Comedy can be a catalyst to help us remember important things
When shown policy-related news with a punchline, young adults recalled the facts better and were more interested in sharing the information
My grandmother always opens our conversations with “So, tell me something!”
When I was a teenager, I often felt paralyzed, thinking, “What do you want to know?”
But then I discovered a trick: I loved watching late-night parodies of the news like Saturday Night Live and The Daily Show, and I would repurpose their jokes to make her laugh. That motivated me to watch more carefully, so I could remember the details to share later — and even to consult other news sources for context.
Although some might consider watching comedy shows to be “wasting time,” recent research shows their value: Humor helps people remember information and makes them want to talk about it. When shown policy-related news with a punchline, young adults recalled the facts better and were more interested in sharing the information compared to those presented with straight news.
Why might this be the case? One possibility is that humor increases the social benefits of sharing — if you make someone laugh, you enjoy your time together more, and they might think you’re witty. And anticipating that reaction can encourage you to remember the information when you first see it.
Students learn information better when asked to teach peers, so if watching comedy gets them to talk about the news, it might help them learn more about current events in the process. To share a comic bit successfully, you need to know what’s going on in the world to understand why it’s funny — and why some topics and situations don’t lend themselves to joking.
Don’t think that because a show uses satire or parody, it isn’t teaching serious information about current events.
Do encourage the young people in your life to share what they are watching as a way to start a deeper conversation about what is going on in the world and in their heads — topics that otherwise feel harder to launch into from that initial “Tell me something!”
Emily Falk is a professor of communication, psychology, and marketing at the University of Pennsylvania, director of Penn’s Communication Neuroscience Lab, and a distinguished fellow of the Annenberg Public Policy Center. This piece originally appeared as a Tip of the Week from Philadelphia-based Character Lab, whose mission is to advance scientific insights that help kids thrive.