fbpx
Wikipedia

Practical joke

A practical joke, or prank, is a mischievous trick played on someone, generally causing the victim to experience embarrassment, perplexity, confusion, or discomfort.[1][2] A person who performs a practical joke is called a "practical joker" or "prankster".[1] Other terms for practical jokes include gag, rib, jape, or shenanigan.

Practical joke involving completely blocking someone's doorway with phone books

Practical jokes differ from confidence tricks or hoaxes in that the victim finds out, or is let in on the joke, rather than being talked into handing over money or other valuables. Practical jokes are generally lighthearted and without lasting effect; they aim to make the victim feel humbled or foolish, but not victimized or humiliated. Thus most practical jokes are affectionate gestures of humour and designed to encourage laughter. However, practical jokes performed with cruelty can constitute bullying, whose intent is to harass or exclude rather than reinforce social bonds through ritual humbling.[3]

Some countries in Western culture traditionally emphasize the carrying out of practical jokes on April Fools' Day and Mischief Night.[4][5][6][7][8]

Description

 
A life-sized cardboard cutout of Pope Francis peeks through an office window, giving off the illusion that the supreme pontiff is inside staring back at the viewer

A practical joke is "practical" because it consists of someone doing something that is physical, in contrast to a verbal or written joke. For example, the joker who is setting up and conducting the practical joke might hang a bucket of water above a doorway and rig the bucket using pulleys so when the door opens the bucket dumps the water. The joker would then wait for the victim to walk through the doorway and be drenched by the bucket of water. Objects can feature in practical jokes, like fake vomit, chewing-gum bugs, exploding cigars, stink bombs, costumes, whoopee cushions, clear tape, and Chinese finger traps. A practical joke can be as long as a person desires. It does not have to be short-lived.[citation needed]

Practical jokes often occur in offices, usually to surprise co-workers. Examples include covering computer accessories with Jell-O, wrapping a desk with Christmas paper or aluminium foil or filling it with balloons. Practical jokes also commonly occur during sleepovers, when teens play pranks on their friends as they come into the home, enter a room or even as they sleep.[citation needed]

American humorist H. Allen Smith wrote a 320-page book in 1953 called The Compleat Practical Joker[9] that contains numerous examples of practical jokes. The book became a best seller – not only in the United States but also in Japan.[10] Moira Marsh has written an entire volume about practical jokes.[2] She found that in the US males perpetrate such gags more often than females.

Student prank

 
Bicycles hanging high as the result of a student prank in Lund, Sweden

University students have a long association with pranks and japes.[11] These can often involve petty crime, such as the theft of traffic cones and other public property,[12] or hoaxes.[13][14][15]

Theft

 
A statue of the Duke of Wellington in front of the Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow, which is famous for having had a traffic cone repeatedly placed on its head since the 1980s.

One classic target of student theft are traffic cones. The issue of the theft and misuse of traffic cones by students has gained enough prominence that a spokesperson from the UK National Union of Students stated that "stereotypes of students stealing traffic cones" are "outdated".[16]

Some universities have gone as far as to devote entire pages of legislation and advice for students with regards to the consequences and laws involving the theft of traffic cones.[17] Misuse of traffic cones in Scotland has even resulted in serious physical injury.[18]

The traffic cone theft issue came to such a head in the United Kingdom in the 1990s that it was brought up in parliament.[19]

In 2002, Fife Constabulary declared a "traffic cone amnesty" allowing University of St Andrews students to return stolen traffic cones without fear of prosecution. A police spokesman had said that the theft of traffic cones had become "an almost weekly occurrence".[20]

Famous examples

One practical joke – recalled as his favorite by the playwright Charles MacArthur – concerns the American painter and bohemian character Waldo Peirce. While living in Paris in the 1920s, Peirce "made a gift of a very big turtle to the woman who was the concierge of his building". The woman doted on the turtle and lavished care on it. A few days later Peirce substituted a somewhat larger turtle for the original one. This continued for some time, with the surreptitious introduction of larger and larger turtles into the woman's apartment. The concierge, beside herself with happiness, displayed her miraculous turtle to the entire neighborhood. Peirce then began to sneak in and replace the turtle with smaller and smaller ones, to her bewildered distress.[21] This prank became the storyline behind Roald Dahl's 1990 novel Esio Trot.

