Paddy starts reading the gravestones.
"Mick" he says, "Would you look at this, a feller here who was 90 when he died!"
"Who's that?" says Mick.
"Somebody called O'Toole from Kerry," he replies.
Mick says, "Never mind him, there's a feller here called Murphy, was 99 when he died! From Castletown of all places!
"Well thats nothing!" says Paddy.
"What about what written on this feller's stone, here right beside the gate!"
"The stone says 147!"
"147? thats amazing!" says Mick.
"Who was he?"
"Well according to the stone, its somebody called Miles from Dublin…"
Okay, here’s my attempt at a “Joke Poo” based on the Paddy and Mick graveyard joke:
Joke Poo: Chip Shortage Shenanigans
Two software engineers, Alice and Bob, were debugging late into the night, fueled by caffeine and desperation at the server farm.
Alice squinted at a monitoring dashboard. “Bob,” she groaned, “look at this server’s CPU lifespan. It’s only projected to last 2 years!”
“Whose server is that?” Bob mumbled, bleary-eyed.
“Some cloud customer named ‘TechGuru22’ from Silicon Valley,” Alice replied.
Bob shrugged. “Eh, two years. Not great, but I’ve seen worse. Check this server over here; it’s reporting a lifespan of only 18 months! Owned by ‘CryptoKing’ from Miami!”
Alice scoffed. “Pfft, amateur hour! Look at this one right next to the entrance! This server is reporting a lifespan of 50 years!“
“Fifty years?! That’s insane!” Bob exclaimed, jolted awake. “Who owns that one?”
Alice zoomed in on the server details. “Well, according to the monitoring data… it’s assigned to a company called ‘Vintage Calculator Emporium’ from Chernobyl…”
Alright, let’s break down this classic Paddy and Mick joke and see what comedic fertilizer we can extract.
Analysis:
- Setup: Two Irishmen, Paddy and Mick, are drunk in a graveyard. This immediately establishes a stereotypical setting and implies potentially irrational behavior. The graveyard setting is ripe for jokes about death, aging, and misinterpretation.
- Punchline Trigger: The escalating ages on the gravestones. The humor hinges on the exaggeration of longevity and the ultimate reveal that subverts the initial premise.
- Misdirection: The audience is led to believe the joke is about impressive lifespans, creating a sense of competition between the two characters.
- Resolution: The final age of 147 is absurd, prompting the question of who lived so long, with the answer being “…Miles from Dublin”. There is an implied expectation that a name would follow, but in this case it is distance. The name and location are combined to produce “Miles from Dublin”.
Key Elements:
- Irish Stereotypes: Two blokes, drinking and general silliness.
- Graveyard Setting: Dealing with death and aging.
- Exaggeration/Absurdity: The increasingly improbable ages.
- Misinterpretation/Wordplay: The ages are not actual lifespans, but a joke built into distance.
Comedic Enrichment & New Joke:
Let’s leverage the elements of exaggeration, Irish stereotypes, and the absurdity of lifespan to create a new quip:
New Joke:
Paddy and Mick are comparing notes on their family histories.
Paddy puffs out his chest and says, “My great-great-grandfather, he lived to be 180 years old! He fought in the Napoleonic Wars, invented the potato peeler, and still had a full head of ginger hair!”
Mick scratches his chin, takes a swig of his Guinness, and replies, “That’s nothin’! My uncle Seamus, he lived to be 300! He personally built the entire Giant’s Causeway, spoke fluent dolphin, and never paid a single parking ticket!”
A woman at the next table leans over, shaking her head, “Honestly, you Irish are such blarney merchants!”
Paddy and Mick look at each other, grinning. Paddy says, “She’s right, you know. Actually, I made all that up, sure my ancestor only lived to be 170.”
Mick replies, “Aye, my story was a complete fabrication! In fact, I don’t have an uncle.”
Paddy leans forward and says, “Oh, you do have an uncle, I was talking to him only this morning, he’s Miles from Dublin!”
Explanation of changes:
- Shifting Context: Instead of a graveyard, we use a conversation about family history, still providing ample opportunity for exaggeration.
- Adding Absurd Details: We add ridiculous details to the exaggerated lifespans. These details are relevant to Irish tropes and stereotypes.
- Meta-Humor: The inclusion of “blarney merchants” and the initial admission of fabrication acknowledges the stereotypical Irish tall tales and self-awareness.
- Playing on Expectations: The audience is primed for another exaggerated age, but the punchline subverts that expectation by bringing back the ‘Miles from Dublin’ joke.
This retains the essence of the original while layering in additional comedic elements for a more elaborate and self-aware joke.

