THE HUMOR BUFFET (The Secret to TEDster Joking)


As a TED-style speaking expert, I’m often asked about talk humor.

I always turn to Gene Wilder.

Willy Wonka knew something about humor and captivating an audience. He once observed:

“A little nonsense, now and then, is relished by the wisest men.”

That said, I’m not a fan of heavy-handed, scripted humor in a talk. Performing stand-up comedy is a heavy lift. (Google “Jerry Seinfeld” and “practice” to learn more.)

And yet, "too serious" can often mean too mind-numbing.

That’s why a recent engagement with a CEO's commencement speech included only a handful of polite, scripted — but rigorously tested — chuckles.

And yet, here’s the secret, we paired those pre-determined jokes with what I call the “humor buffet.”

You see, reading the response of your audience is an important skill. And pairing that ability with (seemingly) off-the-cuff humor is a practiced art.

If they’re laughing, it is great to have the option of keeping the fun going — or not.

Instead of stepping to stage inflexibly scripted, consider creating a selection of “humor dishes,” just in case there's an appetite. You can then read your audience and sprinkle additional chuckles around your tried-and-true quips.

As TEDster Sir Ken Robinson shared in conversation about the design of his breakaway talk:

“It’s important to have rapport with the room. It’s like jazz, I think, or improv... I have some notes in my pocket with just some bullet points, and it’s like a set list is how I think of it, because every audience is different and every occasion is different.”

Consider Sir Ken’s talk about schools and creativity. About 45 seconds in, he asks the audience a question and then cracks a joke about his chosen field:

I have an interest in education. Actually, what I find is, everybody has an interest in education. Don't you?
I find this very interesting. If you're at a dinner party, and you say you work in education — actually, you're not often at dinner parties, frankly.

(Laughter)

If you work in education, you're not asked.

(Laughter)

And you're never asked back, curiously. That's strange to me. But if you are, and they say, "What do you do?" and you say you work in education, you can see the blood run from their face. They're like, "Oh my God. Why me?"

(Laughter)

"My one night out all week."

(Laughter)

But if you ask about their education, they pin you to the wall, because it's one of those things that goes deep with people…

Sir Ken popped off one joke and quickly returned to the buffet three times before returning to the topic at hand!

Yet don’t ask the audience to gorge on comedy. Only offer more IF you find the audience is responding. Laughing. Wanting more. (Hopefully they will be.)

Otherwise, leave that array of comedy dishes untouched. Don't be a not-so-funny, wannabe comedian.

You can return to the buffet another time if the audience is still hungry.

After all... “A little nonsense, now and then, is relished.”

​

DEVIN D. MARKS is known as The TED Talk Whisperer. His firm, CONNECT to COMPEL, has served 100s of TED, TEDx, and TED-Style speakers. The result: 100s of millions of views. His team helps leaders, just like you, catalyze ideas.

You can reach Devin at 617.804.6020, or DM him here.


NEW TEDster BOOK

As head of TED, Chris Anderson has had a ringside view of the world’s boldest thinkers sharing their most uplifting ideas.

With his new book, Infectious Generosity: The Ultimate Idea Worth Spreading, Chris looks at one of humankind’s defining but overlooked impulses – generosity. He thoughtfully explores how we can super-charge its potential to build a hopeful future.

video preview​

Pick up a copy here.

Related TED Talk here.


Short TEDster Insights

Here's a quick video that unpacks a bit of life behind the TED stage:

Ready for TEDx Success? Find the Worth in Early Arrival.

Here's why I show up 4 days before your live event and how we'll be prepping together.

video preview​

Become a Breakaway TEDster!

When you're ready to take center stage (or center screen), let me know. Whether you're working on a TED Talk or a commencement address; an all-hands preso, or a keynote, you will want to be:

[ âś”] 5Fold-Focused
​
(5 factors here)​
[ âś”] Story-Wrapped
​
(3 factors here)​
[ âś”] Action-Igniting
​
(7 factors here)​

And those three priorities make the TED Messaging Method so very, very connecting and compelling.

To begin a conversation, click here:


Let the world LIVE your message!™

Was this week's edition of TEDxTuesdays forwarded to you? Subscribe here. Please note that some links may be affiliate links. That means if you buy something linked, a percentage of the cost hits a holding account; it is then donated to charity on a quarterly schedule.

​Unsubscribe | Update your profile​
​24 School Street, 2nd Floor, Boston, MA 02108​

TEDxTuesdays, a weekly-ish 'zine about TED-style messaging.

#TheTEDTalkWhisperer 🔴 My client's TEDx has 48M views. I help niche experts, authors, and leaders (just like you) spread BIG ideas. LET THE WORLD LIVE YOUR MESSAGE™ #tedtalks #tedx #tedstyle #publicspeaking #speechwriting #pitches #presentations #messaging #branding #publicrelations #events #conferences

Read more from TEDxTuesdays, a weekly-ish 'zine about TED-style messaging.

Joyce sat in the darkened theater, notebook balanced on her lap, heart pounding harder than it should for someone *not* about to go onstage. She was at TEDxCambridge — the largest TEDx venue in the country. But she wasn’t backstage. She wasn’t mic’d. She wasn’t giving the talk she knew she was born to deliver. She was in the audience. Again. She watched, speaker after speaker stepping onto that iconic red stage, each one sharing a message that echoed across the auditorium. With every standing...

Some stories land. Others miss the mark. But the ones that stick — the ones that make people lean in — hit the bulls-eye and are repeated. In my STICKY Stories training, I call it “Bulls-Eye Storytelling.” That's because the closer you get to the center, the more powerful the connection. We’ve all heard stories that float somewhere out there in the narrative ether: “I heard from someone who read it somewhere…” That kind of story is fine. It can teach. It might even inspire. But what grabs...

In an era flooded with content, authority has become the rarest currency. - Anyone can post daily on LinkedIn- Build a brand with AI "insights"- Launch a podcast But let’s be honest — views don’t equate value. And virality doesn’t mean credibility. And "thought leadership" isn't self-declared. The audience watching TED Talks by the millions each week isn’t looking for more noise. They want: - Ideas with depth- Leadership with proof- Results-driving frameworks Going viral shouldn't be the...