 
A hack in progress in Lobby 7 at MIT
 
Shimer College students pushing a VW Beetle into a campus building

Successful modern pranks often take advantage of the modernization of tools and techniques. In Canada, engineering students have a reputation for annual pranks; at the University of British Columbia these usually involve leaving a Volkswagen Beetle in an unexpected location (such as suspended from the Golden Gate Bridge[22] or from the Lions Gate Bridge[23]). In response, other students at that university often vandalize the engineering students' white and red concrete cairn.[24] Engineering students at Cambridge University in England undertook a similar prank, placing an Austin 7 car on top of the University's Senate House building.[25] Pranks can also adapt to the political context of their era.[26] Students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have a particular reputation for their "hacks".[27]

Not unlike the stone louse of Germany, the jackalope in the American West has become an institutionalized practical joke perennially perpetrated by ruralites (as a class) on tourists, most of whom have never heard of the decades-old myth.[28]

In the 1993 film Grumpy Old Men, two neighbors and former friends, John and Max, play cruel practical jokes on each other. It escalates when a beautiful new neighbor is involved as both set their sights on her. In that film's 1995 sequel, Grumpier Old Men, John and Max have cooled off their feud. They later play cruel practical jokes on a beautiful, determined Italian owner who's trying to turn the former bait shop into a romantic restaurant.

The 2003 TV movie Windy City Heat consists of an elaborate practical joke on the film's star, Perry Caravallo, who is led to believe that he is starring in a faux action film, Windy City Heat, where the filming (which is ostensibly for the film's DVD extras) actually documents a long chain of pranks and jokes performed at Caravallo's expense.[29]

In the UK, a group that calls itself Trollstation, plays pranks on people, including police officers and government employees. They record their escapades and upload them to YouTube. In one such video, one of the groups actors poses as a palace guard. Some of the actors have been fined or charged.[30]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Practical joke". Dictionary.com. Retrieved 2012-05-27.
  2. ^ a b Marsh, Moira. 2015. Practically Joking. Logan: Utah State University Press. ISBN 978-0-87421-983-8
  3. ^ Kádár, Dániel Z. (2013). Relational Rituals and Communication: Ritual Interaction in Groups. p. 156. ISBN 978-0230393059.
  4. ^ "Japes of the great (book review of April is the cruellest month: The history and meaning of All Fools' Day)". The Economist. April 2, 1988. Retrieved 2011-04-18.
  5. ^ "A Brief History of 'Mischief Night'".
  6. ^ "What's the Night Before Halloween Called? It Depends on Where You Live".
  7. ^ "Do You Call October 30th Mischief Night or the Devil's Night?".
  8. ^ "Yes. The Night Before Halloween Is a Real Holiday | At the Smithsonian | Smithsonian Magazine".
  9. ^ Smith, Harry Allen (1953). The Compleat Practical Joker. ISBN 0-688-03705-4.
  10. ^ "The Publishers Weekly". Publishers Weekly. Vol. 209. 1976. p. 2:24.
  11. ^ Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library : FAQ Student pranks
  12. ^ Bidmead, Claire (2001). . Higher Education and Research Opportunities in the UK. Archived from the original on May 31, 2006. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  13. ^ Saltzman, Jonathan (December 24, 2005). "Student's tall tale revealed". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  14. ^ Nightwork: A History of Hacks and Pranks at MIT by T.F. Peterson (Paperback – 2003)
  15. ^ If at All Possible, Involve a Cow: The Book of College Pranks by Neil Steinberg (Paperback – 1992)
  16. ^ "Rowdy students 'must be tackled'". BBC Online. 24 January 2006. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on May 5, 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  18. ^ "Falling road cone injures student". BBC Online. 19 November 2006. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  19. ^ House of Commons Hansard Written Answers for 11 Dec 1996 (pt 15)
  20. ^ "Students urged to cone clean". BBC Online. 23 May 2002. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  21. ^ Fun Fare: a Treasury of Reader's Digest Wit and Humor. 1949. p. 36.
  22. ^ Curiel, Jonathan. "Beetle Overboard! / VW hung off GG Bridge in prank", San Francisco Chronicle, February 5, 2001, accessed March 9, 2011
  23. ^ "The Golden Gate prank by UBC engineering students may have been the best ever - Macleans.ca". www.macleans.ca. Retrieved 2020-10-08.
  24. ^ "99 things to do at UBC – Painting the two Cairns". www.ubyssey.ca. Retrieved 2021-07-06.
  25. ^ From Hermes to bonsai kittens. What makes a jape great?, from The Economist, December 20, 2005. Discusses the origins and evolution of pranks.
  26. ^ Priceless pranks, from The Economist, February 21, 2006. Lists famous and successful pranks throughout history.
  27. ^ Kravets, David. "April 1, 1998: Disney to Buy MIT for $6.9 Billion" Wired, March 31, 2010, accessed March 10, 2011.
  28. ^ Deutsch, James (2014). "Jackalope". In Levine, Timothy R. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Deception. p. 555. ISBN 978-1483306896.
  29. ^ Hyden, Steven (2013-11-12). "The Greatest Trick Comedy Ever Pulled". Grantland. Retrieved 2015-01-23.
  30. ^ "Jail sentence for YouTube pranksters". BBC News. 2016-05-16. Retrieved 2021-10-22.

