The foreman meets the new hires at the supply shed next to the elevator cage. He looks at the large, muscular Scotsman and says, "You'll be working the new coal face."
He turns to the Italian and says, "You're in charge of explosives."
He then looks around the empty shed. "Alright, where's the new Chinese fella? He was in charge of supplies."
The Scotsman looks at the empty rack. "Aye, boss, that's the problem. Ah cannae fin' my pickaxe! And he's nowhere tae be seen."
The Italian throws up his hands. "Same-a for me! I no hava no dynamite! No-a blasting caps! The supply man, he's-a vanished! Maybe he went-a down already?"
The foreman, fuming and behind schedule, slams his hand on the counter. "Confound it! He must have taken the last cage down with all the gear and didn't wait. Alright, lads, no sense wasting time up here. Let's get down there and find him."
The foreman, the Scotsman, and the Italian step into the elevator cage, all of them empty-handed and annoyed. The gate closes, and they begin their long, dark descent into the mine.
"I swear," the foreman mutters as they drop, "if he's gotten himself lost, I'll have his hide. We're already behind."
Finally, with a loud clang, the cage shudders to a stop at the bottom work level. The air is thick with coal dust, and the only light comes from a few dim bulbs strung down the main tunnel.
The foreman slides the cage gate open and steps out onto the platform, followed by the other two.
Just as the Italian turns on his helmet lamp, the Chinese man leaps out from behind a large mining cart right next to them, throws his arms wide, and yells…
"SUPPLIES!"
Joke Poo: The Data Dump
A programmer from Google, a cybersecurity expert from Russia, and a systems administrator from India are hired to build a new, ultra-secure cloud server.
The lead architect, a stern German woman, meets the new team in the data center. She points to the Google programmer and says, “You’ll be building the front-end interface.”
She turns to the Russian cybersecurity expert and says, “You are in charge of intrusion detection.”
She then looks around the empty server room. “Alright, where is the Indian systems admin? He was in charge of server deployment.”
The Google programmer looks at his laptop. “Uh, I can’t find the server. I can’t connect because the server isn’t up. He must have dropped some of the software components.”
The Russian cybersecurity expert throws up his hands. “I can’t do my job without a server to protect! No server access, no firewall configurations! The admin, he’s disappeared! Maybe he started setting up remotely?”
The German architect, fuming and behind schedule, slams her tablet on a rack. “Nein! He must have started the whole server installation and didn’t bother to tell anyone. Alright, we have to get this sorted. Let’s go and find him.”
The architect, the programmer, and the cybersecurity expert head down to the power supply in the basement, all of them empty-handed and annoyed. They walk down many flights of stairs.
“I swear,” the architect mutters as they descend, “if he has made some problems and the server does not work, I will fire him.”
Finally, they arrive in the basement. The air hums with electricity, and the only light comes from a few emergency bulbs.
The German architect turns on her flashlight.
Just as the Google programmer reaches for a console, the Indian system admin leaps out from behind a rack of servers, throws his arms wide, and yells…
“PATCHES!”
Alright, let’s dissect this joke and then cook up some comedic enrichment.
Joke Dissection:
- Setup: An Italian, a Scotsman, and a Chinese man are hired for a coal mine, setting up a classic multi-ethnic joke scenario. The initial absence of the Chinese man and missing supplies builds anticipation.
- Premise: The humor relies on misdirection. We assume the Chinese man has messed up, either by taking supplies down early or getting lost. The foreman’s frustration fuels this expectation.
- Punchline: The Chinese man jumps out with the supplies, yelling “SUPPLIES!”, subverting the expectation of incompetence and presenting him as overly enthusiastic and perhaps comically literal. The humor lies in the unexpected jump scare after a suspenseful build-up.
- Key Elements:
- Ethnic Stereotypes (mild): Scotsman is strong; Italian handles explosives; Chinese man is in charge of supplies. While potentially sensitive, the joke is softened by not directly mocking the stereotypes. Instead, it uses them as background context.
- Misdirection: The core mechanic of the joke.
- Surprise: The sudden appearance and yell provide the comedic shock.
- Irony: The whole search was for the supplier, who turns out to be right there.
Comedic Enrichment:
Let’s focus on the “supplies” aspect, specifically mining supplies, and weave in some factual/interesting details.
New Joke/Observation:
Heard about the Chinese mine worker who was obsessed with inventory management? He took “just-in-time delivery” a little too seriously. Turns out, his MBA thesis was on optimizing coal mine supply chains using principles of Agile methodology. The guy even had Kanban boards down there. Problem was, nobody else spoke Kanban-ese.
Amusing ‘Did You Know?’
Did you know the term “powder monkey,” referring to someone who carried explosives in mines, was historically a dangerous job often given to young boys? Talk about a volatile supply chain! Imagine having that on your LinkedIn profile at age 12: “Expert in explosive material logistics.” No wonder they needed a jump-scare specialist to replace him!
Why it works:
- It leverages the “supplies” aspect from the original joke.
- It adds a layer of absurdity by suggesting the Chinese man is overly qualified and zealous.
- It uses real-world concepts like MBA, Agile, Kanban, and historical context of “powder monkey” to create a more sophisticated and ironic humor.
- It avoids direct ethnic stereotyping, instead focusing on a personality trait (obsession with efficiency) taken to an extreme.
Alternative joke using the “Did you know” fact:
The foreman was complaining that the new Chinese supply worker was taking too long to deliver the powder. The Scotsman says “Aye, but at least we don’t have a wee lad doin’ it anymore.” The Italian replies, “True, at least this way it’s not a minor explosion.”
This adds a layer of dark humor as it plays on the saying minor in the sense of age, and minor in the sense of a small accident with explosives.

