues!
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** Being made by [[Redundancy Department of Redundancy|Zucker/Arbahams/Zucker]]
* ''The Andy Milonakis Show''
* Most every element of ''[[Strangers
* ''[[
* The stated intention of ''[[The Fast Show]]''. Some of the sketches were little more than "[[Catch Phrase]] and out". It worked.
* ''[[Most Extreme Elimination Challenge]]'' is a proponent of this trope. Between the [[Amusing Injuries]] happening on screen and the running commentary, it doesn't let up until you hit a commercial break.
** ''MXC'' actually has one up on other contenders; they do two jokes at once. The action is pure slapstick goodness, and the commentary is about equally funny. It's hard to catch everything.
** And has now spawned an Americanized show called ''Wipeout'' that follows the premise of MXC with new footage filmed specifically for it.
* ''[[Arrested Development (TV series)|Arrested Development]]'': It's camouflaged, but attention to the background events and [[Subtext]] makes it become ''extremely'' dense. Try to summarize a typical episode of the half-hour show and you'll see.
* Earlier episodes of ''[[
* [[Mystery Science Theater 3000]] was built this way. Most of the jokes will sail right over the heads of 90% of the audience -- but the 10% that ''do'' get the joke will be reeling with laughter from its sheer obscurity. They make up for this disparity by firing off a ''lot'' (perhaps around ''700 per episode'') of obscure jokes, in the hope that the viewer will be one of the 10% that ''this'' joke was designed for. As one of the makers once said, "The ''right'' people will get it."
* ''[[Good News Week]]''. Both in Paul's monologues and in the games in general.
* [[The IT Crowd]]. The first act usually has a few laughs, things ramp up in Act 2, and by Act 3 you WILL be laughing non stop. This happens Every. Single. Episode.
* ''[[
* Exaggerated and lampshaded in [[Community]], when Pierce prepares jokes in advance for viewing the [[So Bad It's Good]] movie, KickPuncher 2
{{quote| '''Pierce''': Change! Time to change the channel! This guy'll be begging for change soon, he keeps making movies this terrible! We should change to something good, this movie stinks! We should change his diaper. That's change we can believe in!<br />
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* ''[[Childrens Hospital]]'' has only an 11 minute running time, so it does its best to pack in as many jokes as possible.
* ''[[Two Broke Girls]]'' is this trope incarnate, [[Deadpan Snarker|especially with Max.]]
* Any panel show like ''[[Whose Line Is It Anyway?]]'' or ''[[Mock the Week]]''
== Music ==
* [["Weird Al" Yankovic]] loves this; ''White and Nerdy'' is probably the most extreme example. There's also the numerous effects of the virus in ''Virus Alert''.
== Radio ==
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* ''[[The Goon Show]]''. Dear LORD, ''[[The Goon Show]]''.
** On at least one occasion they manage to keep a wild stream of jokes going until the first musical interlude (some seven or more minutes in) without even getting in-character let alone allowing any kind of plot to develop.
* ''[[
{{quote| '''Man:''' Waiter! This steak's off!<br />
'''Waiter:''' I'll get its hat and coat, sir.<br />
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* Ben Elton's stand-up act throughout the Eighties was based on this, [[Motor Mouth|motor mouthing]] the gags at twice normal speed. He later lamented the fact that he used up so much good material so quickly.
* Quite a few [[George Carlin]] routines, but "Modern Man" wins the prize for jokes/second ratio.
* Listening to Dennis Miller is the standup equivalent of [[
* Jimmy Carr, while he does slow down when he does audience interaction segments, none of his "regular" jokes last more than 15 seconds.
** [[Mitch Hedberg]] tends to work the same way.
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== Tabletop Games ==
* ''[[Magic:
== Theatre ==
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* This trope is common in games in which Josh Mandel was involved:
** ''[[Callahan's Crosstime Saloon
** ''Freddy Pharkas, Frontier Pharmacist''
** ''[[Space Quest]] VI''
* ''[[Strong
** Pretty much all of [[Telltale Games|Telltale's]] games are like this, except ''CSI'', the darker parts of ''[[Tales of Monkey Island]]'' and maybe ''[[Wallace and Gromit]]''. The sheer amount of dialogue, descriptions, and [[The Dev Team Thinks of Everything]] makes every game loaded with jokes. A good example is the miscellaneous items in Stinky's in the second season of ''[[Sam and Max]]''. Not only does every item have its own humorous description, but for the first 3 episodes, the description changes each episode.
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* This trope is comparatively rare in shorter works like webcomics and newspaper comics, but ''[[VG Cats]]'' stands out as an example--it often doesn't even have a punchline in the proper sense, ending the strip when it's out of jokes on the subject.
* [[Bug (
* A number of [[
* The further [[Hiimdaisy]] goes, the more jokes in a single issue there are. Case in point: [[Little Kuriboh|LittleKuriboh's]] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WY8ZnAqUdgU voiceover of Let's Destroy Shagohod] ([[Metal Gear]] spoilers alert).
* ''[[8-Bit Theater (Webcomic)|Eight Bit Theater]]'', like ''[[VG Cats]]'', uses a longer form, punchline-less system. On an average strip, every single panel with have a joke in each word-bubble, a joke in the background, a [[Visual Pun]] and a joke in the title.
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== Web Original ==
* Both of purpleeyeswtf's abridgements, [[Code Ment]] and [[None Piece]], make amazing use of this trope. Purpleyes' amazing comedic timing doesn't exactly hurt.
* ''[[
* Chester A. Bum of ''[[
* ''[[
* ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh!: The Abridged Series
** This is also quite evident in the '[[
* ''[[Loading Ready Run]]'' has two [http://loadingreadyrun.com/videos/archive/bonus/date/desc?search=comedy+ so+ fast rapidfire] series.
{{quote| "Comedy so fast The Flash once said, 'Even though I am technically faster than Superman, I too agree that this comedy is quicker than what you typically see.'"}}
* ''[[
* [[AMV Hell]] is a series of fan videos with a style of humor curiously similar to Robot Chicken (in spite of being created before Robot Chicken aired). Anime clips, no more than a minute long, are set to music or audio from a different source for comedic effect. It also lasts for more than an hour, and it's [[Better Than It Sounds]].
* All of [[Seanbaby]]'s writings are a cluster of connected jokes.
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* ''[[Family Guy]]''
** And ''[[
* Any cartoon produced by Jay Ward, especially ''[[Rocky and Bullwinkle]]''.
* [[Tex Avery]] pioneered this in animation, starting with his work on ''[[Looney Tunes]]'' and then took it further at MGM. At [[Warner Bros]] the torch was carried by his acolyte Bob Clampett.
* The [[Tex Avery]]-inspired [[Steven Spielberg]]-produced cartoon shows ''[[
* ''[[Xavier: Renegade Angel]]'' takes this to an extreme: pauses the voice actors put between jokes are ''digitally removed''.
* ''[[Harvey Birdman, Attorney
* [[Venture Brothers]]: A combination of this and obscure references ensures that you'll still be catching new jokes on your fourth, fifth, etc. time watching any given episode. Especially in later seasons.
* ''[[Drawn Together]]''
* ''[[Robot Chicken]]''
* ''[[The Fairly Odd Parents]]''
* ''[[
* ''[[Back
* ''[[The Simpsons]]'' can sneak up on you like this.
{{quote| '''Mr. Burns:''' It's as big as a football field and weighs as much as the state of New Hampshire. I only flew it once at an altitude of six feet for a distance of four feet. Then we discovered that rain makes it catch fire. Then the Fuhrer fired me.}}
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