External links

https://www.detroityes.com/mb/showthread.php?24109-Spirit-of-Detroit-statute-takes-a-midnight-stroll

practical, joke, other, uses, disambiguation, prank, redirects, here, 2016, canadian, film, prank, film, other, uses, prank, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, rel. For other uses see Practical joke disambiguation Prank redirects here For the 2016 Canadian film see Prank film For other uses see Prank disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Practical joke news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message A practical joke or prank is a mischievous trick played on someone generally causing the victim to experience embarrassment perplexity confusion or discomfort 1 2 A person who performs a practical joke is called a practical joker or prankster 1 Other terms for practical jokes include gag rib jape or shenanigan Practical joke involving completely blocking someone s doorway with phone books Practical jokes differ from confidence tricks or hoaxes in that the victim finds out or is let in on the joke rather than being talked into handing over money or other valuables Practical jokes are generally lighthearted and without lasting effect they aim to make the victim feel humbled or foolish but not victimized or humiliated Thus most practical jokes are affectionate gestures of humour and designed to encourage laughter However practical jokes performed with cruelty can constitute bullying whose intent is to harass or exclude rather than reinforce social bonds through ritual humbling 3 Some countries in Western culture traditionally emphasize the carrying out of practical jokes on April Fools Day and Mischief Night 4 5 6 7 8 Contents 1 Description 2 Student prank 2 1 Theft 3 Famous examples 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksDescription EditThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message A life sized cardboard cutout of Pope Francis peeks through an office window giving off the illusion that the supreme pontiff is inside staring back at the viewer A practical joke is practical because it consists of someone doing something that is physical in contrast to a verbal or written joke For example the joker who is setting up and conducting the practical joke might hang a bucket of water above a doorway and rig the bucket using pulleys so when the door opens the bucket dumps the water The joker would then wait for the victim to walk through the doorway and be drenched by the bucket of water Objects can feature in practical jokes like fake vomit chewing gum bugs exploding cigars stink bombs costumes whoopee cushions clear tape and Chinese finger traps A practical joke can be as long as a person desires It does not have to be short lived citation needed Practical jokes often occur in offices usually to surprise co workers Examples include covering computer accessories with Jell O wrapping a desk with Christmas paper or aluminium foil or filling it with balloons Practical jokes also commonly occur during sleepovers when teens play pranks on their friends as they come into the home enter a room or even as they sleep citation needed American humorist H Allen Smith wrote a 320 page book in 1953 called The Compleat Practical Joker 9 that contains numerous examples of practical jokes The book became a best seller not only in the United States but also in Japan 10 Moira Marsh has written an entire volume about practical jokes 2 She found that in the US males perpetrate such gags more often than females Student prank Edit Bicycles hanging high as the result of a student prank in Lund Sweden University students have a long association with pranks and japes 11 These can often involve petty crime such as the theft of traffic cones and other public property 12 or hoaxes 13 14 15 Theft Edit A statue of the Duke of Wellington in front of the Gallery of Modern Art Glasgow which is famous for having had a traffic cone repeatedly placed on its head since the 1980s One classic target of student theft are traffic cones The issue of the theft and misuse of traffic cones by students has gained enough prominence that a spokesperson from the UK National Union of Students stated that stereotypes of students stealing traffic cones are outdated 16 Some universities have gone as far as to devote entire pages of legislation and advice for students with regards to the consequences and laws involving the theft of traffic cones 17 Misuse of traffic cones in Scotland has even resulted in serious physical injury 18 The traffic cone theft issue came to such a head in the United Kingdom in the 1990s that it was brought up in parliament 19 In 2002 Fife Constabulary declared a traffic cone amnesty allowing University of St Andrews students to return stolen traffic cones without fear of prosecution A police spokesman had said that the theft of traffic cones had become an almost weekly occurrence 20 Famous examples EditOne practical joke recalled as his favorite by the playwright Charles MacArthur concerns the American painter and bohemian character Waldo Peirce While living in Paris in the 1920s Peirce made a gift of a very big turtle to the woman who was the concierge of his building The woman doted on the turtle and lavished care on it A few days later Peirce substituted a somewhat larger turtle for the original one This continued for some time with the surreptitious introduction of larger and larger turtles into the woman s apartment The concierge beside herself with happiness displayed her miraculous turtle to the entire neighborhood Peirce then began to sneak in and replace the turtle with smaller and smaller ones to her bewildered distress 21 This prank became the storyline behind Roald Dahl