Humor is arguably Britain's finest export. It's bold, witty, and full of puns, and can knock you out almost instantly. In fact, hands down the funniest person I know is from Manchester, England. (He also wrote for Bored Panda, so if you've been reading us for long enough, you might even know who I'm talking about.)
So let's take a closer look at the culture that molds it. Spanning across multiple social media platforms, British Memes is an online project that paints a vivid picture of what everyday life looks like in this corner of the world.
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absolutly, the later the better. Post lunch me doesnt want to be sat working for hours and hours after eating
English comedian Ricky Gervais, who co-wrote, co-produced, and starred in the hit BBC series The Office, which was on air for two years and adapted for a U.S. series for eight seasons, thinks that a good way to describe British humor is to juxtapose it to its American counterpart.
"It's often dangerous to generalize, but under threat, I would say that Americans are more 'down the line,'" Gervais wrote in TIME. "They don't hide their hopes and fears. They applaud ambition and openly reward success."
"Brits are more comfortable with life's losers. We embrace the underdog until it's no longer the underdog. We like to bring authority down a peg or two. Just for the hell of it," Gervais explained.
"Americans say, 'have a nice day' whether they mean it or not. Brits are terrified to say this. We tell ourselves it's because we don't want to sound insincere but I think it might be for the opposite reason. We don't want to celebrate anything too soon."
Gervais thinks Brits see failure and disappointment lurk around every corner. This is due to their upbringing. While Americans are raised to believe they can be the next president, Brits are told, "It won't happen for you."
The comedian also pointed out that while irony shows up in the smarter US comedies, Americans don't use it as much socially as Brits. "We use it as liberally as prepositions in everyday speech. We tease our friends. We use sarcasm as a shield and a weapon. We avoid sincerity until it’s absolutely necessary," he said. "We mercilessly take the piss out of people we like or dislike basically. And ourselves. This is very important. Our brashness and swagger is laden with equal portions of self-deprecation. This is our license to hand it out."
This, Gervais has found, is sometimes perceived as nasty by the 'recipients' who aren't used to such customs, but he reassured everyone that it isn't. "It’s play fighting," he explained. "It's almost a sign of affection if we like you, and ego bursting if we don't. You just have to know which one it is."
"I never actively try to offend. That's churlish, pointless and frankly too easy. But I believe you should say what you mean. Be honest. No one should ever be offended by truth. That way you'll never have to apologize. I hate it when a comedian says, 'Sorry for what I said.' You shouldn't say it if you didn't mean it and you should never regret anything you meant to do."
Ditto, but yelling HONK because I don't have a horn earns me strange looks.
Another thing that the rest of the world may not know is that in the UK nothing and nobody is off-limits, so you will regularly see politicians being ridiculed and anybody in the public eye, including the Royal Family, is fair game.
No wonder satire is so popular in the UK. As Gervais briefly mentioned, Brits love humbling people when they get too arrogant and there have been many comedy shows dedicated to exactly this type of humor, including Have I Got News For You and Weekly Wipe.
Love island is awful. It's the kind of show that makes having root canal treatment a pleasure. Nothing to do with love and everything to do with getting a job in TV or getting a modelling career off the ground.
But the UK has also had a number of hit sitcoms where pretty much nothing happens apart from everyday life. There are no knee-slapping moments but a lot of cringey situations when you cannot believe someone has done or said what they have.
These sitcoms are subtle but absurdly funny and ones worth watching are Gavin and Tracy, I'm Alan Partridge, and The Royle Family.
I hope they have good hygiene standards for preventing covid, otherwise on your last day, you'll be leaving a little hoarse.
I looked it up (I'm sick and have nothing better to do): they're red spider mites and are considered a pest as they kill plants, so I guess they've been killed off with insecticide. Thanks for occupying my brain with something other than how ill I'm feeling for a few minutes!
British culture. Idk anyone talking about drinking cider, maybe stolen liquor or beer though.
Cider is an alcoholic drink in the UK, not just apple juice - it's stronger than beer most of the time.
Load More Replies...Mad Dog 20/20 and Boone's Farm could be considered bad cider if you squint just right.
We used to go gnome nicking, except we'd actually move lawn ornaments to the garden next door. The neighbour would suddenly have gnomes and stuff in their lawn they'd previously only seen next door. I'm sorry, I still think this was hilarious. Fight me.
Only front gardens this is, we didn't go into anyone's back garden. Ahaha.
