A Teacher tells you to spit out your gum.
A Train says "Chew Chew"
(I remember my son telling us that one when he was young. I've just this minute seen a Teacher telling it to her class in a YT short)
Okay, here’s my “Joke Poo” take on the teacher and train joke, titled:
Joke Poo: What’s the difference between a Plumber and a Piano?
A Plumber tells you to unclog your drain.
A Piano says, “B Flat.”
Alright, let’s analyze this joke and see what comedic gold we can extract!
Joke Dissection:
- Setup: The classic “What’s the difference between X and Y?” format. Immediately establishes a comparison.
- Key Elements:
- Teacher: Represents authority, instruction, and a focus on rules (especially ones about gum chewing).
- Train: Represents transportation, sound (specifically the “choo choo” sound).
- Wordplay: The humor relies on the “Chew Chew” mimicking the sound of a train and cleverly connecting it to chewing gum, the teacher’s focus.
- Target Audience: Likely children or those familiar with simple, pun-based humor.
Now, let’s use these elements to create some comedic enrichment:
Option 1: A “Did You Know” That Enhances the Joke:
“Did you know the first diesel-electric locomotive, nicknamed “The Boxcab,” was so quiet it was initially unpopular because people couldn’t hear it coming and worried about being hit? Maybe if it had a louder ‘Chew Chew,’ it would have been more readily embraced… and teachers could have used the analogy about telling people to spit out their gum a bit sooner.”
Explanation: This takes the joke’s element of trains and links it to a surprising historical fact. It uses irony to highlight the contrast between the loud stereotypical sound of a train and the quiet reality of early electric trains, while bringing back the teacher and gum-chewing element.
Option 2: A New Joke (Building on the First):
“Why did the frustrated teacher bring a xylophone to class?
Because she was tired of reminding the students to spit out their gum and wanted to say it with a little more per-chew-ssion!“
Explanation: This joke retains the teacher-gum connection, using a pun with the word “percussion” and the idea of “chew”, making the new punchline a different, yet related, joke based on wordplay. It also introduces a new element: the frustration of the teacher.
Option 3: A Witty Observation:
“The real difference between a teacher and a train? A train’s ‘Chew Chew’ is (usually) a harmless sound. A teacher’s ‘Spit out your gum!’ is the sound of impending detention.”
Explanation: This observation highlights a subtle but significant difference in the consequences associated with each sound. The first is a playful sound, while the second represents an authority figure issuing a command. It is humorous through the exaggeration of the negative outcome (detention).
I hope you found these humorous enhancements satisfactory!

