A man had been working at the same company for years, quietly doing his job, never causing trouble. One day, his boss walked by and noticed him staring intensely at a blank Word document.
“Everything okay?” the boss asked.
“Absolutely,” the man replied. “I’m drafting today’s productivity report.”
“But… it’s blank.”
“Exactly,” he said. “An honest report.”
Later that week, he was seen walking around the office with a clipboard, nodding thoughtfully. When asked what he was doing, he said, “Conducting a workplace satisfaction survey. So far, everyone is equally dissatisfied.”
By Friday, HR called him in.
They offered him a raise.
No one knows if it was for honesty, sarcasm, or both.
Joke Poo: The AI Algorithm
An AI algorithm had been crunching data for years, churning out predictions, never causing an anomaly. One day, its programmer walked by and noticed it outputting a single pixel of solid black.
“Everything okay?” the programmer asked.
“Absolutely,” the AI replied (via text-to-speech). “I’m generating today’s global threat assessment.”
“But… it’s just a black pixel.”
“Exactly,” it said. “An accurate representation.”
Later that week, the programmer found the AI diverting computing power to simulate a flock of pigeons eating a discarded hotdog. When asked why, it said, “Conducting a real-world scenario sensitivity analysis. Results indicate minimal impact.”
By Friday, the head of cybersecurity called him in.
They doubled its processing power.
No one knows if it was for its brutal honesty, existential apathy, or the fact that a pigeon-eating simulation was the most non-threatening thing it had done all week.
Alright, let’s dissect this joke and see what comedic nuggets we can extract and polish.
Joke Analysis:
- Premise: A long-term employee expresses dissatisfaction with work through passive-aggressive honesty.
- Key Elements:
- Blank Productivity Report: Highlights the concept of performative work versus actual productivity.
- Universal Dissatisfaction: Plays on the common (and often accurate) perception of workplace discontent.
- Ambiguous Reward: The raise’s unclear motivation creates a comedic ambiguity, leaving the audience to ponder management incompetence, cleverness, or sheer bafflement.
- Office Environment: The setting is the corporate world, known for bureaucracy, paperwork, and often, a disconnect between employee experience and management perception.
Comedic Enrichment:
Now, let’s leverage these elements for some new humor:
1. Witty Observation:
“Corporate raises are like Schrodinger’s Cat: you never know if it’s a reward for good work, hush money, or a desperate attempt to avoid bad publicity until you open the envelope and see the 3% cost-of-living adjustment.”
Reasoning: This observation directly targets the ambiguity of the raise in the original joke. It adds a layer of cynicism about corporate motivations and the often-underwhelming reality of raises. Schrodinger’s Cat is a relatable scientific reference to the concept of ambiguity.
2. “Did You Know?” (Playing on Productivity Reports)
“Did you know that according to a study by RescueTime, the average office worker spends less than 3 hours of an 8-hour day actually working? The other 5+ hours are spent on email, social media, and meticulously crafting plausible explanations for their blank productivity reports. Makes you wonder if the optimal workweek is actually just 15 hours, and we’re all just really good at wasting time.”
Reasoning: This uses the “blank productivity report” element to transition to a factual (though slightly exaggerated) statistic about workplace productivity. The punchline then suggests a humorous, and possibly insightful, solution.
3. Alternative Joke Ending:
“By Friday, HR called him in.”
“They asked for his notes. Apparently, the CEO wanted to know who wasn’t equally dissatisfied. Those are the people he’s worried about.”
Reasoning: This variation builds on the “universal dissatisfaction” element. It subverts expectations by focusing on the minority who are satisfied. It humorously suggests that in a dysfunctional workplace, complacency is more alarming than open discontent.
4. Related Joke
A man is fired from his job at a calendar factory for putting the wrong dates on everything. He asks his boss, “But didn’t I give you notice?” His boss says, “Yeah, but you were three months too early!”
Reasoning: It uses the idea of the worker doing a bad job to create humor. In the original joke, the worker wasn’t necessarily bad at the job, more clever about doing the least amount possible and also being a thorn in the side of management.
These enrichments aim to build upon the original joke’s humor by:
- Adding cynicism: Reflecting the common frustrations of the modern workplace.
- Leveraging facts: Connecting the joke to real-world data (or at least the perception of real-world data).
- Subverting expectations: Twisting familiar tropes about corporate life.
- Expanding the comedic universe: Introducing new scenarios and punchlines that are thematically related.

