Monday, June 23, 2008

In Memoriam

I can’t think of a business connection to the passing of comedian George Carlin yesterday, but I’m going to write a post about this event anyway and I don’t really care if I’m off-topic or not. Mr. Carlin is one of the people who (unwittingly, perhaps) taught me about humor, about the way people think, about how to set up a good quip (and how to finish it off), and how just about everything in our daily lives is absurd, unnecessary or tragic – and just how funny that really is. I don’t doubt that many other people will have far more elaborate and meaningful things to say about this event, but from where I’m sitting, the world has just become a far less entertaining place – and that is a misfortune all of humanity shares in, whether they realize it or not…

Most people probably had their first encounters with George Carlin when they heard one of his comedy recordings in the 1960s, which is two or three media revolutions ago, depending on how one feels about magnetic tape. Some of these have become part of our popular culture; for example, there are people who have never heard of George Carlin and never listened to spoken-word comedy in their lives who still know the concept of the “Seven Words You Can’t Say on Television” – and can probably recite them if asked. Some of the concepts on their early albums are still just as funny today, such as a hippy weatherman, or a Native-American drill sergeant carrying on just the way a U.S. Army D.I would. And some, like “Baseball and Football” will remain relevant – and funny – for as long as either game is being played anywhere in the world…

What most people probably fail to realize is how few comedians manage to remain not just funny but also relevant for that length of time. The same material once purchased on long-playing 33 rpm records (and later on CD) is now being downloaded off the Internet for use on MP3 players by the grandchildren of people who were listening to Mr. Carlin in his early years. Meanwhile, many of his more recent concerts are being downloaded and viewed as video files and podcasts using the same technology, and it seems probable that much of his work will remain popular for decades to come…

As a student of both history and literature, I can tell you that very little comedy survives its own era – and by that I mean the 30 years or so that the primary audience remains interested in hearing it. The majority of all humor is topical, and generally does not make it out of the same decade in which it was written, let along remain popular four decades later. That we still find humor in the writings of Mark Twain or H.L. Mencken 100 years later is a testament to the brilliance of such writers – and I strongly suspect that 100 years from now, Mr. Carlin will be included on the list of American Humorists the authors wish were still around and writing…

So as you go about your business today, try not to take things quite as seriously. Remember that the fact that life is tragic doesn’t mean that it isn’t also funny, and that in the theater of the absurd in which we live, it is up to all of us to find the parts worth laughing about. And join me in saying, with the greatest fondness and the highest respect, thank you, Mr. Carlin, for making this journey a little more entertaining. Here’s to you, wherever you are…

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