I have the humor of a 9-year-old boy, and sometimes I've had laughing fits on-air.
In prehistoric times, mankind often had only two choices in crisis situations: fight or flee. In modern times, humor offers us a third alternative; fight, flee - or laugh.
At Christmas, it's my siblings running around the house, we're cooking, talking, laughing, loud and just crazy. It's beautiful chaos.
My dad's one of the funniest men in the world. I grew up with him making me laugh so much I'd beg him to stop.
A page a day means I need to focus on a gag a day, and that's great for laughs but bad for plot, and I'm primarily a plot guy.
For me, the great joy is to watch an audience watching what I've made. To hear not a peep from the audience at the right moment, and then to hear the laughs and the cheers.
Comedy is difficult for an actor. But I think I have a good sense of humor and manage to make people laugh and make them happy.
While most of us know that we feel better after a good hearty laugh, science, in many cases, is yet to prove why.
Once I realised the value of making people laugh, I got very good at it. Fast.
I get just as much of a thrill out of constructing a good sentence that gets a laugh at the end as I do from a joke.
Never give up. Laugh a lot. Be good to others.
They can certainly expect to be very impressed with the technical aspects of the show, fooled and led up the garden path by the story and ultimately have a jolly good laugh!
I keep reminding people that an editorial in rhyme is not a song. A good song makes you laugh, it makes you cry, it makes you think.
It's funny, the hardest thing to do is to make something look like it's fast, loose and improvised, and get somebody to laugh.
I really, really like 'Eastbound & Down.' It's one of the few things that makes me laugh. It's almost too funny to get an award.
It just seems to me that there's no particular reason comedy albums should be dead. There's a lot to laugh at. We have very funny people, still.
There's only one true superpower amongst human beings, and that is being funny. People treat you differently if you can make them laugh.
I like guys who are honest and funny. Looks come and go; I want to be 65 years old and laughing with my husband.
The audience changes every night. You're the same person. You have to speak your mind and do the stuff that you think is funny and makes you laugh.
During the Great Depression, when people laughed their worries disappeared. Audiences loved these funny men. I decided to become one.
My father was a very funny man, and one of my strongest recollections is hearing him laugh. He didn't like people who had no sense of humour.