The Anatomy Of A Stand-up Comedy Joke

There is more important information related to this article located on the new Addendum page.

stand-up comedy joke structureI want to give you an example of the incredibly lame information that is provided to new and prospective comedians in popular stand-up comedy books, workshops and classes as well as on online stand-up comedy tips sites.

As you go through this article, keep this important question in the back of your mind:

How does the typical stand-up comedy information provided as “must know” actually help you in ANY way when it comes to producing comedy material that will actually work for your when you take it to the stage?

With that question in mind, let’s get started.

The Standard Info

Here is the anatomy of a stand-up comedy joke that you will get from almost every resource:

A stand-up comedy joke has 3 primary parts:

1. The set-up lines. These are the informational and unfunny parts of the joke.

2. The punchlines. These are the funny lines or parts of lines that generate laughter from the joke.

3. The tag lines. These are an additional punchline or punchlines (optional) verbalized after the initial punchline in a joke.

Now that you know the “traditional” anatomy of a stand-up comedy joke, take a moment to answer this question I asked at the beginning:

How does the information I have presented help you in ANY way develop a stand-up comedy act that actually works to get laughs on stage?

The answer is that outside of mere academic recognition of the parts of a joke, the “traditional” information I have just provided you is basically worthless when it comes to helping anyone develop stand-up comedy material — from initial concept to the actual stage performance that gets big laughs.

While knowing the parts of a joke is beneficial provided an individual knows how to structure their stand-up comedy material for the stage (which most new comedians don’t know how to do), it is of little help when it comes to:

  • Knowing how to identify stand-up comedy ideas and topics that have the best chance of success on stage, right from the start
  • Knowing how to generate bulk stand-up comedy material quickly
  • Knowing what a punchline is relative to them and their sense of humor
  • Knowing the punchline word structure that over 90% that all punchlines have
  • Knowing how to apply line length strategies to produce the tightest possible stand-up comedy material
  • Knowing how to make sure they are delivering an average of 4-6+ punchlines per minute
You May Also Like:  How Many Jokes Are In A Minute Of Stand-up Comedy Material?

These are just some of the critical factors that have a direct impact upon the speed at which a comedian can progress to develop a stand-up comedy act that rocks a room.

However none of that vital information can be gathered from simply knowing how to define and recognize set-up lines, punchlines, and tag lines after-the-fact.

But what if I gave you these definitions AND gave you a ton of examples of actual stand-up comedy jokes from other comedians? Wouldn’t that help?

Does Studying Stand-up Comedy Jokes Help At All?

You can easily find stand-up comedy videos featuring popular comedians performing on YouTube. In 2014, YouTube began including transcripts with each video.

So, you can spend many hours transcribing comedians’ material word for word to discover the “secrets” of creating and developing a stand-up comedy routine.

However, this approach has one major flaw and I can reveal it with a single question:

How does studying the verbatim, transcribed stand-up comedy act of any comedian, who has their own unique sense of humor, help someone create their own original and high-level stand-up comedy act?

Unless someone plans to copy a comedian’s material and delivery (which is theft in the stand-up comedy world and is frowned upon), it is unlikely that a transcription of another comedian’s stand-up comedy act would be beneficial.

Everyone develops a unique stand-up comedy act that is specific to them, their sense of humor, and their delivery. It is also the result of their personal process used and developed to refine their stand-up comedy material.

Consider this as well:

Most of a comedian’s laughter power comes from delivery — the non-verbal expression and the voice tone variations — not the verbatim words alone as they are “written” on paper. That part always seems to be missing too…

Even knowing the delivery style, attitude and method of expression used by the comedian who delivered the joke, it is difficult at best to even “see” what’s funny and why it’s funny from stand-up comedy joke examples on a piece of paper.

While there are certainly some things that can be learned from observing recorded comedian performances, discovering how to create and develop new and unique stand-up comedy material that gets laughs isn’t one of them.

The Bottom Line

You will make little if any progress as a comedian trying to use “traditional” methods and techniques because most traditional stand-up comedy education is based on non-actionable information that WON’T help YOU develop stand-up comedy material at the level you desire.

You May Also Like:  The Similarities Between Conventional Stand-up Comedy Education Resources And Dissecting A Frog

Some of the reasons that Killer Stand-up clients have a HUGE edge over virtually all other comedians because:

1. They are given actionable, step-by-step information designed to help individuals structure the sense of humor that they already have at every phase of the stand-up comedy material development process.

2. They understand effective punchline structure and frequency.

3. They don’t work on individual “jokes”. They work from a topic based approach and work on chunks of comedy material at a time.

4. They understand that we write differently than we talk and that most of a comedian’s laughter power comes from delivery.

5. They are able to use precision tools like Comedy Evaluator Pro for measuring true performance results and act improvement which can literally shave years off the time it takes to kill on stage.

But don’t take my word for it. Do some research and see if you can find ANYTHING useful beyond what I have already provided on this single page:

  • Go to eHow.com or any other website offering stand-up comedy “how to” info and check out the videos there on how to develop a stand-up comedy routine.
  • Get ANY of popular books on stand-up comedy.
  • Take a comedy workshop or class.

Related Article: Didn’t Get What You Wanted When You Took That Stand-up Comedy Class Or Workshop? Here’s Why…

After that if you feel that you truly have comedy talent and you are ready to use that comedy talent immediately I have one Special Report you should read right now:

The Stand-up Secret That No One Else Will Tell You

If you can consume and apply the information that is in that report, I will promise you this…

You will get more usable information about tapping into your already developed sense of humor and comedy talent from that one Special Report than than you can get from virtually ANY book about developing a stand-up comedy routine that is available today.

In my opinion you have 2 choices:

You can go about becoming a comedian the hard way or the easy way. The choice is completely yours.


5 Stand-up Comedy Lessons - Killer Stand-up Online Course
This training module intro page provides comedy lessons on why conventional stand-up comedy writing methods don’t work.

14 Replies to “The Anatomy Of A Stand-up Comedy Joke”

  1. I dropped out of my last comedy writing group cause it was mostly guys talking about their dicks. Were they having a problem with their delivery?

    • For some folks, the extent of those things deemed “funny” for public consumption as stand-up comedy material lies between the knees and belly button. That’s not a delivery issue. It’s a perception issue and a lack of understanding about why something is funny (or not) on an individual level.

      • This comment (decrying some joke writing for being too fixated on certain body parts) is a really good pun, if intended to “tag” the article’s title, “The Anatomy of a Stand-Up Comedy Joke”!

  2. In point 2 of the second section of this article, you mention “delivery style, attitude, and method of expression”. These certainly are three significant facets of the comedic experience that are omitted from joke books and online instruction. One needs only to compare Stewert Francis and Tim Vine, or Steven Wright and Wendy Liebman to see how varied deliveries can be even among comedians who work in essentially similar genres. Although these are all one-liner comedians, I cannot imagine, say, Steven Wright being nearly as effective if he delivered like Tim Vine!

  3. I wholeheartedly believe that comedy is both a mixture of feeling and thinking. You need have this affinity to grasp what is funny in the moment and wait for your entry so that your joke will have the maximum effect. Another great article. I am pretty sure all aspiring comics will find this incredible!

Leave a Reply to Teddy Ostrow Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*