Over the years I have had a number of criticisms of my blog; too political, too opinionated, too little about the RSA, too much about the RSA, much too much about me. But one of the first was a Fellow who included in a lengthy list of my misdemeanours the allegation that I had ‘used the Society’s website to make jokes’. This was a reference, I think, to an early post in which I proudly clamed to have made up my own witticism.
Anyway, time has passed; it is a Friday, the sun is shining and we need something to take our minds off a failing economy, the collapse of Westminster democracy and the threat of an attack by North Korea.
The prompt was my father ringing me, as he often does on a Wednesday, for a joke to use in his Radio 4 programme ‘Thinking Allowed’. The subject was gambling and although he ended up using a different gag, his request led me to discover the following:
I visited the Dalai Lama’s country to go greyhound racing
Tibet?
No, I just like dogs
This is a variance on the classic
My wife’s gone to the West Indies
Jamaica?
No, she went of her own accord
When I worked at ippr a few years ago, between renewing the democratic left and finding innovative paths to social justice, we spent an afternoon inventing our own versions:
My sister’s gone to the capital of Indonesia
Jakarta?
No, she took the plane
Gradually these became more elaborate:
My brother sells electrical accessories in the largest city in Yorkshire
Leeds?
Yes, and plugs and chargers
And contrived:
My wife’s testing a new product in Poole
In Dorset?
Yes, she thinks it’s great
So, here’s a weekend challenge to my reader (happy birthday for yesterday, mum); invent your own ‘wife's gone to the West Indies’ joke. The best one gets free Fellowship of the Society (but, not really).
Related articles
-
Open RSA knowledge standards
Alessandra Tombazzi Tom Kenyon
After investigating ‘knowledge commons’, we're introducing our open RSA standards and what they mean for our practice, products and processes.
-
RSA Catalyst Awards 2023: winners announced
Alexandra Brown
Learn about the 11 exciting innovation projects receiving RSA Catalyst funding in our 2023 awards.
-
Investment for inclusive and sustainable growth in cities
Anna Valero
Anna Valero highlights a decisive decade for addressing the UK’s longstanding productivity problems, large and persistent inequalities across and within regions, and delivering on net zero commitments.
Be the first to write a comment
Comments
Please login to post a comment or reply
Don't have an account? Click here to register.