And I was like "Is this movie about my mother?"
Okay, here’s my “Joke Poo” version:
Joke Poo: The Email
So, my colleague told me about a company policy where if you receive an email and don’t reply within 24 hours, you get written up.
And I was like, “Is this policy about my spam filter?”
Okay, let’s dissect this joke:
Core Joke Structure:
- Setup: A horror movie premise: unanswered phone calls lead to death.
- Punchline: The speaker equates this horror movie premise to their personal experience with their mother.
- Humor Mechanism: Relatability + Exaggeration + Inversion. Relatability (everyone can relate to annoying calls). Exaggeration (mortal danger). Inversion (a normally benign thing becomes a source of dread).
Key Elements:
- Horror Movie Trope: This relies on familiarity with horror movie conventions and the inherent anxiety associated with them.
- Mother-Child Relationship (Specifically Mother): The core humor stems from stereotypical portrayal of mothers as persistently calling, often with guilt-inducing implications if ignored.
- The Phone Call: The phone itself is a facilitator, both in the horror movie and in the joke. It’s a symbol of connection but also potential intrusion.
- Guilt/Anxiety: Underlying the humor is the universally felt guilt or anxiety associated with ignoring calls from loved ones, especially parents.
Comedic Enrichment and New Humor Creation:
Let’s focus on the element of the telephone and its historical context:
Witty Observation/Did You Know:
“You know, back in the early days of telephones, operators would listen in on your calls. So, technically, that horror movie was already a documentary about my mother. Only instead of a spectral killer, it was just Mildred from the switchboard, offering unsolicited advice on my dating life.”
New Joke:
Why did Alexander Graham Bell invent the telephone?
So mothers could guilt-trip their children from even further away!
Analysis of the New Joke/Observation:
- It takes the “telephone” element and uses historical information to create a new layer of humor.
- The “Mildred from the switchboard” addition plays on the idea of intrusive listening, making it a more specific and relatable scenario.
- The Alexander Graham Bell joke is a classic question/answer setup that leverages the pre-existing humorous framework.
- It directly links the telephone’s invention to the persistent mother trope, amplifying the original joke’s core humor.

