Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Blog 2

Shaggy Dog Stories 1 "Only you can prevent forest fires" (reference to mother nature and earth)
  • story starts out rational and innocent, almost like a novel
  • audience and readers may/do need a background of cultural knowledge to understand the joke
    • what a friar is
    • the name of the bully Hugh MacTaggart
      • In America, the bullies name would most likely be Italian; something that would come out of a movie such as The Godfather, Bronx Tale & Goodfellas.
  • punch line is repeated and emphasized throughout the entire story
    • we see this early in the Shaggy Dog Story
  • punch line sounds similar to a famous phrase
    • "only you can prevent forest fires"/ "only hugh can prevent florist friars
  • Set up in formal language like a narrative
    • narrator telling the story to an audience (storytelling)
Shaggy Dog Stories 2 "Giant Panda or Panda"
  • Must have prior background to terms in the story (NYC, Maitre'd, restaurant setting.)
    • similar to the first story, needed to have prior cultural knowledge
  • Has a story line like any novel
    • climax - falling action - resolution/punch line
  • Violence/Irony used
  • Comedy/Jokes are used
  • Story uses a specific location (restaurant, NYC)
  • dialogue is used
Shaggy Dog Stories 3 "Nope I'm a frayed knot!"
  • Common/familiar American joke
  • Progressive story that builds up on the punch line
  • Repetition
    • "Im sorry sir we don't serve strings here"
    • "Bartender, gimme a beer"
  • introduce punch line with a kind of a definition
    • explains the string ties himself up in a frazzled bow
  • dialogue between "bartender" and "string
  • specific location like the last few Shaggy Dog stories
    • Bar location 
  • Punch line at the end ("Nope, I'm a frayed knot")
Shaggy Dog Stories 4 "Thank God its Friday (TGIF)
  • some sort of background information of religion
    • friday/God
  • Dialogue is used between "Friday" and Robinson Cruscoe
  • Specific location
    • outside/tent
  • words of the common saying "TGIF" is used throughout the story
    • thank/god/friday
  • Irony
Shaggy Dog Stories 5 "Check the mail"
  • Violence and comedy are used
    • shot gun to the bear
    • lawyer and friend picking berries in the field
    • friend thinking he would get a freebie
  • Double meaning of words that sound the same but are spelled different
    • Check/Czech
    • mail/male
  • Dialogue between the two men/lawyer and sheriff
  • Time and locations given
    • summer time
  • Characters with names and specific roles
  • Punch line at the end
    • "Would you believe a lawyer who said the czech was in the male?"

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