Load More Replies...In the US, it is illegal to drink in public and also the drinking age is 21, so this scenario is much wilder in the US than in the UK I guess.
It’s not illegal to drink in public but if you’re so sloshed you’re being a terror then yes you will probably get arrested in the U.S. edit: apparently it is prohibited depending where you are, sometimes by state sometimes by local municipality. Weird. It’s not heavily enforced in most areas, I’ll say that for sure.
Load More Replies...I used to steal the bus stop posters and sell them
Load More Replies...In the US, cider is non alcoholic - unless it's 'hard' cider. I think...
Yep. Plain cider isn't alcoholic & hard cider is alcoholic.
Load More Replies...I used to be able to down a liter of old english in under a minute and then boke it all up 5mins later. I would shout 'waterfall time' and every one would stand there watching me boke haha good times
And you seriously wonder why your cozntry voted BoJo into office?
Load More Replies...We sing the songs that remind us of the good times..
Load More Replies...just british. In america they buy guns and shoot up their school at 14.
wow ok um. a few American kids maybe, not all of us. most of us are trying to find a way to stop it from happening
Load More Replies...And British girls get like super drunk. Not from cider I mean. When they get drunk - it is really ugly. Vomiting on the streets, falling asleep, walking barefoot etc. Never seen anything like that in any other country(ok, maybe in Australia).
We used tell our parents we were staying at other's house, then drink wine coolers Boone's Farm, Purple Passions, ever clear...whatever we could get and pretty much spend the night dying in a field from alcohol poisoning. So yes.
We (Poland) used to drink the cheapest 'wine' beverage that was basically some fruit taste, high vol alcohol and sth we call sulfur but was probably some horrible add on. I still cringe for my 15-16 self. And yeah, it was in the park
Ahh yes...depending on location - Nattie Light for camping, Barefoot Moscato for the park and long island iced tea at the beach.
If they drank it at home they'd have to obey the "Cider House Rules". I'll get my coat ...
Yes. The answer is yes and the 'cider' was strawberry hill c**p "wine".
Yes. The answer is yes and our "cider" was strawberry hill c**p wine.
In the US when I was a teen (late 70's) it would have been "Maddog" MD20/20
I drank wine, which cost 0.41 gbp, or 56 Serbian dinars lol. It would make your mouth, lips, teeth and everything else it touches purple. It was delicious!
I *would* have drunk cider in the park when I was 14 if I had *known* cider existed! I know about it now and enjoy it often.
My cousin and brothers did. I didn't like the taste but I'm female and maybe have better taste than they do. I can't speak for all Americans though. I'm 50 now so things might have changed a bit too
No, and I don’t even know what that is. Maybe beer if they could get it, but it’s more safe drinking your parent’s booze at home.
I think the world has moved on to alcohol-pops now... But I remember hearing a tale of a grandmother who always gave the grandchildren Woodpecker cider because it had a picture of a woodpecker on the bottle. She thought it was just a kid's drink and they just thought it was tasty.
Nowadays maybe but when I was a kid I would guess the equivalent would've been wine coolers because hard cider is more the recent decade; my day hard cider was made at home.
I drank Smirnoff Ice because my mother told me only tinkers drink cider.
Kayjunmoon's comment is completely correct, cider here in Britain is ALWAYS alcoholic. Cider I'm certain other countries is not alcoholic, unless it's labelled as Hard Cider. It's extremely weird that a non-controversial factual comment is being downvoted, and a rude and factually wrong comment is being upvoted.
Load More Replies...What's stopping her is that the lowest amount you can withdraw at a cashpoint is £5.00 :D
what do you consider snacks? I'm in the Midwest US. we do popcorn, chips (crisps), beef jerky. curious to what other cultures snack on.
This appears to be a list of random content with an unconnected title.
This is a clickbait site that steals it's content from other sites. I wouldn't be surprised if I were you.
Load More Replies...All in all, a very poor collection, the result pf poor editing. Very few of the examples are particularly British. Also, the headline is a grammatical blunder. Loved the toasted cheese, though.
This appears to be a list of random content with an unconnected title.
This is a clickbait site that steals it's content from other sites. I wouldn't be surprised if I were you.
Load More Replies...All in all, a very poor collection, the result pf poor editing. Very few of the examples are particularly British. Also, the headline is a grammatical blunder. Loved the toasted cheese, though.