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  • Hey Vsauce, Michael here.

  • "I've got a question for you: Why did the chicken cross the road?"

  • "Brilliant question. Let's find out why."

  • Historically, the chicken crossed the road to get to the other side...has anybody ever

  • laughed at that joke? Why has it become so famous? And, for that matter, who cares? Why

  • would you want to investigate why things are funny? As E.B. White said "analyzing humor

  • is like dissecting a frog- few people are interested, and the frog dies."

  • But I want to dive into the guts of this chicken joke because today it is so famous, it is

  • practically shorthand for comedy. And, people frequently consider it either the worst joke

  • of all time, or the oldest joke. But neither of those is true.

  • But, first things first, the chicken joke isn't technically even a joke, it's an "anti-joke."

  • It's a joke about jokes. You see, we expect a joke to surprise us, to flip things around

  • or use word play. But, to get to the other side is just obvious- it's mundane, which,

  • by itself, can be pretty funny. To make this more clear, let's take a look at anti-joke

  • chicken. "What's blue and smells like red paint? Blue paint." You see, you expect a

  • typical joke-y punch line, but, instead, what you get is hilariously serious. Anti-Joke

  • Cat is another good one. "Knock knock." "Who's there?" "Lettuce." "That's impossible."

  • "Yo momma's so fat, we are all extremely concerned for her health." Anti-jokes can also be used

  • for psychological experiments right at home. You may have heard of this one already, the

  • "no soap, radio" joke. Here's how it works: get a couple of your friends together, and

  • tell them to all laugh when you're done telling the joke, no matter what. Then, go find a

  • target who's not in on it and tell them some version of a joke like this: "Two polar bears

  • were sitting in a bathtub. The first one says "pass the soap." The second one says "no soap,

  • radio."" At this point, you are your friends should start laughing uproariously, meaning

  • the target has one of two choices- either be afraid of looking dumb and laugh along

  • anyway, or, say they're confused, at which point you should tell them "what, you don't

  • get it??", and keep laughing. You wait until the target gives into peer pressure and succumbs

  • to mob mentality and joins, despite the fact that "no soap, radio" is actually nonsense.

  • As for being the oldest joke in the book, "why did the chicken cross the road?" is far

  • from it- it's only about 160 some odd-years old. It first appeared in print in The Knickerbocker

  • as a conundrum that really isn't one- an anti-joke. If you want to look for the oldest joke ever

  • to appear in print, we're going to have to go back 4,000 years to read some ancient Sumerian

  • proverbs.

  • The joke is essentially a cautionary tale to never expect anything to be perfect. It

  • goes like this: "Something which has never occurred since time immemorial; a young woman

  • did not fart in her husband's embrace." So...yeah, the earliest known joke is a joke about a

  • woman farting in a guy's lap. So...cool...

  • All I'm sure of is that our proverbial chicken did not Agyrophobia- that's the fear of crossing

  • streets. But maybe the chicken should have. I mean, crossing the road could be quite dangerous

  • for a little bird, which leads us to a quite darker interpretation of the joke- maybe this

  • chicken knew of the danger of crossing the road. Maybe he knew what could happen. Maybe

  • he was sad, or lonely, or knew what his fate was. And, so, he decided to take control and

  • end it himself, and crossed the road to get to the other side.

  • If you want to continue being morbid, check out DeathClock.com. Answer a few questions

  • and the site will generate a countdown of the number of seconds you likely have left

  • to live. You can just sit there and watch them tick away...but let's get back to the

  • joke.

  • Perhaps a better question than "why" did the chicken cross the road is "why wouldn't chickens

  • be crossing the road?" I mean, to be sure, the Earth is a big place, and less than 1

  • percent of it is even paved, but, there are quite a few chickens on Earth.

  • To put this in perspective, there are about 500,000,000 cats and, as far as we go, there

  • are 7,000,000,000 humans. But chickens- there are 24 billion chickens. We're outnumbered

  • more than 3:1. But, if we cooked up every single chicken alive on Earth right now, we

  • could fill enough KFC 16-piece buckets to form a stack of them going to the Moon and

  • back, three times. Unbelievable, right? I mean, they all fit so nicely here on Earth's

  • surface, walking around with their characteristically lean meat which, because fat contributes so

  • much more flavor to a piece of meat than the muscle does, may explain why chicken is such

  • a great generic meat flavor, and why so many other exotic meats we try later tend to taste

  • like chicken.

  • But, let's get back to the question in this video's title: Why did the chicken cross the

  • road? Well, to get to the other side, sure, but there are many different motivations a

  • chicken could have for going to the other side- maybe it was looking for food, maybe

  • it was being chased by a predator. What matters though is that we can never know because there

  • is no chicken. It's purely hypothetical, as opposed to the equally famous "Mary Had a

  • Little Lamb," in which the lamb, and Mary, were real people.

  • Mary Sawyer was an actual student at The Redstone School in Massachusetts, and one day her brother

  • encouraged her to bring her lamb to school. Her fellow students were amused, as was visiting

  • student John Roulstone who wrote "Mary Had a Little Lamb."

  • We have actual documentation of those real people and events, but this chicken never

  • even really existed. So, asking why the chicken crossed the road is just like asking "why

  • did the original writer decide that it should be a chicken crossing a road?" Which means

  • that the chicken crossed the road because some comedian in the 19th century decided that

  • you would probably think about it too much, making the mundane "to get to the other side"

  • answer quite surprising.

  • To explain this let's look at a computational neural explanation of humor. In order to effectively

  • manage resources, our brains stay a few steps ahead of what we're hearing, estimating what

  • kind of outcomes are possible. But when we discover that we're actually being told a

  • joke, and none of our paths were the correct version of what was being told, all of that

  • neural network energy needs to dissipate, and, according to some theorists, that energy

  • moves into motor cortex, causing convulsions: laughter.

  • Unfortunately our poor chicken friend doesn't illicit that response from us anymore because

  • we've all heard the joke- we know what to expect when the joke begins. But, we should

  • be proud of our chicken friend and the unknown author who thought him up, because even though

  • the joke is so famous it's no longer funny, even at a neurological level, it still stands

  • as a testament to just how complicated, and clever our comedy can be. Keep laughing, and,

  • as always, thanks for watching.

Hey Vsauce, Michael here.

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