Meta-jokes are a popular form of humor. They contain several somewhat different, but related categories:
joke templates,
class-referential jokes,
self-referential jokes and
jokes about jokes.
Joke template This form of meta-joke is a
sarcastic jab at the endless refitting of joke forms (often by professional comedians) to different circumstances or characters without a significant innovation in the humor.
Class-referential jokes This form of meta-joke contains a familiar class of
jokes as part of the joke. For example, here are a few subversions of the standard
bar joke format:
Self-referential jokes Self-referential jokes refer to themselves rather than to larger classes of previous jokes. }}
Jokes about jokes Marc Galanter, in the introduction to his book
Lowering the Bar: Lawyer Jokes and Legal Culture, cites a meta-joke in a speech of
Chief Justice William Rehnquist: I've often started off with a
lawyer joke, a complete caricature of a lawyer who's been nasty, greedy, and unethical. But I've stopped that practice. I gradually realized that the lawyers in the audience didn't think the jokes were funny and the non-lawyers didn't know they were jokes. Stand-up comedian
Mitch Hedberg would often follow up a joke with an admission that it was poorly told, or insist to the audience that "that joke was funnier than you acted." The process of being a humorist is also the subject of meta-jokes; for example, on an episode of
QI,
Jimmy Carr made the comment, "When I told them I wanted to be a comedian, they laughed. Well, they're not laughing now!"— a joke previously associated with
Bob Monkhouse. ==Other examples==