s 1990 novel Esio Trot A hack in progress in Lobby 7 at MIT Shimer College students pushing a VW Beetle into a campus building Successful modern pranks often take advantage of the modernization of tools and techniques In Canada engineering students have a reputation for annual pranks at the University of British Columbia these usually involve leaving a Volkswagen Beetle in an unexpected location such as suspended from the Golden Gate Bridge 22 or from the Lions Gate Bridge 23 In response other students at that university often vandalize the engineering students white and red concrete cairn 24 Engineering students at Cambridge University in England undertook a similar prank placing an Austin 7 car on top of the University s Senate House building 25 Pranks can also adapt to the political context of their era 26 Students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT have a particular reputation for their hacks 27 Not unlike the stone louse of Germany the jackalope in the American West has become an institutionalized practical joke perennially perpetrated by ruralites as a class on tourists most of whom have never heard of the decades old myth 28 In the 1993 film Grumpy Old Men two neighbors and former friends John and Max play cruel practical jokes on each other It escalates when a beautiful new neighbor is involved as both set their sights on her In that film s 1995 sequel Grumpier Old Men John and Max have cooled off their feud They later play cruel practical jokes on a beautiful determined Italian owner who s trying to turn the former bait shop into a romantic restaurant The 2003 TV movie Windy City Heat consists of an elaborate practical joke on the film s star Perry Caravallo who is led to believe that he is starring in a faux action film Windy City Heat where the filming which is ostensibly for the film s DVD extras actually documents a long chain of pranks and jokes performed at Caravallo s expense 29 In the UK a group that calls itself Trollstation plays pranks on people including police officers and government employees They record their escapades and upload them to YouTube In one such video one of the groups actors poses as a palace guard Some of the actors have been fined or charged 30 See also EditBullying in academia California Institute of Technology pranks Capping stunt Dreadnought hoax Gag name George Hayduke Hacks at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology List of practical joke topics Pieing Practical joke device Prank call Prank emailing Pranknet Senior prank Snipe hunt Spaghetti tree hoaxReferences Edit a b Practical joke Dictionary com Retrieved 2012 05 27 a b Marsh Moira 2015 Practically Joking Logan Utah State University Press ISBN 978 0 87421 983 8 Kadar Daniel Z 2013 Relational Rituals and Communication Ritual Interaction in Groups p 156 ISBN 978 0230393059 Japes of the great book review of April is the cruellest month The history and meaning of All Fools Day The Economist April 2 1988 Retrieved 2011 04 18 A Brief History of Mischief Night What s the Night Before Halloween Called It Depends on Where You Live Do You Call October 30th Mischief Night or the Devil s Night Yes The Night Before Halloween Is a Real Holiday At the Smithsonian Smithsonian Magazine Smith Harry Allen 1953 The Compleat Practical Joker ISBN 0 688 03705 4 The Publishers Weekly Publishers Weekly Vol 209 1976 p 2 24 Seeley G Mudd Manuscript Library FAQ Student pranks Bidmead Claire 2001 Nightmare on student street Higher Education and Research Opportunities in the UK Archived from the original on May 31 2006 Retrieved 23 November 2010 Saltzman Jonathan December 24 2005 Student s tall tale revealed The Boston Globe Retrieved 23 November 2010 Nightwork A History of Hacks and Pranks at MIT by T F Peterson Paperback 2003 If at All Possible Involve a Cow The Book of College Pranks by Neil Steinberg Paperback 1992 Rowdy students must be tackled BBC Online 24 January 2006 Retrieved 23 November 2010 Worcester Students Union The Home for Worcester University Students Archived from the original on May 5 2007 Retrieved 2007 07 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Falling road cone injures student BBC Online 19 November 2006 Retrieved 23 November 2010 House of Commons Hansard Written Answers for 11 Dec 1996 pt 15 Students urged to cone clean BBC Online 23 May 2002 Retrieved 23 November 2010 Fun Fare a Treasury of Reader s Digest Wit and Humor 1949 p 36 Curiel Jonathan Beetle Overboard VW hung off GG Bridge in prank San Francisco Chronicle February 5 2001 accessed March 9 2011 The Golden Gate prank by UBC engineering students may have been the best ever Macleans ca www macleans ca Retrieved 2020 10 08 99 things to do at UBC Painting the two Cairns www ubyssey ca Retrieved 2021 07 06 From Hermes to bonsai kittens What makes a jape great from The Economist December 20 2005 Discusses the origins and evolution of pranks Priceless pranks from The Economist February 21 2006 Lists famous and successful pranks throughout history Kravets David April 1 1998 Disney to Buy MIT for 6 9 Billion Wired March 31 2010 accessed March 10 2011 Deutsch James 2014 Jackalope In Levine Timothy R ed Encyclopedia of Deception p 555 ISBN 978 1483306896 Hyden Steven 2013 11 12 The Greatest Trick Comedy Ever Pulled Grantland Retrieved 2015 01 23 Jail sentence for YouTube pranksters BBC News 2016 05 16 Retrieved 2021 10 22 External links Edithttps www detroityes com mb showthread php 24109 Spirit of Detroit statute takes a midnight stroll Look up prank in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pranks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Practical joke amp oldid 1148306410, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.